Here's a little ditty from the boys courtesy of the Stucco Dat Project of perhaps the best run of shows in the past decade of the band (ok, maybe MSG, right before this is equally stellar). After 1991, the band was never as great again. So per my Reddit friend, this should read Last Great Boston Run.
I stopped going to see the Dead in 1987 right before I moved from Berkeley to West LA. True.
I only saw 2 shows in 1987 reaching the 79 show mark (80 was a one-off in 1994 in LA along with Kirko who you see above with me from Frost 5-2-87 and Bradford 12-16-94). And my last show in Boston proper was November 14, 1978 at the Music Hall. itunes files or flacs, just choose By the way, I fixed the Boston Globe articles at the bottom.
And it wasn't until after Jerry's death in 1995, and my reconnecting with the advent of amazing board tapes that I discovered the last golden era from about Warlocks in 1989 through 1991. But nothing from this era quite gets me like the shows from September 1991. Now a few years back, my buddy Arnie told me that he and Liza get invited to the Boston Garden in September 1991 by our college buddy Katie to get backstage passes to the Dead. WTF. How did I stray so far, and what's this about.
Turns out that Cameron Sears was pals with Katie from high school in Maine and he was the source of this gratitude. Someday I will tell you all about my lunch with Cameron and Peter McQuaid near the old Stone location on Broadway around 2004, but that's for another day. Back to Arnie's story. Arnie said the Dead played Dark Star and then wound up into I Need A Miracle which disappointed him (I guess expecting Dark Star>St Stephen>The Eleven etc). So I went back and found Arnie's show which turned out to be that amazing show where Bruce Hornsby played this incredible Pacobell classical piece out of space after Dark Star that just rocked my world. I even put this in like my third blog post two years and 200 blog posts ago . So for your listening pleasure are six segments from this run
9/20/91 Help On The Way [4:04] > Slipknot! [6:04] > Fire On The Mountain [12:20]
9/21/91 Uncle John's Band > Saint Of Circumstance > Eyes Of The World
9/22/91 He's Gone > Nobody's Fault But Mine > Spoonful >
9/24/91 after Dark Star Space > Foolish Heart > I Need A Miracle > Standing On The Moon
9/25/91 That Would Be Something > Playing> China Doll > Throwing Stones > Not Fade Away
https://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/music/2015/06/27/assessing-grateful-dead-local-legacy/aJJVIkL2YR7CeUuR8iOUWM/story.html
Night 5 and 6 :
Night 5 is whatever songs the copyright folks allow me to stream
I stopped going to see the Dead in 1987 right before I moved from Berkeley to West LA. True.
I only saw 2 shows in 1987 reaching the 79 show mark (80 was a one-off in 1994 in LA along with Kirko who you see above with me from Frost 5-2-87 and Bradford 12-16-94). And my last show in Boston proper was November 14, 1978 at the Music Hall. itunes files or flacs, just choose By the way, I fixed the Boston Globe articles at the bottom.
And it wasn't until after Jerry's death in 1995, and my reconnecting with the advent of amazing board tapes that I discovered the last golden era from about Warlocks in 1989 through 1991. But nothing from this era quite gets me like the shows from September 1991. Now a few years back, my buddy Arnie told me that he and Liza get invited to the Boston Garden in September 1991 by our college buddy Katie to get backstage passes to the Dead. WTF. How did I stray so far, and what's this about.
Turns out that Cameron Sears was pals with Katie from high school in Maine and he was the source of this gratitude. Someday I will tell you all about my lunch with Cameron and Peter McQuaid near the old Stone location on Broadway around 2004, but that's for another day. Back to Arnie's story. Arnie said the Dead played Dark Star and then wound up into I Need A Miracle which disappointed him (I guess expecting Dark Star>St Stephen>The Eleven etc). So I went back and found Arnie's show which turned out to be that amazing show where Bruce Hornsby played this incredible Pacobell classical piece out of space after Dark Star that just rocked my world. I even put this in like my third blog post two years and 200 blog posts ago . So for your listening pleasure are six segments from this run
9/20/91 Help On The Way [4:04] > Slipknot! [6:04] > Fire On The Mountain [12:20]
9/21/91 Uncle John's Band > Saint Of Circumstance > Eyes Of The World
9/22/91 He's Gone > Nobody's Fault But Mine > Spoonful >
9/24/91 after Dark Star Space > Foolish Heart > I Need A Miracle > Standing On The Moon
9/25/91 That Would Be Something > Playing> China Doll > Throwing Stones > Not Fade Away
9/26/91 Dark Star [16:04] > Saint Of Circumstance > Eyes Of The World > Drums > Space > The Other One > Dark Star [6:40] ; Attics Of My Life > Good Lovin'
Encore Brokedown Palace > And We Bid You Good Night
https://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/music/2015/06/27/assessing-grateful-dead-local-legacy/aJJVIkL2YR7CeUuR8iOUWM/story.html
Night 5 and 6 :
Night 5 is whatever songs the copyright folks allow me to stream
A long, strange trip: eternal Grateful Dead 26 years of mystique comes to Boston
[City Edition]
Boston Globe (pre-1997 Fulltext) - Boston, Mass.
Author:
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Gilbert, Matthew
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Date:
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Sep 20, 1991
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Start Page:
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1
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Section:
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METRO/REGION
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The operative word will be jam.
For six nights over the next week, Boston's arteries and airwaves will be thick with Grateful Dead. On the congested
expressway near the Boston Garden, shiny sedans will mingle with rusty Volkswagens. On radio stations, Dead classics
like "Sugar Magnolia" will clog playlists. Within the Garden itself, some 15,000 crowded fans per night will reinvent
a psychedelic Eden, while extra thousands mill about North Station seeking a "miracle," a ticket. And onstage,
the San Francisco band that inspires a quasi-religious fervor will weave its bright, celestial funk, jamming on the songs
they've been reviving for 26 years and counting.
expressway near the Boston Garden, shiny sedans will mingle with rusty Volkswagens. On radio stations, Dead classics
like "Sugar Magnolia" will clog playlists. Within the Garden itself, some 15,000 crowded fans per night will reinvent
a psychedelic Eden, while extra thousands mill about North Station seeking a "miracle," a ticket. And onstage,
the San Francisco band that inspires a quasi-religious fervor will weave its bright, celestial funk, jamming on the songs
they've been reviving for 26 years and counting.
How is it that the most hippie-passe, most gimmick-free, most idealistic rock band ever is, so far, America's No. 1
top-grossing concert act of 1991?
top-grossing concert act of 1991?
While fresh mainstream players like Whitney Houston and Guns N' Roses have struggled to fill recession-era concert
halls, the graying Grateful Dead sold out six Garden dates in three hours last month. Tonight's Dead arrival comes
on the heels of nine packed shows at the even larger Madison Square Garden in New York, where a media circus
including a visit from Dan Rather encircled the band.
halls, the graying Grateful Dead sold out six Garden dates in three hours last month. Tonight's Dead arrival comes
on the heels of nine packed shows at the even larger Madison Square Garden in New York, where a media circus
including a visit from Dan Rather encircled the band.
There is, it seems, something about the Dead that is recession-proof. They are even sturdier than Wall Street at this
point. Most rock-era listeners will sneer at the band, damning them as tired '60s relics dwelling on a bygone
love-Haight romance. But their fans, known as Deadheads, are profoundly, eternally dedicated.
point. Most rock-era listeners will sneer at the band, damning them as tired '60s relics dwelling on a bygone
love-Haight romance. But their fans, known as Deadheads, are profoundly, eternally dedicated.
There are Deadheads who follow the band cross-country, catching every show in every city at sometimes
$25 per ticket, talking of the musicians as if they're old buddies. Promoters, aware of the Deadheads' tenacity, are
increasingly eager to book their guaranteed full-house shows.
$25 per ticket, talking of the musicians as if they're old buddies. Promoters, aware of the Deadheads' tenacity, are
increasingly eager to book their guaranteed full-house shows.
And there are fresh crops of Deadheads every year. While curiosity-seekers come and go, new converts arrive and
never leave, college-age youths eager to don the tie-dye and grow the ponytail. Now at shows they sway and boogie
alongside the elder statesmen, daydreaming of the fiction of Jack Kerouac and Ken Kesey and canonizing free-thinking
figures like Neal Cassady and the Merry Pranksters.
never leave, college-age youths eager to don the tie-dye and grow the ponytail. Now at shows they sway and boogie
alongside the elder statesmen, daydreaming of the fiction of Jack Kerouac and Ken Kesey and canonizing free-thinking
figures like Neal Cassady and the Merry Pranksters.
What exactly has engaged the unlimited devotion of these fans, young and old? Ironically, it's the opposite of what draws
the masses to, say, Madonna. The Dead is a family-like band that has never had financial triumph, or even simple icon
status, as its goal. Their mission has always been low-rent and iconoclastic, in league with the working-class characters
on one of their most popular early albums, "Workingman's Dead." Musical craftsmanship has always been their priority.
the masses to, say, Madonna. The Dead is a family-like band that has never had financial triumph, or even simple icon
status, as its goal. Their mission has always been low-rent and iconoclastic, in league with the working-class characters
on one of their most popular early albums, "Workingman's Dead." Musical craftsmanship has always been their priority.
Dead fans revel in the intimacy of the Dead endeavor. For instance, when a Dead show is announced, close to half
of the tickets are reserved for Deadheads by the Dead's West Coast organization, then distributed through a mail-order
system. Also, at Dead shows there is a section reserved for tapers, whose microphones reach into the air like eager
giraffes. The Dead have officially condoned bootlegging, aware of the importance of tapes to their many fanatical
archivist fans.
of the tickets are reserved for Deadheads by the Dead's West Coast organization, then distributed through a mail-order
system. Also, at Dead shows there is a section reserved for tapers, whose microphones reach into the air like eager
giraffes. The Dead have officially condoned bootlegging, aware of the importance of tapes to their many fanatical
archivist fans.
In such small but critical ways, the psychic distance between the Dead and their audience is closed. They are a
band of six middle-aged men who refuse to lord it over their fans. Dressed in T-shirts and jeans, they stand
unassumingly on the stage, no egos flaring, no limelight, no choreography. Jerry Garcia, pudgy and gentle,
emits an undeniable solar force, a dynamism that is far from sexual.
But the attention stays on the music.
band of six middle-aged men who refuse to lord it over their fans. Dressed in T-shirts and jeans, they stand
unassumingly on the stage, no egos flaring, no limelight, no choreography. Jerry Garcia, pudgy and gentle,
emits an undeniable solar force, a dynamism that is far from sexual.
But the attention stays on the music.
The music itself is discursive and democratic. There are no backup musicians in the Dead; each band member
has the same musical say. The songs, and especially the extended jams within them, are like conversations among
equals, with Phil Lesh playing bass to match the two drummers, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, or perhaps carrying
on a subtle dialogue with Garcia's lead.
has the same musical say. The songs, and especially the extended jams within them, are like conversations among
equals, with Phil Lesh playing bass to match the two drummers, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, or perhaps carrying
on a subtle dialogue with Garcia's lead.
Similarly, no single musical style predominates. Grateful Dead music is an uncanny melting pot of bluegrass, folk, blues,
jazz, reggae, experimental "acid rock," African rhythms . . .
jazz, reggae, experimental "acid rock," African rhythms . . .
Deadheads also thrive on a spontaneity found at Dead shows that flies in the face of MTV-era prefabricated touring.
The band draws impulsively from a song repertoire that can take them through six or so nights without a repeat.
As they reach back to early, trippy tunes like "China Cat Sunflower" and forward to the more poppish strains of
"Touch of Grey," they reward the Deadhead who is attending every show with variety. The Dead also grant themselves
the room to jam on songs as long as they like -- sometimes as long as 30 minutes.
The band draws impulsively from a song repertoire that can take them through six or so nights without a repeat.
As they reach back to early, trippy tunes like "China Cat Sunflower" and forward to the more poppish strains of
"Touch of Grey," they reward the Deadhead who is attending every show with variety. The Dead also grant themselves
the room to jam on songs as long as they like -- sometimes as long as 30 minutes.
With all this flexibility, Dead concerts are free to vary radically in quality. If the inspiration doesn't flow -- the band
members
are tired, say, or the sound system is vexingly muddy -- then it shows. A bad Dead concert can be like a summer cold:
You feel listless and burnt. But a good show, fans will say,
makes the bad ones worth bearing.
members
are tired, say, or the sound system is vexingly muddy -- then it shows. A bad Dead concert can be like a summer cold:
You feel listless and burnt. But a good show, fans will say,
makes the bad ones worth bearing.
The concert experience is the cement between the Grateful Dead and their fans. Except for moments on albums like
"From the Mars Hotel" and "Blues for Allah," the true Dead sound has evaded their studio efforts; they are first and
foremost a performing band. And a Dead concert is a Scene, what some might even call a religious rite. As Deadheads
descend on a city, in full silk-screen regalia, there is a sense of pilgrimage. The preachers are at the altar, spiritual lift is
in the air, magical hymns are in the ears . . .
"From the Mars Hotel" and "Blues for Allah," the true Dead sound has evaded their studio efforts; they are first and
foremost a performing band. And a Dead concert is a Scene, what some might even call a religious rite. As Deadheads
descend on a city, in full silk-screen regalia, there is a sense of pilgrimage. The preachers are at the altar, spiritual lift is
in the air, magical hymns are in the ears . . .
The Dead have turned out to be quintessentially American shamans. They are children of technology and freedom, of
electric guitars and improvisation. They travel across the country, taking their music and business in new and democratic
directions. They offer their fans a dose of group spirit and organic music -- for a night for some, a lifetime for others.
electric guitars and improvisation. They travel across the country, taking their music and business in new and democratic
directions. They offer their fans a dose of group spirit and organic music -- for a night for some, a lifetime for others.
Illustration
PHOTO; CAPTION:1. Grateful Dead leader Jerry Garcia in New York this month. / NEWSDAY PHOTO / DAVID POKRESS
2. The Grateful Dead at one of the nine packed concerts the band gave in New York this month. / NEWSDAY PHOTO
/ DAVID POKRESS
2. The Grateful Dead at one of the nine packed concerts the band gave in New York this month. / NEWSDAY PHOTO
/ DAVID POKRESS
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
[City Edition]
Boston Globe (pre-1997 Fulltext) - Boston, Mass.
Author:
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Morse, Steve
|
Date:
|
Sep 15, 1991
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Start Page:
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A.1
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Section:
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ARTS & FILM
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No Grateful Dead story is complete without telling of the first encounter. A striking first memory came at the Boston Tea
Party in the late '60s. Organist Ron McKernan, alias Pigpen, sang his climactic tune of the night, "Lovelight." Wobbly
after hours of serious hedonism, he fell off the stage in midsong, splatting on the floor. Helped up by a roadie, he dusted
himself off and finished the song as if nothing had happened.
Party in the late '60s. Organist Ron McKernan, alias Pigpen, sang his climactic tune of the night, "Lovelight." Wobbly
after hours of serious hedonism, he fell off the stage in midsong, splatting on the floor. Helped up by a roadie, he dusted
himself off and finished the song as if nothing had happened.
A fitting sign of the band's spirit?
For sure.
That's life in the Grateful Dead -- the stubbornly determined hippie band that's defied the odds of the fickle pop world,
plus the deaths of three keyboardists (Pigpen, Keith Godchaux and Brent Mydland) and the diabetic coma of guitarist
Jerry Garcia to keep making music based on instinct, not commercial greed. For rock's greatest antitrend band, the
song is still the same.
plus the deaths of three keyboardists (Pigpen, Keith Godchaux and Brent Mydland) and the diabetic coma of guitarist
Jerry Garcia to keep making music based on instinct, not commercial greed. For rock's greatest antitrend band, the
song is still the same.
"What keeps it alive is our approach," says guitarist Bob Weir, whose compatriots -- bolstered since their last visit by
new keyboardists Bruce Hornsby and Vince Welnick -- play Boston Garden for six sellout shows starting Friday. "We try
to walk out each night with our eyes open, as if we were playing together completely anew.
new keyboardists Bruce Hornsby and Vince Welnick -- play Boston Garden for six sellout shows starting Friday. "We try
to walk out each night with our eyes open, as if we were playing together completely anew.
"I like to think we're a bit more articulate than back in the '60s, but there was a certain brutal honesty about what we
were doing then," Weir adds from his home near the band's birthplace of San Francisco, where they often jammed in
Golden Gate Park back when Haight-Ashbury was a melting pot of experimentation, not a tourist trap.
were doing then," Weir adds from his home near the band's birthplace of San Francisco, where they often jammed in
Golden Gate Park back when Haight-Ashbury was a melting pot of experimentation, not a tourist trap.
"We're more sophisticated now, but we're still into the moment," Weir says. "We're still into deeply improvisational stuff
where we have no idea where we're going. We do our best to achieve a sort of hallucinogenic realm and just go there
and live a little while."
where we have no idea where we're going. We do our best to achieve a sort of hallucinogenic realm and just go there
and live a little while."
"Still into the moment" is the key, since juggling continuity and continuous reinvention is what the band's about. But the
Dead are not a completely free-form group, whatever some Deadheads like to believe. While they rarely repeat songs
night to night, there's more structure than meets the eye. For a typical concert of two 90-minute-plus sets, they plan the
first song of the first set and the first four of the second. And they always do their ritualized "space jam" in the second,
sparked by dual drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzman.
Dead are not a completely free-form group, whatever some Deadheads like to believe. While they rarely repeat songs
night to night, there's more structure than meets the eye. For a typical concert of two 90-minute-plus sets, they plan the
first song of the first set and the first four of the second. And they always do their ritualized "space jam" in the second,
sparked by dual drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzman.
A few song arrangements have also become formalized, such as "Touch of Grey" (their only Top 10 hit), their many
covers of Bob Dylan tunes (they backed Dylan on a live album four years ago) and their country covers, such as
"Big River" and Merle Haggard's "Mama Tried."
covers of Bob Dylan tunes (they backed Dylan on a live album four years ago) and their country covers, such as
"Big River" and Merle Haggard's "Mama Tried."
But improvisation colors most everything else. The one constant through the years, despite personnel changes, is that
the Dead can resemble a genre-splitting jazz troupe more than a rock band. Maybe that's because they never fit any
pop pigeonhole, since they've ransacked the whole closet of musical influences, from Chuck Berry to Bill Monroe and
back again. Certainly that image is enhanced by their latest chemistry with the jazz-trained Hornsby, who studied at
Boston's Berklee College of Music; and former Tubes keyboardist Welnick, who's been known to play John Coltrane
tunes during sound checks.
the Dead can resemble a genre-splitting jazz troupe more than a rock band. Maybe that's because they never fit any
pop pigeonhole, since they've ransacked the whole closet of musical influences, from Chuck Berry to Bill Monroe and
back again. Certainly that image is enhanced by their latest chemistry with the jazz-trained Hornsby, who studied at
Boston's Berklee College of Music; and former Tubes keyboardist Welnick, who's been known to play John Coltrane
tunes during sound checks.
"There are times when I get goosebumps with this band," says Hornsby, the well-known solo star who has an open
invitation to sit in with the Dead and expects to make 60 of their 80 shows this year, including all the Boston dates.
As a teen-ager, Hornsby joined his brother in a Dead cover band called Bobby Hightest & the Octane Kids in his
hometown of Williamsburg, Va. He first met the Dead in 1986, after they heard he was doing an occasional Dead cover
with his Grammy-winning band, the Range.
invitation to sit in with the Dead and expects to make 60 of their 80 shows this year, including all the Boston dates.
As a teen-ager, Hornsby joined his brother in a Dead cover band called Bobby Hightest & the Octane Kids in his
hometown of Williamsburg, Va. He first met the Dead in 1986, after they heard he was doing an occasional Dead cover
with his Grammy-winning band, the Range.
"There really is a magic some nights," Hornbsy adds from a tour stop in Cleveland. "One thing the Dead do, which not
many bands dare do, is they're willing to wing stuff and play songs with minimal rehearsal. The Dead are a group willing
to screw up to get to the great stuff -- and I admire that. There's a certain recklessness. They don't play it safe in that sense. And there's a time when it all comes together. It can be a certain thing the drummers do" with bassist Phil Lesh. "It has its own build; and the ebb and flow is unique. It's a collective thing that just happens. I can't explain it. And that's one good thing about it. It hasn't been whittled down to a formula."
many bands dare do, is they're willing to wing stuff and play songs with minimal rehearsal. The Dead are a group willing
to screw up to get to the great stuff -- and I admire that. There's a certain recklessness. They don't play it safe in that sense. And there's a time when it all comes together. It can be a certain thing the drummers do" with bassist Phil Lesh. "It has its own build; and the ebb and flow is unique. It's a collective thing that just happens. I can't explain it. And that's one good thing about it. It hasn't been whittled down to a formula."
"There's an immeasurable amount of freedom," adds Welnick, who studied at the San Francisco Conservatory and
played with the Tubes (anyone remember their hit "White Punks on Dope"?) and Todd Rundgren before auditioning
for the band last year, after Mydland's death.
played with the Tubes (anyone remember their hit "White Punks on Dope"?) and Todd Rundgren before auditioning
for the band last year, after Mydland's death.
"The Dead are like a cross between a Dixieland band and a progressive jazz band, blues band, country band and
folk band," says Welnick. "Kind of folkie-country-bluesy-jazzy-progressive-avant-garde."
folk band," says Welnick. "Kind of folkie-country-bluesy-jazzy-progressive-avant-garde."
That ought to do for definitions. Whatever you call it, don't look for it on MTV, or on any of the image-drenched,
computer-programed package tours that have become the rage.
computer-programed package tours that have become the rage.
"These days, there's too much importance placed on trends," says Weir. "And music to me is not a matter of fashion or
trend. It's a matter of feeling. All too often these days, if you're concentrating on whether something is appropriate for the
times or the current trend, you're forgetting about the feeling you're putting into it and what it is you're doing. And the
music comes out sounding like that. It may be polished, it may be glamorous, but it's lacking in depth."
trend. It's a matter of feeling. All too often these days, if you're concentrating on whether something is appropriate for the
times or the current trend, you're forgetting about the feeling you're putting into it and what it is you're doing. And the
music comes out sounding like that. It may be polished, it may be glamorous, but it's lacking in depth."
The Dead are still led by the R&B-based Weir, whose chunky chords marry a garage-rock feel with a Stax/Volt session;
and Garcia, the congenially inscrutable singer/guitarist who grounds the band in country, blues and bluegrass when
he's not traversing psychedelic realms. The two trade songs during a Dead concert and, through subtle nods and
gestures, urge other members to solo.
and Garcia, the congenially inscrutable singer/guitarist who grounds the band in country, blues and bluegrass when
he's not traversing psychedelic realms. The two trade songs during a Dead concert and, through subtle nods and
gestures, urge other members to solo.
"Garcia and I tend to go back and forth and play off of each other a lot," says Hornsby, who moves from piano to
accordion on stage. "That's been happening more and more lately. He likes me to get in his face sometimes and
enter the fray." Adds Hornsby: "I'm not up there to hang out. I'm up there to push it and some nights to jack up the
energy level."
accordion on stage. "That's been happening more and more lately. He likes me to get in his face sometimes and
enter the fray." Adds Hornsby: "I'm not up there to hang out. I'm up there to push it and some nights to jack up the
energy level."
"The nod comes at any time," says Welnick, who grew up in Phoenix and attended Dead shows there. "You never
know. It doesn't happen at the same time in every song, or necessarily ever in the same song again. So you don't
have preconceived notions of what to play and you just do it for better or worse. Maybe they'll be laying back, so you
might play a big synth solo; or maybe play something in half-time, so it doesn't sound so busy."
know. It doesn't happen at the same time in every song, or necessarily ever in the same song again. So you don't
have preconceived notions of what to play and you just do it for better or worse. Maybe they'll be laying back, so you
might play a big synth solo; or maybe play something in half-time, so it doesn't sound so busy."
Sounding busy has reportedly been a problem sometimes for the 1991 Dead. With two drummers, two guitarists and,
on many nights two keyboardists, the potential is there for mayhem. "A lot of my input has been to get people to play
a little less," says Hornsby. "There's so many people on stage now. It's easy to get up there, get excited and overplay.
I'm really aware of it."
on many nights two keyboardists, the potential is there for mayhem. "A lot of my input has been to get people to play
a little less," says Hornsby. "There's so many people on stage now. It's easy to get up there, get excited and overplay.
I'm really aware of it."
"Knowing when not to play is the biggest challenge. . . . And you've got to be careful you don't step on the big fellas,"
says Welnick, meaning Garcia and Weir.
says Welnick, meaning Garcia and Weir.
After all, the big fellas and their rhythm sections have been at this a long time; and it's hard to argue with the Dead's
unique brand of success. The group has been the No. 1 concert draw of the last several years in terms of average
grosses per show. They're playing Boston Garden for an unprecedented six nights, following nine nights at New York's
Madison Square Garden. And the recent tribute album "Deadicated," featuring Dead covers by everyone from
Los Lobos and the Indigo Girls to Elvis Costello and Jane's Addiction, only confirms the group's stature among
their peers.
unique brand of success. The group has been the No. 1 concert draw of the last several years in terms of average
grosses per show. They're playing Boston Garden for an unprecedented six nights, following nine nights at New York's
Madison Square Garden. And the recent tribute album "Deadicated," featuring Dead covers by everyone from
Los Lobos and the Indigo Girls to Elvis Costello and Jane's Addiction, only confirms the group's stature among
their peers.
"They're an absolute phenomenon -- and it's not based on any obvious thing," says a recently chatty Robbie Robertson,
formerly of the Band, who played the legendary 1973 Watkins Glen, N.Y., show with the Dead and Allman Brothers in
front of 600,000 people. "They don't have the greatest vocalists or the greatest songs or the greatest musicians.
There's nothing you can really pinpoint, except they give off a kind of love that's unique in music."
formerly of the Band, who played the legendary 1973 Watkins Glen, N.Y., show with the Dead and Allman Brothers in
front of 600,000 people. "They don't have the greatest vocalists or the greatest songs or the greatest musicians.
There's nothing you can really pinpoint, except they give off a kind of love that's unique in music."
That uniqueness is about to invade Boston Garden, which is a long, long way from Golden Gate Park. Or is it?
Stay tuned.
Illustration
PHOTO; CAPTION:Garcia (left) with newcomers Bruce Hornsby and Vince Welnick.
DAY OF THE DEAD While Garcia & Co. rock the Garden, the lyricist gratefully
works at home
works at home
[City Edition]
Boston Globe (pre-1997 Fulltext) - Boston, Mass.
Author:
|
Gilbert, Matthew
|
Date:
|
Sep 20, 1991
|
Start Page:
|
43
|
Section:
|
ARTS & FILM
|
THE MUSIC SECTION
"A box of rain will ease the pain . . ."
Tonight, while cowboy-adventurers Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Phil Lesh tread the frontier of rock improvisation at
the Boston Garden, one of the most vocal members of the Grateful Dead will be at home sharpening pencils, pruning
roses, or possibly playing cards.
the Boston Garden, one of the most vocal members of the Grateful Dead will be at home sharpening pencils, pruning
roses, or possibly playing cards.
He is the official lyricist of the "band beyond description," painter of the images that are essential to the Dead's
peculiarly psychedelic but earthbound gestalt. While the band also sings Bob Dylan and Chuck Berry classics,
originals by John Barlow, as well as American traditional pieces like "I Know You Rider," the lyrics written by
Robert Hunter inevitably form the definitive script of a Dead show.
peculiarly psychedelic but earthbound gestalt. While the band also sings Bob Dylan and Chuck Berry classics,
originals by John Barlow, as well as American traditional pieces like "I Know You Rider," the lyrics written by
Robert Hunter inevitably form the definitive script of a Dead show.
Some of Hunter's lines, which Viking has collected in a book called "Box of Rain," have slipped permanently into the
mass-cultural memory, most notably "What a long strange trip it's been." Others are found among nouveau-American
folk classics -- "A friend of the Devil is a friend of mine," for instance, or "Come hear Uncle John's Band by the riverside."
Still others, Hunter's most far-flung lines, have given voice to the logic/illogic of LSD: "Dark star crashes / pouring its
light / into ashes."
mass-cultural memory, most notably "What a long strange trip it's been." Others are found among nouveau-American
folk classics -- "A friend of the Devil is a friend of mine," for instance, or "Come hear Uncle John's Band by the riverside."
Still others, Hunter's most far-flung lines, have given voice to the logic/illogic of LSD: "Dark star crashes / pouring its
light / into ashes."
On the phone from his home 25 minutes outside of San Francisco, drawing on light cigarettes through an aqua-filter
("Hot air in, hot air out," he says), Hunter describes the art of songwriting as "freedom within a box. . . . You're in a certain
box and you have to make the best you can out of that." In other words, like the Dead's starlit jams, Hunter's lyrics take
giant leaps but must fit within a tight rhythmical rhyming structure.
("Hot air in, hot air out," he says), Hunter describes the art of songwriting as "freedom within a box. . . . You're in a certain
box and you have to make the best you can out of that." In other words, like the Dead's starlit jams, Hunter's lyrics take
giant leaps but must fit within a tight rhythmical rhyming structure.
Early in his connection with the Dead, which began in the late '60s, Hunter was a traveling band member. "We used to
compose on the road, so there was a purpose for me being there. It was a way to corner people to get songs written."
But over the years, he says, the road has become so all-encompassing that "it's best to get work done at home.
" Either way, he's considered full-fledged Dead, and unlike most nonperforming lyricists, he's listed in the band lineup
on album jackets.
compose on the road, so there was a purpose for me being there. It was a way to corner people to get songs written."
But over the years, he says, the road has become so all-encompassing that "it's best to get work done at home.
" Either way, he's considered full-fledged Dead, and unlike most nonperforming lyricists, he's listed in the band lineup
on album jackets.
Hunter says that working with Garcia and the Dead is a predictably unpredictable process. "Any way that you can think
of coming up with a song we've done it. Sometimes a jam during rehearsal has turned into some lyrics, where the whole
band and myself have worked together. That's a very fine way. Everybody really feels a sort of common ownership of
a song."
of coming up with a song we've done it. Sometimes a jam during rehearsal has turned into some lyrics, where the whole
band and myself have worked together. That's a very fine way. Everybody really feels a sort of common ownership of
a song."
"Dark Star," the eternal Dead classic that has yielded some of the most cosmic of jams, was born by such committee,
Hunter says. "I had just joined the band. We were in Rio Nido down on the Russian River and I was in my cabin, and
I heard this far-out music coming from the hall where they were going to be playing, and I grabbed my pencil and ran
over there and started writing."
Hunter says. "I had just joined the band. We were in Rio Nido down on the Russian River and I was in my cabin, and
I heard this far-out music coming from the hall where they were going to be playing, and I grabbed my pencil and ran
over there and started writing."
Other times, Hunter brings his words to Garcia, who then sets them to music. While Hunter composes with guitar in hand,
he doesn't play his music for Garcia. "The most effective songs," he says, "come up when Jerry has worked out the
changes, and gives me something which is not what I would think of. I used to give him tapes with my version of how
something went -- and there came a point when he said, `You know, I'd just as soon not have this stuff. Because it
takes a while to get your changes out of my head, man.' " Hunter laughs.
he doesn't play his music for Garcia. "The most effective songs," he says, "come up when Jerry has worked out the
changes, and gives me something which is not what I would think of. I used to give him tapes with my version of how
something went -- and there came a point when he said, `You know, I'd just as soon not have this stuff. Because it
takes a while to get your changes out of my head, man.' " Hunter laughs.
Other times, Garcia or another band member will approach Hunter with a set of chord changes and scat-like
phrasing. Hunter will then color in the lyrics. This was the case recently with "So Many Roads," a new, as-yet-unplayed
song with Garcia. It also happened with "Box of Rain," which he wrote for a melody by bassist Phil Lesh more than
20 years ago. "I had scat stuff to work with. So that I heard Phil singing, just minus the words. I knew exactly what
it would sound like then." The song, highly melodic and plaintive, was written for Lesh's father, who was dying of
cancer.
phrasing. Hunter will then color in the lyrics. This was the case recently with "So Many Roads," a new, as-yet-unplayed
song with Garcia. It also happened with "Box of Rain," which he wrote for a melody by bassist Phil Lesh more than
20 years ago. "I had scat stuff to work with. So that I heard Phil singing, just minus the words. I knew exactly what
it would sound like then." The song, highly melodic and plaintive, was written for Lesh's father, who was dying of
cancer.
Hunter feels that the song "Box of Rain" has held up since its creation. "You can listen to it many times over the
years and it will go ahead and fluctuate with you; it'll change with you. As opposed to say, `Itsy Bitsy Teeny
Weeny Yellow Polka Dot Bikini,' which will probably mean the same thing 20 or 30 years later." Other songs
Hunter thinks have withstood the years are "Ripple" and "Stella Blue." "When I'm asked a question about specific
songs," he says, "I mostly go blank."
years and it will go ahead and fluctuate with you; it'll change with you. As opposed to say, `Itsy Bitsy Teeny
Weeny Yellow Polka Dot Bikini,' which will probably mean the same thing 20 or 30 years later." Other songs
Hunter thinks have withstood the years are "Ripple" and "Stella Blue." "When I'm asked a question about specific
songs," he says, "I mostly go blank."
As a songwriting team, Hunter and Garcia have gained a reputation not unlike durable, influential duos such as
Mick Jagger-Keith Richards and Elton John-Bernie Taupin. Earlier this year, a tribute album called "Deadicated"
featured mainstream artists like Elvis Costello, Suzanne Vega and Midnight Oil performing a number of
Hunter-Garcia songs. "I was just knocked out," Hunter says about the best-selling release. "It was like
somebody sent me chocolates, roses and a Jaguar all at once. . . . It was just such a pleasure to hear
someone else do the material, and to feel that the material did have an independent existence. It validated it."
Mick Jagger-Keith Richards and Elton John-Bernie Taupin. Earlier this year, a tribute album called "Deadicated"
featured mainstream artists like Elvis Costello, Suzanne Vega and Midnight Oil performing a number of
Hunter-Garcia songs. "I was just knocked out," Hunter says about the best-selling release. "It was like
somebody sent me chocolates, roses and a Jaguar all at once. . . . It was just such a pleasure to hear
someone else do the material, and to feel that the material did have an independent existence. It validated it."
When the Dead tour -- which is nearly always -- they play the older songs as frequently as the newer ones.
A glance at a recent song list will show titles reaching back to the late '60s, such as "China Cat Sunflower,"
which Hunter mailed to the Dead before he'd even joined up. For Hunter, this causes some creative frustration.
"The fire that was, well fine. But it doesn't keep you warm in the present. Not a writer, anyway. It does the band
because they're out playing that stuff.
A glance at a recent song list will show titles reaching back to the late '60s, such as "China Cat Sunflower,"
which Hunter mailed to the Dead before he'd even joined up. For Hunter, this causes some creative frustration.
"The fire that was, well fine. But it doesn't keep you warm in the present. Not a writer, anyway. It does the band
because they're out playing that stuff.
"There's kind of an idea flying around that the band wants new material, and maybe were going to take some
time off and get that done this year. And if that happens -- ooh, to have that excitement again. It's something
dynamic for me to do. I'm sort of hanging here on the vine turning into a raisin."
time off and get that done this year. And if that happens -- ooh, to have that excitement again. It's something
dynamic for me to do. I'm sort of hanging here on the vine turning into a raisin."
Meanwhile, Hunter has "drifted off into other directions," which includes writing songs for a band called Zero,
as well as a pair of songs for Bob Dylan. Hunter has also just released a Rykodisc CD called "Box of Rain,"
a live solo outing on which the songwriter sings a group of his Dead songs (he's toured alone and with bands
like Comfort since the late '70s). He has also just published a book of poetry with Viking called "Night Cadre"
and finished a long, commissioned poem called "Idiot's Delight" for Hanumen Press, which publishes work
by writers like Jack Kerouac and John Ashbery. But his poetic endeavors, he says, are "rather minor
compared to the Grateful Dead."
as well as a pair of songs for Bob Dylan. Hunter has also just released a Rykodisc CD called "Box of Rain,"
a live solo outing on which the songwriter sings a group of his Dead songs (he's toured alone and with bands
like Comfort since the late '70s). He has also just published a book of poetry with Viking called "Night Cadre"
and finished a long, commissioned poem called "Idiot's Delight" for Hanumen Press, which publishes work
by writers like Jack Kerouac and John Ashbery. But his poetic endeavors, he says, are "rather minor
compared to the Grateful Dead."
"Night Cadre," which he wrote in a three-year period, "was a way of working out a hard and difficult time.
I was trying to put pieces of my life back together and getting into some serious stuff, and that's done.
I don't intend to be the world's darkest poet. I've got another book of poetry completed since, and its
considerably brighter."
I was trying to put pieces of my life back together and getting into some serious stuff, and that's done.
I don't intend to be the world's darkest poet. I've got another book of poetry completed since, and its
considerably brighter."
Hunter is perhaps the most well-read of rock lyricists, and his songs are deeply allusive. All over his lyrics are
references to American and English history, Chinese proverbs and Biblical events. "Roll away the dew," for
instance, the exquisitely enigmatic line from "Franklin's Tower," has its roots in rolling away the stone from
Jesus' grave.
references to American and English history, Chinese proverbs and Biblical events. "Roll away the dew," for
instance, the exquisitely enigmatic line from "Franklin's Tower," has its roots in rolling away the stone from
Jesus' grave.
"Whatever comes in goes through my own little matrix, and if it impresses me sufficiently, it will probably
enter my work somewhere. . . . You digest things and they become your own. And my readers will digest
what I do, and it will come out in their work. It's nice. This is the unbroken chain."
enter my work somewhere. . . . You digest things and they become your own. And my readers will digest
what I do, and it will come out in their work. It's nice. This is the unbroken chain."
But even with his literary links, Hunter remains a unique talent, a sculptor whose finely sanded lines
resemble nothing else on the rock 'n' roll landscape. "I can touch that dreamspace," he says. "The stuff you
dream is kind of close to consciousness for me, which is a bit of a talent and in normal life it's a bit of a disability.
I've got a little tunnel into my subconscious . . . There's a space you get into. I know when I'm there. And I know
that I couldn't manufacture it."
resemble nothing else on the rock 'n' roll landscape. "I can touch that dreamspace," he says. "The stuff you
dream is kind of close to consciousness for me, which is a bit of a talent and in normal life it's a bit of a disability.
I've got a little tunnel into my subconscious . . . There's a space you get into. I know when I'm there. And I know
that I couldn't manufacture it."
Illustration
PHOTO; CAPTION:Jerry Garcia, left, and Bob Weir, below, are highly visible members of the band. Robert
Hunter, far left, performs his magic far away from the madding crowd. / PHOT
Hunter, far left, performs his magic far away from the madding crowd. / PHOT
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