Archive for May, 2006

Dead to the World 5/31/06

Wednesday, May 31st, 2006

Bill Graham introduces Mickey and Billy
Mickey and Billy introduce Hamza el-Din
Hamza plays two songs
Ollin Arrageed->
Promised Land
Sugaree
- Grateful Dead 10/21/78 Winterland, San Francisco

Bob Weir and Mark Karan in the KPFA studio

Interview with Mickey Hart and Ram Rod 3/3/83 (click here for additional audio from this interview; text transcript is posted here)

Lost Sailor->
Saint of Circumstance
Bob Weir and Ratdog 3/31/06 Casino Ballroom, Hampton Beach NH

Kashmir – The Waybacks with Bob Weir 4/29/06 Merlefest, Wilkesboro NC

Bury Me StandingBob Weir and Ratdog, Evening Moods

Big IronThe Waybacks with Bob Weir 4/28/06 Merlefest, Wilkesboro NC

Grateful Dead Hour #923

Sunday, May 28th, 2006

Week of May 29, 2006

Part 1 31:30
Grateful Dead 10/28/85 Fox Theater, Atlanta
ROW JIMMY
PROMISED LAND

David Gans and Friends 8/13/05 Gathering of the Vibes, Mariaville NY
SING ME BACK HOME
Dave Alvin, West of the West
LOSER

Part 2 23:50
Grateful Dead 10/28/85 Fox Theater, Atlanta
SCARLET BEGONIAS->
TOUCH OF GREY
MAN SMART, WOMAN SMARTER

The friends who joined me for “Sing Me Back Home” on 8/13/05: Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay, vocals; Klyph Black, bass; Jeff Mattson, guitar; Tom Circosta, vocals; Rob Koritz, drum. Klyph, Jeff and Tom – all members of the Zen Tricksters – have started a band with Donna Jean called Kettle Joe’s Psychedelic Swamp Revue. Also in the band are Mookie Siegel (David Nelson Band), Wendy Lanter, and Tricksters drummer Joe Ciarvella.

Click on this photo for some images from last year’s Gathering of the Vibes:
Herbie and Bobby
This year’s Gathering takes place August 17-20 in the usual place: Mariaville, New York. Bob Weir and Ratdog, Yonder Mountain String Band, Keller Williams, Hot Tuna, Burning Spear, Zero, and many more! I’ll be there, too.

Support for the Grateful Dead Hour comes this week from eDeadshop, an online store offering t-shirts, hats, stickers, tye dyes, gifts and other rock and roll items – officially licensed merchandise from the Grateful Dead, Phish, Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, Pink Floyd and many others.

And from the Black Crowes, on tour all summer long with Robert Randolph & The Family Band and Drive-By Truckers. The Black Crowes nationwide tour starts Saturday, June 10th at White River Amphitheatre in Seattle and ends August 12th at Red Rocks. more information at blackcrowes.com and livenation.com

Contest is closed

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

I’ve got my 20 winners. Thanks for writing in, folks, and thanks for reading the logblog!

logblog giveaway: Ratdog Live CDs

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

I’ve got a small stack of CDs to give away, courtesy of Ratdog Live.

It’s the 3/31/06 show at the Hampton Beach NH Casino, featured in GD Hour #922.

Disc 1
1. Maggie’s Farm > (14:50)
2. Shakedown Street > (11:40)
3. Big River (5:52)
4. She Says > (8:59)
5. Liberty (7:04)
6. Lost Sailor > (10:13)
7. Saint of Circumstance (8:07)
8. Hell in a Bucket (9:34)

Disc 2
1. El Paso (8:10)
2. Me and My Uncle (5:13)
3. Even So > (10:12)
4. October Queen > (14:15)
5. Uncle John’s Band (10:16)
6. West LA Fadeaway (12:26)

Disc 3
1. Jam > (6:59)
2. Come Together (7:02)
3. Sugar Magnolia (11:12)
4. E: Attics of My Life (6:41)

If you want a copy, email me the name and nationality of Ratdog’s bass player. First come, first served.

And please do pay a visit to Ratdog Live – they have most of Ratdog’s live shows available for purchase, and the mixes sound very good to my ears.

Grateful Dead Hour #922

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Week of May 22, 2006

Part 1 28:47
Grateful Dead 10/28/85 Fox Theater, Atlanta
SUGAREE
KANSAS CITY
FENNARIO
MY BROTHER ESAU

Part 2 27:33
Grateful Dead 10/28/85 Fox Theater, Atlanta
RAMBLE ON ROSE
CASSIDY
Bob Weir and Ratdog 3/31/06 Casino Ballroom, Hampton Beach NH
JAM->
COME TOGETHER

The Ratdog show is available from Ratdog Live.

Support for the Grateful Dead Hour comes this week from the 10,000 Lakes Festival, July 19 through 22 in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. 10KLF features Phil Lesh & Friends, Trey Anastasio, The String Cheese Incident, The Benevento Russo Duo featuring Mike Gordon, Keller Williams, Railroad Earth, Umphrey’s McGee, MMW, and many more. Information on camping and and tickets at www.10KLF.com

And from New England Framing & Fine Art, presenting original artwork by Jerry Garcia, Stanley Mouse, and Robert Crumb, handmade Grateful Dead mandalas by Gordon Merrick. The art show runs at their studio in Stowe, Vermont, through June 30. The opening celebration on May 27 includes live music. More information is available at www.mainlymasters.com

Additional support comes this week from The Black Crowes, on tour all summer long with Robert Randolph & The Family Band and Drive-By Truckers. The Black Crowes nationwide tour starts Saturday, June 10th at White River Amphitheatre in Seattle and ends August 12th at Red Rocks. more information at blackcrowes.com and livenation.com

“Two Cents” re the NSA

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

I’m in the SF Chronicle’s “Two Cents” reader-response column again today.
The question was, “Ever say anything on the phone you don’t want the NSA to hear?”
My favorite answer was from Jo-Anna Pippen:

I’m sure in the last four years I’ve said: “Michael Moore, shotgun, Internet, ACLU, Berkeley, indicted, Hillary, drugs, cell, data, gay marriage, SpongeBob, peace, France, oligarchy, bomb, cell, Cheney, contraception, AT&T, Democrat, 29 percent, White House, turd blossom, tequila, Jeb, firewall, NBC and New York Times.” I’m probably on a watch list already.


Read ‘em all.

Support the Grateful Dead Hour

Saturday, May 20th, 2006

Hello, friends and listeners -

This is another of my periodic requests for direct support from the people who listen to the GD Hour.

The business is reasonably stable, on what I’d characterize as a very gradual downslope over the last few years. But we’ve had a couple of financial hits recently – I had to replace my main computer just before the end of the year, and I had two very large repair bills to deal with in the last month or so. There isn’t much headroom in our cash flow over here.

So I’m asking all of you who listen to the show to make a “radio shareware” contribution to help keep the GD Hour alive.

You can send a check or money order to:

Truth and Fun, Inc.
484 Lake Park Ave. #102
Oakland CA 94610-2730

or use PayPal

You can always find this information online at gdhour.com/support.html

Thank you for listening, and thank you for your support!

One more thing: the GD Hour is always looking for underwriters to support the program – ideally, on a long-term basis. This is public-radio style underwriting, which is not advertising per se, but if you have a product or service that you’d like the listeners to know about, you can make them aware with this sort of message. If you’d like to know more about sponsoring the Grateful Dead Hour on a national basis, short- or long-term, please contact Dave Weissman.

Thank you for listening, and thank you for any support you can give us.

Happy birthday, Mr. Gravy

Saturday, May 20th, 2006

Tonight is Wavy Gravy’s birthday party at the Berkeley Community Theater, as always a benefit for SEVA.
C.W. Nevius writes about Wavy in today’s San Francisco Chronicle.

Compassion comes easy to this clown

A few excerpts:

….this has been a remarkable run, from making announcements atop the stage at Woodstock to having Ben & Jerry’s name a flavor of ice cream after him.

It was tasty, too.

With no visible means of support to speak of — Gravy calls himself “an activist, clown and former frozen dessert” — he’s not only lived a life in full, but filled it with an extraordinary zest and good deeds.

[...]

And then there’s the time he was poetry director at the Gaslight in Greenwich Village.

“I convinced the owner to bring on a kid named Bob Dylan.”

Dylan, by the way, wrote “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” on Gravy’s typewriter. So says Gravy, who says Salvador Dali stopped by and “made a salad.”

Is it any wonder that documentarian Michelle Esrick is on the Gravy train? Her film, “Saint Misbehavin’: The Life and Time of Wavy Gravy,” is due in 2007. Good luck. Editing his life into feature-film length won’t be easy….

I’ve had many opportunities to hang out with Wavy over the years – I’ve played festivals where he emceed, for example – and I’ve produced radio announcements for his various events over the years. I refer to him as a “regional saint,” for some reason. He’s a great character, and he’s done a hell of a lot of good in the world.
Happy birthday, other boss. I hope you have a great party tonight.

Interview with Mickey Hart and Ramrod 3/3/83

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

(Click here for audio excerpts. This transcript is permanently archived at gdhour.com)

Mickey Hart and Ram Rod
March 3, 1983
Interview with David Gans
San Rafael, California

Hart: I have a responsibility to Ram Rod. He knows what I’m capable of. If I don’t give everything, I think I’d be letting him down. He takes my drums and he hauls them all over the country, sets them up – and this is not a glamorous job, man – tears them down and brings them back as good as he took them out, so we’re able to be the Grateful Dead. I play for Ram Rod first. I play for Jerry and Bob and Billy. These are the people you play for first. If I played bad, it would be really hard to look at him if I gave up … if I wimp out, I’m not able to look at him. You couldn’t pay him enough if he saw me after 25 minutes giving up. These guys are the best, man. We have to perform for them. They’re as good as we are. Don’t think they’re not, man.

What’s in it for you, Ram Rod?

Ram Rod: What’s in it for me? I like it…. I get off when everything’s working right. The music melting together, fitting together, the musicians playing and not arguing while they’re playing. It only takes one guy to say, “I’m making sure that nothing goes further than me, right here.” Any one guy can stop it from going. I know that I can make the music bad if I want to, just by thinking. I’ve done it, to see if it’s true. But then, I’ve been listening and letting my consciousness do it for 15 years or so and after a while, it’s undeniable. After a while you realize that it does make a difference, whether you’re sitting there listening to it or not. There are times when I’ve left the stage because I’ve felt that my consciousness was keeping it from happening.

When those guys are out there playing, it’s consciousness working together. And when the music is really happening you don’t stop to think about what you’re going to play, ’cause if you stop to think about the next note, it’s gone past you. It goes through everybody. Whether you’re playing it or not, if you are there and the person who is playing it is aware of you being there, you’re part of it – and if he’s worried about you being there, what you’re thinking, you’re interrupting his consciousness. You’re keeping him from flowing with the other people’s minds.

Hart: I’ve never yelled at Ram Rod in 15 years, never raised my voice. Because he feels worse about messing up or not giving his all than I would. I wouldn’t even call him on it.

Ram Rod: I’m not the person in the spotlight … If I think it’s hard on me, what’s it like for the guy standing out there?

Hart: If my cymbal is a half-inch off, I could cut my knuckles. That’s the responsibility he has. He’ll take brass, glass and wood out and bring it back. That’s not an easy task. We just used to have drums. Now we have all these little percussion instruments that we take out, instruments that weigh hundreds of pounds as well as ounces. And they’re all brought back as good as they went.

Ram Rod: It means a lot to a musician when he’s playing and he looks back and sees somebody back there … you don’t have to worry if somebody is paying attention.

Hart: You never have to tell Ram Rod what to do; he’s self-motivated. Everybody in the Grateful Dead is self-motivated. Nobody is anybody’s boss.

Ram Rod: Someone once in an interview asked Steve [Parish], “Who’s the boss?” Steve said, “The situation is the boss.”

You guys all know what you’ve got to do.

Hart: He really cares. I never have to tell him twice. Once and that’s it. It’s the best possible situation to be in as a drummer, to have support like that.

… There’s a responsibility we have to our audience, but first we have it to ourselves and our brothers. We try to create an intimate atmosphere on the stage first. We know if we do that it can be sent to a million people…. It’s got to start right there. I play for Jerry, the guy right in front of me. We get it, they’ll get it. Don’t ever forget that. Sometimes people forget it and they play for the crowd, and that’s when it gets to be a show-biz trip.

And then there are those nights when no one can put their finger in the right place.

Hart: Right, there are those times when nobody can hold it.

Ram Rod: Yeah, and you start thinking about, “Have we given them enough?”

Hart: We’ll try harder the next time … the next one always has a great effort.

Ram Rod: People around here hate fuckin’ up twice the same way.

Hart: We don’t dig losin’ it. We don’t dig going all this way and playing bad music. That’s the worst.

You know what else this means? Do you know how few people in this country have jobs that they give a damn about?

Hart: Hardly any.

Ram Rod: … I didn’t come here and get this job …

Hart: He didn’t have a choice.

Ram Rod: But you’re right. There are a lot of people … doing something that they hate.

Hart: We’re lucky…. We couldn’t. I think there’s a craziness in all of us, that we couldn’t…. I think the Grateful Dead can stay valid because of the unique ingredients that we have. We’re still a little crazy, individually…. We just have to… maintain our own level of excellence. It just so happens it might be high enough to get away with for the next 20 years. Maybe…. We work for a living. You got to make sure you understand that. We’re a working band.

[Ram Rod] seems to live by Mark Twain’s statement, “It’s better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.”

Ram Rod: Absolutely … In fact, keeping my mouth shut is one of my best qualities. Robert Hunter said one time, “Ram Rod never says anything, but every time he does he’s wrong.”

I hope you didn’t lose any sleep over that.

Ram Rod: Oh no. Any time Hunter says anything about me I’m flattered. I could die happy just knowing I knew that man.

Bill [Graham] was saying somethin about the audience, how they talk about you guys like family members. “Phil’s putting on a bit of weight.” It’s not the same as checking out Keith Richards’ boots.

Hart: It’s not judgmental or critical. They don’t judge the Grateful Dead in those terms.

There are more subtle things to look at. That’s why when there’s a three-night run, I’ll sometimes watch one whole night from way down front and sometimes I’ll sit way in the back. Sometimes I’ll go to a gig as a Healy person and listen from where he is, and sometimes I’ll go way up in the corner and see how far the vibes go.

Ram Rod: I’ll watch ballgames that way too. I’ll watch one or two guys, watch how they play. That’s how you find out if the guy is a good lineman.

Hart: Music is such a magical potion. The ingredients that goes into making really great music, most people don’t know what they are. We don’t.

Ram Rod: The Grateful Dead have never heard themselves play.

Hart: It’s the one perspective that we don’t have.

This music knows how to get higher than a lot of other music.

Hart: It has a certain kind of friendliness to it.

Ram Rod: We’re so lucky to do what we like doing.

Hart: Sometimes it really is incredible.

Ram Rod: Sometimes it just rocks your socks.

Hart: Sometimes it’s very big and you really have to take note of it. Sometimes it’s mediocre.

Ram Rod: Sometimes it’s a struggle, but very seldom is it bad.

Hart: It can be boring, it could be lackluster, without inspiration. But sometimes you can get to places that will keep you going for those other times.

Saunders-Garcia “Well-Matched”

Tuesday, May 16th, 2006

Fantasy Records has just released Well-Matched: The Best of Merl Saunders and Jerry Garcia. I picked the tracks, and Blair Jackson wrote the excellent liner notes.

Mystery Train • Lonely Avenue • Merl’s Tune • Positively Fourth St. • After Midnight • Welcome to the Basement • Space • I Second That Emotion (previously unreleased) • The Harder They Come.

Linda Kalin and Deb Sibony designed the package, which is in the shape of a matchbook. Nice photos, too! (Note: the matches in the photo are the front page of the booklet.)

Well-Matched