Archive for December, 2007

Joint photo show

Monday, December 31st, 2007


Hanging the show, originally uploaded by dgans.

Rita and I hung our joint photo show at the Nomad Cafe today. It’ll be up the entire month of January.

Water Textures
Photographs by Rita Hurault and David Gans

Nomad Cafe
6500 Shattuck Avenue, Oakland CA

Through January 2008
Reception Sunday, January 13, 2-4pm

A roving band of intellectual thugs?

Monday, December 31st, 2007


DSC03941, originally uploaded by lesterlyn.

Photo by Lynda Lester of last year’s Grateful Dead caucus at the Southwest/Texas Popular Culture Association meeting in Albuquerque NM. It’s a wonderful gathering – smart people present real scholarly papers on Dead-related subject matter, and we all attend and discuss; in the evenings we dine together and talk some more!

The 2008 caucus happens February 13-16. You could join us! More info here. Lynda’s complete photo gallery here

New Mutilaudio

Monday, December 31st, 2007

I did another of my Mutilaudio experiments last night, exploring the musical commonalities of “US Blues” and “Scarlet Begonias”.

It needs a title. Suggestions welcome.

Donna the Buffalo NYE webcast

Monday, December 31st, 2007

For those of you that were unable to make it, we will be webcasting the Donna the Buffalo show from Huntsville Alabama starting at 10 pm cst.

The chatroom will open early, and you can listen at www.haveyouherdradio.com

Please bear with us as we work thru any technical issues that may arise.

Have a Safe & Happy New Years
Peace, Robert

www.haveyouherdradio.com

“Let love cover the earth, like water covers the sea.
If you’re gonna do it, do it for love.” J.P.

XRT’s Farewell to the GDH

Monday, December 31st, 2007

IT’S THE END OF AN ERA.
“ALMOST 20 YEARS SINCE THE DEAD HOUR DEBUTED ON XRT: JANUARY 12, 1988.
SINCE THEN, IT’S A BEEN LONG STRANGE TRIP. (sorry)
AND WE’VE ENJOYED EVERY MINUTE OF BEING
THE RADIO HOME OF THE GRATEFUL DEAD HOUR ON XRT.
NOWADAYS, YOU’VE NEVER HAD MORE OPTIONS
FOR LISTENING TO THE DEAD HOUR ON XRT.
AT 10 O’CLOCK.
ON SUNDAY NIGHT.
SO, I CALLED DAVID GANS TO CONGRATULATE HIM
ON THE 1000TH SHOW.
AND, I EXPRESSED MY APPRECIATION FOR THE DEAD’S SUCCESSFULLY AND THOROUGHLY TAKING ADVANTAGE OF
THE NEW TECHNOLOGY – DIGITAL, SATELLITE, etc.
NOW YOU CAN ACCESS THE DEAD’S INCREDIBLE ARCHIVES.
THRU THEIR WEB SITE , OR FOR THOSE WHO PAY TO SUBSCRIBE
TO SATELLITE RADIO, YOU’RE HEARING HISTORIC FULL-LENGTH
DEAD PERFORMANCES, PRETTY MUCH ON DEMAND!
THAT’S INCREDIBLE!
SO AFTER 20 YEARS ON XRT:
FRIENDS: ENJOY THE DEAD – WHENEVER YOU WANT TO –
THRU WHATEVER MEDIUM YOU PREFER.
WE’VE HAD A GREAT TIME BEING YOUR DEAD RADIO COMPANION.
WE’LL STILL BE HERE, WHENEVER YOU WANT US:
93XRT.COM, 93XRT, AND 93XRT HD1.”

-Norm Winer
WXRT Program Director
Sunday, Dec. 23, 2007

Jug band music documentary

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Last night we saw a terrific documentary on Jug Band music, “Chasin’ Gus’ Ghost” by Todd Kwait. Anyone who is interested in the Grateful Dead will want to see this film, because the Grateful Dead began as a jug band and retained a lot of material from that era throughout their career – “Viola Lee Blues,” “New Minglewood Blues,” “Big Railroad Blues,” “She’s on The Road Again,” “KC Moan,” “Stealin,” “Overseas Stomp.”

Some info from the web site:

The movie is written and directed by independent filmmaker Todd Kwait, and includes interviews and live performances by John Sebastian from the Lovin’ Spoonful, Jim Kweskin, Geoff Muldaur, Bill Keith, Maria Muldaur, and the late Fritz Richmond from the influential Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Bob Weir from the Grateful Dead, Charlie Musselwhite, Paul Rishell and Annie Raines, plus many more artists who were influenced by the great jug band musicians from our past.

This movie is a historical retrospective that spans the globe and honors many great talents from yesterday and today. Filming for Chasin’ Gus’ Ghost took the crew to Japan, Sweden, and Kingston, Ontario. Closer to home, filming took place in Northern California; Woodstock, New York; Portland, Oregon; Memphis and western Tennessee; Cambridge, Massachusetts; Louisville, Kentucky; and Cleveland, Ohio.

The film is not in wide release. There’s a schedule of events on the web site – be on the lookout for a showing in your area.

Bob Weir is one of the musicians interviewed in the film. “Jug band music is the mud that my toes are planted in, quote simply. It means that much to me.” Bobby goes on to tell how he met Jerry Garcia on New Year’s Eve of 1964 and how that led to the creation of Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions. Grateful Dead Records released a live performance of Mother McCree’s a few years ago, but it appears to be unavailable at the moment.

John Sebastian is a central figure in the film and in the jug band revival of the ’60s. Ever hear of the Even Dozen Jug Band? According to Wikipedia:

The Even Dozen Jug Band was founded in 1963 by Stefan Grossman (solo country blues and ragtime guitarist) and Peter Siegel (old-timey guitarist and producer) in New York. Other members were David Grisman (noted bluegrass/newgrass mandolinist), Steve Katz (later with Blood, Sweat and Tears and Blues Project), Maria Muldaur (then Maria d’Amato), Joshua Rifkin (arranger of Scott Joplin Ragtimes), and John Sebastian (later with the Lovin’ Spoonful and now a solo artist).

Chasin’ Gus’ Ghost takes us back to the 1920s, to the dawn of “Race music” records. Gus Cannon is the eponym of the film, and Cannon’s Jug Stompers was one of the most important recording acts of the era. You’ll also learn about Will Shade and the Memphis Jug Band.

I am awaiting clearance to play some audio from the movie on the GD Hour, and I’m hoping we can do a program with the director, Todd Kwait, on Sirius soon.

UPDATE: By coincidence, I read this definition of jug band music in a Vanity Fair article on Michelle Phillips:

jug-band music (pre-Depression-era blues, hokeyed up for vaudeville)

Grateful Dead Hour #1006

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Week of December 31, 2007

Part 1 23:00
Grateful Dead 6/30/74 Civic Center Arena, Springfield MA
NOT FADE AWAY->
GOIN’ DOWN THE ROAD FEELIN’ BAD->
ONE MORE SATURDAY NIGHT

Part 2 31:55
American Beauty Project 11/16/07 UMass Amherst
SUGAR MAGNOLIA
NEW SPEEDWAY BOOGIE
TILL THE MORNING COMES
RIPPLE

Grateful Dead, Road Trips vol. 1 no. 1: Fall 79
MORNING DEW (11/8/79)

GD Watkins Glen photos

Friday, December 28th, 2007


WG53B, originally uploaded by grant_gouldon.

There are several “group pools” of Dead-related photos on flickr, my online photo home. This morning I found a stash of images from Watkins Glen (July 1973) posted by Grant Gouldon. Click on the previous sentence or the image above and poke around a bit!

Gouldon’s collection is great – not just the band onstage, but the people in the audience, too.

And here’s a set of photos from Buffalo ’73 by the same photographer.

Here’s my own collection of GD shots on Flickr.

Jeb Puryear CD release party online

Friday, December 28th, 2007

One of my favorite musicians in the world, Jeb Puryear of Donna the Buffalo, has a new solo CD, Hopes and Dreams.

From Robert Chrismer:

We will be doing a videocast of the Jeb Puryear CD release party at the T.I.C.C. Owego, NY. 12-28-2007

Show starts at 7 pm EST, video feed should be active by 6:45.

You can watch here or listen here.

Don’t forget to join us in the chat room.

Peace, Robert

“Let love cover the earth, like water covers the sea.
If you’re gonna do it, do it for love.” J.P.

“Lady of Carlisle” question

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I was poking around the net looking for info on “Lady of Carlisle” (getting ready to play an Ian and Sylvia recording of it on the radio), and I found this:

(excerpt)

Then up spoke this fair young lady,
Saying “I can’t be but one man’s bride
But if you’ll come back tomorrow morning,
On this case we will decide. ”

She ordered her a span of horses,
A span of horses at her command;
And down the road these three did travel
Till they come to the lions’ den.

There she stopped and there she halted
These two soldiers stood gazing around,
And for the space of half an hour,
This young lady lies speechless on the ground.

And when she did recover,
Threw her fan down in the lion’s den
Saying, “Which of you to gain a lady
Will return her fan again?”

(In Hunter’s version, we meet the soldier and the sailor first. Then the lady arrives, by way of a door in the fire – how cool is that! This bit of research is making me love “Lady With a Fan” all over again.)

Anyway, I’m wondering what’s up with this bit -

There she stopped and there she halted
These two soldiers stood gazing around,
And for the space of half an hour,
This young lady lies speechless on the ground.

They’re parked in front of a lion’s den. The men are gazing around, presumably on the lookout for lions, and she TAKES A NAP?

I don’t geddit.