Archive for May, 2008

DG’s New poster

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Roy Schneider, a fine musician as well as a talented cartoonist, recently retired from drawing his daily strip, The Humble Stumble. That meant he had time to do this tour poster for me.

DG by Roy Schneider

Roy is about to put out his second CD, Roy Schneider and the Roadside Turtle Rescue. Watch for it on his site and on CDBaby.

New online music store: Amie Street

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

I just started selling my music on AmieStreet.com, and to kick things off they are giving my fans $5 to download my music.

All you have to do is click on the link below to get $5 to download my music or songs from tens of thousands of other great independent artists.

Just click this link and you’ll be all set!

Go directly to my records with this link. Or, uh, see below!

Thanks for checking it out!

SpringFest photos

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Dwight Holmes forwarded the link to these photos of Sunday, March 30 at the Suwannee SpringFest when Peter and Lorin Rowan, Randy Judy and I joined Donna the Buffalo for a wild “Iko Iko.”

Suwannee SpringFest photos by Amanda Abercrombie

Grateful Dead Hour #1027

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Week of May 26, 2008

Part 1 29:43
Donna Jean and the Tricksters
ME AND KETTLE JOE
Railroad Earth, Amen Corner
BEEN DOWN THIS ROAD
CROSSING THE GAP
YOU NEVER KNOW

Part 2 26:12
Grateful Dead 1/7/78 Golden Hall, San Diego CA
EL PASO->
LET IT GROW->
PROMISED LAND

New CD from one of my favorite bands, Railroad Earth, and a long cut from Donna Jean and the Tricksters.

Support for the Grateful Dead Hour comes this week from:

The 10,000 Lakes Festival, July 23 through 26 in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. Phil Lesh & Friends, Mickey Hart Band, Dark Star Orchestra, The Flaming Lips, George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic, Michael Franti & Spearhead, and over fifty additional acts.

The All Good Music Festival and Campout July 11 – 13 in Masontown, West Virginia featuring Phil Lesh & Friends, Widespread Panic, Gov’t Mule, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Medeski/Scofield/Martin & Wood, Keller Williams, Dark Star Orchestra, Mike Gordon, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi, Tea Leaf Green & dozens more, with no overlapping sets.

The Lazy River Music & Arts Festival June 27 – 29 near Chicago featuring the music of Son Volt, Rusted Root, Banyan with members of Umphrey’s McGee, EOTO, New Monsoon, ekoostik hookah, Mr. Blotto, and dozens more. It’s the first Chicago-area festival to offer overnight camping.

KPFK “Folk Scene” tribute to Utah Phillips 5/25

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

From Roz Larman on the Folk Alliance western regional list:

FolkScene will be paying tribute to Utah… [Sunday,] May 25. We have a wonderful concert from McCabe’s that dates back to Feb 14, 1987. It was shortly after the passing of Kate Wolf. He talks a lot about Kate. The program airs from 7-9:00 PM on KPFK Los Angeles at 90.7 FM and streaming from www.kpfk.org. The program will be archived for 6 days, and available to download to your ipod.

Utah Phillips has died

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Bruce Phillips, aka U. Utah Phillips, The Golden Voice of the Great Southwest, passed away at 11:30 pm Friday night, May 23.

I found the folowing on KVMR’s web site.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008
A Note From Utah

Dear Friends,

Utah here, with a rambling missive pandect and organon regarding my current reality. At no time should you suspect me of complaining (kvetching); I am simply grepsing (Yiddish word for describing the condition of that reality).

First, medical: My heart, which is enlarged and very weak, can’t pump enough blood to keep my body plunging forward at its usual 100 percent. It allows me about 25 to 30 percent, which means I don’t get around very much or very easily anymore. I’m sustained (i.e., kept alive) by a medication called Milrinone, which is contained in a pump that I carry around with me in a shoulder bag. The pump, which runs 24 hours a day, moves the medication through a long tube running into an implanted Groshong catheter that in turn runs directly into my heart. I’ll be keeping this pump for the rest of my life. I also take an extraordinary number of oral medications, of which many are electrolytes.

My body is weak but my will is strong, and I keep my disposition as sunny and humorous as I’m able. It’s hard enough being disabled without being cranky as well. Though I’m eating well, my weight has gone from 175 to 155 pounds. I look like a geriatric Fred Astaire.

We manage to get out a good bit, visiting the Ananda (a local spiritual village and retreat center) flower garden up on the San Juan Ridge and occasionally going to lunch at various places around town. The bag is always with me. Believe me, none of this would be possible without my wife Joanna. She has the deepest, most loving and caring heart one could ever imagine. She’s taken charge of all my medications and makes sure that I’m well fed and don’t fall into the slovenly ways of a derelict. She also has enormous physical beauty—I have never seen a more beautiful woman in my life. She is endowed with intelligence, deep insight, compassion, and a capacity for love that passes all understanding.

Heart disease aside, I find that I have a hernia that needs to be repaired. Someday I suppose I’ll become like Ernie Bierwagen, the old man who owned the orchards outside town. He said to me once, “I know that God wants me to say something, because the only thing I have left that works is my mouth.” But for now, I’m enjoying my life and can think of no good reason not to. Joanna and I both know that the chemical regimen I’m on can’t go on indefinitely. We take things a day at a time, deriving joy and solace from a solid, loving relationship.

I want to share with you something about where we live. If you’re reading this on the Internet, I’ve sent Duncan some photos to show you what it looks like. Our house is on a country lane right off Red Dog Road, about a mile from downtown Nevada City. Nevada City is an old gold-mining town in the Sierra foothills with a population of about 2,800. The old buildings are all still here, including the National Hotel, one of the oldest hotels in the West that’s still doing business. The town is a quirky, mystical sort of place, populated by poets, writers, artists, misfits, and just regular folks. When you drive down Berggren Lane where we live, you come to a brown house with green trim, lap-strake siding, a steel roof, and a high green fence around the front. The steel roof is there because we live in an ancient oak and cedar grove, which includes in the front yard a couple of towering poplar trees. Sometimes the wind coming down from the high Sierra breaks off tree limbs, and if it weren’t for the steel roof, we could well be eating our salad by the roots.

When we first moved in here, the house was tiny. Using her remarkable ingenuity and the prodigious skills of our friend Steven Goodfield, a fine independent carpenter, Joanna has added a hallway and two rooms going up the hill, which gives us a bedroom and bathroom, and me a study. The French doors in our bedroom open out onto a dappled hillside with hawthorns, cedars, pines, wild cherries, and oaks. The lot itself is quite narrow, the result of a bad survey many years ago. The old part of the house was built in 1912. When we bought it, there was a greenhouse along the southern wall. It was rotting out, so we replaced it with a new, insulated and thermo paned greenhouse so that we could remove the interior wall and make it almost part of the living room. Our house is a beautiful, comfortable place to live, absolutely surrounded by greenery.

Looking out the greenhouse windows now, I can see the huge poplars in front, already in full leaf. The front yard is Joanna’s flower garden, a great splash of color amid the green. As I look over my shoulder out the greenhouse door, which is also the front door to the house, I can see the hawthorn trees covered with cascades of white blossoms, as though their limbs were burdened with new snow. There’s a brick patio just outside the greenhouse with a fireplace and a small pond crowned with a bronze frog who emits a stream of water into the pond, which, when the weather is warm, we can hear from the bedroom when we’re going to sleep.

Opposite the greenhouse is the kitchen, with a wonderful early 1930s gas range, one of those with a two-lid firebox on one end. Outside the kitchen window is a railed porch built by our friend Kuddie, which overlooks another flower garden and an old apple tree, still bearing, that was probably planted when the house was built. The lot itself, narrow though it is, goes up the hill quite a way, where it levels off through the cedars and ends at a large open space that was a vegetable garden when I was still able to do that sort of thing.

The cedars are gigantic and quite an anomaly, a patch of forest that was never logged, probably because of the bad survey. It simply got missed. Walking in it now is like walking in the quiet of a much larger forest.

Walking up the hill, you pass three small outbuildings. One, called Marmlebog Hall (Joanna’s children call her Marmle), is where Kuddie ordered and maintained the CDs I used to travel with. It also contains a small labor library. The second building is a small barn on uneven stilts because of the hill. It’s there for storage. Don’t ask me what all is in it, but I do know it would drive an archaeologist mad. Among other things, it houses about 15 collapsing cardboard boxes that contain what academics have characterized as my personal archives, but are in fact a jumble of papers and objects, the detritus of over half a century. The University of California at Davis once said they wanted to accession my archives. I said, okay, if you hire somebody to come and plough through those boxes, because I’m not going to. They never called back.

The third building up there is an old shed, tiny, drafty, but a place where I spent many happy hours making things when I wasn’t traveling: wooden swords, bird feeders, and such. For the past few years the workshop has been a henhouse with a chicken-wire enclosure. Nothing fancy: five hens and a large rooster named Ralph (Rooster-Dooster). Ralph enjoys the good life. You could poke three holes in Ralph and go bowling with him. The hens all have names, but I forget what they are. They give us eggs, which I think was the idea to begin with.

Last winter a bear broke into the chicken yard and tore the door off the henhouse. The hens and Ralph managed to escape by hiding behind an old chest of drawers. The first hen to reappear showed up in our dog Bo’s mouth; she was uninjured, but that condition would not have lasted much longer. The others came out of hiding one at a time. Before our friend Che Greenwood could come over to fix the door, we feared the bear would return, plus a great storm was kicking up. So we set up a round of chicken wire in the greenhouse, which, as I say, is part of the living room, and installed the chickens there. Eventually, the smell was overpowering. How can chickens live with themselves? It was Friday evening and I’d turned on my small portable radio, as at this time the power was out, to listen to a station in Sacramento that broadcasts opera from 8:00 p.m. till midnight. That Friday one of the opera excerpts featured was an aria from Puccini’s Tosca sung by Maria Callas. That’s when Ralph decided he liked opera. As she sang, he began to crow along, so I got Tosca as a duet between Callas and Ralph. That’s when I said, these chickens have got to go back up the hill. I mean, it was Puccini, for God’s sake.

So. That’s domestic life here at our place.

A few words about me and the trade before I wind this up. When I hit a blacklist in Utah in 1969, I realized I had to leave Utah if I was going to make a living at all. I didn’t know anything abut this enormous folk music family spread out all over North America. All I had was an old VW bus, my guitar, $75, and a head full of songs, old- and new-made. Fortunately, at the behest of my old friend Rosalie Sorrels, I landed at Caffe Lena in Saratoga Springs, New York. That seemed to be ground zero for folk music at the time. Lena Spencer, as she did with so many, took me in and taught me the ropes. It took me a solid two years to realize I was no longer an unemployed organizer, but a traveling folk singer and storyteller—which, in Utah at the time, would probably have been regarded as a criminal activity.

I spent a long time finding my way—couches, floors, big towns, small towns, marginal pay (folk wages). But I found that people seemed to like what I was doing. The folk music family took me in, carried me along, and taught me the value of song far beyond making a living. It taught me that I don’t need wealth, I don’t need power, and I don’t need fame. What I need is friends, and that’s what I found—everywhere—and not just among those on the stage, but among those in front of the stage as well.

Now I can no longer travel and perform; overnight our income vanished. But all of those I had sung for, sung with, or boarded with, hearing about my condition, stepped in and rescued us. I can’t tell you how grateful I am to be part of this great caring community that, for the most part, functions close to the ground at a sub-media level, a community that has always cared for its own. We will be forever grateful for your help during this hard time.

The future? I don’t know. But I have songs in a folder I’ve never paid attention to, and songs inside me waiting for me to bring them out. Through all of it, up and down, it’s the song. It’s always been the song.

Love and solidarity,

Utah

Movie recommendation

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

I wish I remembered who told me to rent The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico so I could thank him or her. Very funny Canadian mockumentary about a fucked-up Canadian country singer, with Kris Kristofferson, Merle Haggard, Ronnie Hawkins, Levon Helm, and others appearing as themselves. Very well done.

And in the bonus material on the DVD, a long interview with Kristofferson telling true stories about real stuff, including the time he had Zal Yanovsky as his guitar player (which I never knew about), the night Steve Goodman brought Kristofferson and Paul Anka (!) to hear John Prine, etc.

“Dead Symphony” live

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

In Baltimore, on Jerry’s birthday.

More on Lee Johnson’s orchestral adaptation of GD themes here.

And here’s a review of the CD from an earlier blog post.

Dead to the World/Sing Out! 5/21/08

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

Tonight, Dead to the World and Sing Out! merge for a four-hour birthday salute to Bob Dylan. Your hosts: David Gans, Larry Kelp, and Kevin Vance. Plus, it’s FUND-RAISING time again! Please donate online or call 510-848-5732 or 1-800-439-5732.

Tough MamaJerry Garcia, Garcia Plays Dylan
Visions of JohannaBob Dylan, The Bootleg Series vol. 4: Live 1966
Workingman’s Blues #2 – Bob Dylan, Modern Times
JackaroeJewels and Binoculars, Ships with Tattooed Sails
Call Letter Blues – Bob Dylan, The Bootleg Series volumes 1-3: Rare and Unreleased 1961-1991
All I Really Want to DoAnother Side of Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan’s 115th Dream – Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home
Love Minus Zero/No Limit – Eliza Gilkyson from (various artists) A Nod to Bob
I Believe in You – Cat Power, Jukebox
Mississippi – Bob Dylan, Love and Theft
Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right - Bob Dylan, The Bootleg Series, vol 6: Live 1964
All Along the WatchtowerBarbara Keith
She Belongs to Me – Jerry Garcia, Garcia Plays Dylan
With God On Our SideBuddy Miller, Universal United House of Prayer
Maggie’s Farm – Bob Dylan, No Direction Home
Subterranean Homesick Blues – Tim O’Brien, Red on Blonde
Señor (Tales of Yankee Power) – Bob Dylan, Street Legal
Mr Tambourine Man – The Byrds, Mr Tambourine Man
I’m Not There – Bob Dylan, I’m Not There Soundtrack
Denk ned Doch – Wolfgang Ambros, Wie im Schlaf
Silvio – Bob Dylan, Down in the Groove
Blue Yodel
– Bob Dylan, The Dylan-Cash Sessions
Simple Twist of FateJerry Garcia Band
Clothesline Saga – Bob Dylan & The Band, The Basement Tapes
I Was Young When I Left Home – Bob Dylan, Songs for Bonnie
Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You – Jimmy LaFave live on KPFA 4/17/1997
Things Have ChangedThe Best of Bob Dylan
Seven CursesTom Russell, Indians Cowboys Horses Dogs
Shelter from the StormRodney Crowell, The Outsider
Chimes of FreedomThe Kennedys, Half a Million Miles
Forever Young – Bob Dylan, Biograph

Weekend in the mountains

Monday, May 19th, 2008


View from the kitchen, originally uploaded by dgans.

On Saturday, May 17, I drove out to North Fork, California – the exact center of the state, as the sign proudly proclaims – to play a benefit show for KFCF.

North Fork is 3000+ feet up, on the San Joaquin River. A beautiful spot.

The show was at the Town Hall, which I gather used to be the multi-purpose room of a high school.

The show was well-attended – about 100 people. Those who paid an extra $5 got a healthy dinner of curried lentil soup and a hearty salad.

Everyone sat at long tables, and I realized on the drive home that I would have had a better time performing if I had thought to ask people to move the tables away and sit together in the chairs. Instead, I played to this spread-out audience sitting at tables. But still – a really fun time.

After the show, I was led up the canyon to the Kern Family Farm, 80 amazing acres on a bluff overlooking the San Joaquin. I spent the night in the “studio,” a stone house on a ledge right on the bluff. Got up at around 7 am and walked around with my camera, enjoying this spectacular spot.

I called the main house to let ‘em know I was awake and ready to move and Hansel, the patriarch, came down in his truck to lead me up to the main house. I never would have found it unassisted.

After a breakfast of pancakes, eggs, and fresh homemade goat cheese (the latter two items being mainstays of the farm’s market offerings), I was taken on a tour of the farm. I met two dozen goats, a hundred or so chickens, a small assortment of ducks and geese, two llamas, a pot-bellied pig, two Great Pyrenees dogs who protect the livestock from bears, mountain lions, etc., the two house dogs (Shiva and Ken). Saw the greenhouse and the fields in various states of growing or being prepared, took pictures of the amazing water wheel that moves fresh water from 750 feet down in the granite to the house, and the solar-power pumps that move gray water, etc. All their electricity is locally generated, either solar or hydroelectric (!).

Hansel and Sue have two teenage kids, both of whom plan to stay there and work the farm.

I had a great time, and I am really impressed with what they have done up there!

Take a look at the rest of the Photos.