should i give the grateful dead a chance?

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is there an era when propulsion is an actual GD thing?

mark s, Thursday, 20 February 2020 21:57 (four years ago) link

“Touch of Grey” maybe.

o. nate, Thursday, 20 February 2020 21:58 (four years ago) link

"Alabama Getaway", "Shakedown Street", a lot of the post '77 stuff imo

sleeve, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:00 (four years ago) link

I think "The Eleven" is reliably propulsive, whenever it appears...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_WpX9s2_rQ

Ticket Tout (morrisp), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:05 (four years ago) link

another case of a shit rhythm section not being able to maintain a tempo or a beat, with some pretty good guitar playing being the only standout factor.

Οὖτις, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:13 (four years ago) link

it does almost have that Beefheart thing of different band members playing different rhythms against and on top of each other, but none of them seem capable of actually keeping their individual parts together, nor is it as knotty and clangorous

Οὖτις, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:14 (four years ago) link

So I listened to "Dark Star" from "Live/Dead" and it started off like Agitation Free or one of those 3rd division Krautrock jam bands I don't like very much. The (tiny) song bit itself was naff then back to the jam. I like Jerry Garcia's playing, but maybe not for 23 minutes straight? I did expect something a bit more transcendental but I suppose it's OK, I prefer when Amon Duul II do it though.

Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:15 (four years ago) link

Maybe Garcia is more like Richard Lloyd than Tom Verlaine?

Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:16 (four years ago) link

another case of a shit rhythm section not being able to maintain a tempo or a beat

but it's groovy in a very Dead-specific way... I guess either you hear it, or you don't.

Ticket Tout (morrisp), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:21 (four years ago) link

lol they even named the song after the time signature, just in case.

Man, imagine if Robert Quine was in the Dead ... Or, like, Sonny Sharrock.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:23 (four years ago) link

I guess the Dead are not a band I would try very hard to "make a case for," or try to convince anyone to keep trying if they don't connect with it (though, again, that's what happened with me... eventually, it clicked).

Ticket Tout (morrisp), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:23 (four years ago) link

Don't know if it's been mentioned upthread, but this is the key document re UK Hell's Angels: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ng8Ll7x08Vk&feature=youtu.be

It's pretty terrifying stuff

fetter, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:23 (four years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ng8Ll7x08Vk&feature=youtu.be

fetter, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:24 (four years ago) link

xxp "Just in case"? Lol. I mean, musicians do that kind of thing, I wouldn't read too much into it.

Ticket Tout (morrisp), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:24 (four years ago) link

"Lady if you have to ask you'll never know!!"

mark s, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:25 (four years ago) link

Argh, apols. It's a BBC documentary from 1973. Sorry for fucking up the board.

fetter, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:25 (four years ago) link

xpost The Dead and Dave Brubeck, maybe. But Genesis? They called the song "Turn It On Again," dammit, not "Thirteen."

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:25 (four years ago) link

“There’s never enough money to cover marijuana, LSD, Grass and acid”

Tell me about it.

Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:28 (four years ago) link

are those some things that wd help me love the dead better

mark s, Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:29 (four years ago) link

That documentary is awesome.

Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:30 (four years ago) link

So I listened to "Dark Star" from "Live/Dead"...

lol I did this today too. I try again every few years to see if I get it, and I don't. Really my favorite part is the very beginning, the noodling just before they play the actual composed head of the song. And the song itself is okay, but by the time they're trying to take it "out" at about nine minutes or so I just give up. I don't think I've ever made it through a "Dark Star."

A perfect transcript of a routine post (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 20 February 2020 22:33 (four years ago) link

Wow--we either hear the Grateful Dead or the Feelies very differently. For what it's worth, I'm talking about those two specific songs; on Crazy Rhythms, for instance, no, I don't hear the Grateful Dead.

clemenza, Thursday, 20 February 2020 23:04 (four years ago) link

lol they even named the song after the time signature, just in case.

I would guess that the title was more of a way for the band to remember it (not that it helped)

Οὖτις, Thursday, 20 February 2020 23:29 (four years ago) link

Now, that's just rude.

Ticket Tout (morrisp), Thursday, 20 February 2020 23:44 (four years ago) link

Brit Hells Angels bring Family's Music From a Doll's House lp and watch Doctor Who on their hell-raising bank holiday weekend.

by the light of the burning Citroën, Friday, 21 February 2020 00:06 (four years ago) link

the dead have another song in seven. guess what it's called.

ts: "the eleven" by the grateful dead vs. "eleven" by primus

i mean, they proved that they could be as lumpen and imprecise as any group of british art school dropouts, so job done?

i've listened to way more dead than i can rationally justify, and i still don't fuck with "live/dead". idk, maybe it is that great, but it just completely fails to click with me. yeah it's a decent guitar solo and all but i really would rather listen to cipollina. jerry gets compared a lot to django but while django built an amazing technique to compensate for his missing finger, jerry just seems to have accepted it as a limit and worked within that limit, and for me to find him listenable i have to do the same.

so digging the dead for me is a process of understanding and accepting their very obvious limitations. none of them can sing. they can't play in unison. they're completely inconsistent, frequently within the course of a single song. there are a lot of songs of theirs that are never fucking good any time they play them, and they are guaranteed to play at least one of them in any given concert of theirs.

when they're on, though, they do things no musicians have done before and no musicians will ever do again. and since jerry's been dead for a quarter century or so, i have the luxury of being able to cherry-pick the "good bits". that helps a lot.

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 01:17 (four years ago) link

"when they're on, though, they do things no musicians have done before and no musicians will ever do again."

Kate, could you —or after you do so, anyone who wants to— please elucidate as to what this could be? People say this kind of thing all the time about this band, yet it is seldom that anyone can specify…

veronica moser, Friday, 21 February 2020 02:48 (four years ago) link

Yeah, this is the crux of it for me:

none of them can sing. they can't play in unison. they're completely inconsistent, frequently within the course of a single song...when they're on, though, they do things no musicians have done before and no musicians will ever do again.

I guess when people say "highly improvisational rock band" what I want is something much more like Can circa 1971-74, or Träd, Gräs och Stenar, than any version of the Grateful Dead. There were a few isolated moments on the 3CD Fillmore West 1969 set and the "Bear's Choice" album from 1970 that almost clicked for me, but eventually I just couldn't get past the hapless fumbling stuff to get to the "good" stuff. And ultimately the vocals are just an insurmountable obstacle.

but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 21 February 2020 03:02 (four years ago) link

I didn't get the Dead really, beyond liking a few songs, until Garcia's playing just clicked for me one time. It was like I finally heard what people love about him, the flowing conversational tone and sparkling runs. They'll never be a band I listen to a lot, I go through a Dead phase maybe once a year. But it finally made sense to me musically.

Kate, could you —or after you do so, anyone who wants to— please elucidate as to what this could be? People say this kind of thing all the time about this band, yet it is seldom that anyone can specify…

― veronica moser

i can try! it's definitely a challenge to convey.

My personal starting point is that I like terrible music. There are a lot of ways people come up with euphemisms for different sorts of awfulness but there is a lot of music that I like while acknowledging that it is, on some level, completely awful. "White Light/White Heat", for instance, that is an absolutely terrible sounding record, or if that doesn't go far enough for you, we can talk, I don't know, Metal Machine Music, or "Flames of Ice" by Les Rallizes Denudes. These are records I like. I also like a lot of the later work of Brian Wilson, who after 1967 wrote a great deal of songs that are, really, just terrible songs. I'm talking about songs like "Games Two Can Play" from "Adult/Child", an extremely belated riff on Joe South's "Games People Play" where he in the middle of the song out of nowhere exclaims "I'm fat as a cow, how'd I ever get this waaaay?"

I don't like these songs _because_ they are terrible. I feel like it's a common misconception people get, that just because I listen to and enjoy terrible music that I have no standards. I like this music because its brilliance and awfulness is inseparable, because as I get older I find that my greatest strengths and my greatest weaknesses are two sides of the same coin. Because nobody but Brian Wilson could ever possibly write a song like "Games Two Can Play".

Well, the Grateful Dead's music is probably more explicable and comprehensible than "Games Two Can Play" is, if only because of that fucking bridge. But it is, for me, definitely a matter of absence rather than presence, it's lacking in what I had thought and assumed were essential elements in making music listenable.

I'm just putting on right now a random track of theirs... them doing "Not Fade Away" at Boston Music Hall on 1971-12-01. And it is just so frankly bizarre. The audience just starts screaming and going wild and right out of the gate it's clear to me that this is an absolutely, unquestionably, terrible version of "Not Fade Away". I listen to other versions of it I have sitting around and this is... this is kind of a hard song to fuck up? It's got this incredibly basic and rock-solid beat, this propulsive energy to it, and if you fuck it up you're usually left with a snoozefest or something lethargic but here, there's this just implicit fuck-you in the way they're playing it. It's not necessarily the vocals - I mean there are honestly a lot of bands that have kind of ragged harmony vocals, that's a rock thing - but the musicianship is just as "ragged", which is to say there's no groove, there's no pocket, they're the exact opposite of "locked in". The term "professionally incompetent" comes to mind, but not in the sense that they're shit at their jobs, but in the sense that being this shitty _is_ their job, a job they take very seriously and are very, very good at.

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 04:20 (four years ago) link

lol, "with friends like these ..."

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 21 February 2020 04:49 (four years ago) link

that’s a great post and it actually makes me feel challenged to make music you would like

El Tomboto, Friday, 21 February 2020 04:56 (four years ago) link

But not to listen to the Grateful Dead tbh.

Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Friday, 21 February 2020 07:37 (four years ago) link

So they’re making Outsider Art?

Something Super Stupid Cupid (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 21 February 2020 11:23 (four years ago) link

i like kate's reasoning a lot -- withdrawal of conventional values as a self-conscious tactic (and value), well, i have not laboured lo! these five decades in the free improv mines without working out that this is exactly the kind of perverse crabwise approach i too have tbh

obviously metal machine music is simply good not bad and why would you even try to claim otherwise, pshaw at that line

mark s, Friday, 21 February 2020 11:34 (four years ago) link

i like kate's reasoning a lot -- withdrawal of conventional values as a self-conscious tactic (and value), well, i have not laboured lo! these five decades in the free improv mines without working out that this is exactly the kind of perverse crabwise approach i too have tbh

obviously metal machine music is simply good not bad and why would you even try to claim otherwise, pshaw at that line

mark s, Friday, 21 February 2020 11:34 (four years ago) link

withdrawal of conventional values as a self-conscious tactic

This is Crazy Horse too I guess, when they were backing Neil anyway. The difference (to me) is that their lumpen rhythms still had some forward propulsion, unlike the Dead who just sound incompetent to me, and not in a good way. At least Rallizes took that murky swilling feel to its logical conclusion, and were never going to play bluegrass either. I have the same problem with the Dead I have with Pink Floyd - the rhythmic end is so plodding it makes me feel exhausted just to listen to it.

empire of the shunned (Matt #2), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:10 (four years ago) link

i think that's another good point about forward propulsion! most people when they play are, you know, going somewhere, you get the sense that they have a destination in mind, and that's what frustrated me so much about the grateful dead - the phrase "aimless jamming" came to mind a lot. and it's something i just had to learn to accept, that their aimlessness is an essential part of their appeal. for me, the dead at their best don't do crescendos, don't do build and release, every moment exists for its own sake. maybe they just had no short-term memory, i don't know, but it's something i appreciate about them. everything is fucked, there's no consolation in the past or the future, the only joy possible is to live in the now. and that's on some level a bleak, nihilistic way to live, but it's also liberating. it fits with my personal philosophy as i live it, of being the best me i can be in any given moment, of not being afraid to make mistakes, and of asking nothing more of myself.

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:25 (four years ago) link

what they actually learned from stockhausen: moment form

mark s, Friday, 21 February 2020 12:29 (four years ago) link

So they’re making Outsider Art?

― Something Super Stupid Cupid (James Redd and the Blecchs)

that's a phrase i consciously avoided using because of the implications it has. i feel like chusid means well by it but there's some difficult implications raised by it - "outside" of what? in industry terms, brian wilson is pretty much the opposite of an outsider, but a lot of his work has the singular vision often ascribed to "outsider art".

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:30 (four years ago) link

what they actually learned from stockhausen: moment form

― mark s

good cite, though cynical me wants to say that nobody actually learned shit from stockhausen, they just name-dropped him for a decade or so there

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:31 (four years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeE6QysNp24

posting this in lieu of a long post in my head. also there's a destination in the sunshine daydream "playing in the band," that destination is hell

american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:33 (four years ago) link

back in the day the title track of terrapin station drew me in deeper than workingman's dead and american beauty. the existence of this cover version, despite the generous range of the day of the dead tribute project, still surprises me

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPdoWp-PHFU

reggie (qualmsley), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:34 (four years ago) link

the reason i love the dead is that they are constantly falling apart but remain together, it's like this spaghetti-like web that turns out to have all of these knots in it that you couldn't see. it's exhilarating to listen to. at about seven minutes in that "help on the way" you enter that web

american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:37 (four years ago) link

they might not be the best players in the world but for me they are one of the best examples of an ensemble of musicians as a collective, roaming, unconscious mind

american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:43 (four years ago) link

hell. hmmm.

hell isn't about the destination, it's about the journey.

i'm not trying to be glib there. it's something i've been through, several times, it's in fact something i'm going through right now, and going through a certain level of mental/emotional shit i have at times found myself completely lost, miserable, and with no way out. i've tried following other people's directions and gotten, as far as i can tell, absolutely nowhere, and i don't have any better ideas, and there's nothing left for me to keep doing the same shit i've always been doing and hope that what i'm doing will somehow miraculously start working.

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:50 (four years ago) link

i think you're generally right about the dead having no destination in their jams and that that is the point! and yeah hearing "playing in the band" gradually bend into something evil and gnarled is a really sick journey

american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 21 February 2020 12:53 (four years ago) link

i have played the sunshine daydream "playing in the band" for people hoping to convert them and it's never worked, which is very weird for me, someone who can't help but feeling at around nine minutes into it that i've been sucked off the earth into space and am being chewed up in the teeth of a monster formed out of the darkness and stars

american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 21 February 2020 13:04 (four years ago) link

the reason i love the dead is that they are constantly falling apart but remain together, it's like this spaghetti-like web that turns out to have all of these knots in it that you couldn't see.

― american bradass (BradNelson)

i get what you're saying, i have that feeling about a lot of things, and i'm not sure i trust that feeling. the way my brain works, and this seems to be a common human experience, is that my brain tends to create patterns and meaning where none exist. like, if there's a collective mind here it's not _just_ the dead, it's the canon-building process, it's headyversion saying "hey check out the 1970-11-05 DS, sure it's an AUD but they were really on and locked in that night", that's why i'm happy to see you writing about this insted of saying "listen to this version of this song", which is a thing that gets mocked so roundly by people who aren't deadheads, whatever is there - and ok, you've convinced me, there is in fact something there - is elusive, there's no single way in and if the common entry points don't work, which they didn't for me, i kept trying different ways over a period of decades and it did eventually click. one of my ongoing efforts w/r/t music is social, if somebody loves a song or a performance i want to be able to hear what other people hear in the music they love. i kept trying to listen to the dead because people still love them.

and i guess w/r/t the dead i'm now officially on the other side, where i'm trying to explain why i listen to dead bootlegs so fucking much after decades of vocally despising them.

ftr the 1977-05-09 help/knot/tower is yeah very good, and that's coming from somone who is generally left cold by '77

i'm going to have to listen to the sunshine daydream "playin" again, i haven't had that experience with it before but now that you've mentioned your experience i might!

Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 21 February 2020 13:07 (four years ago) link


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