Tuesday, July 4, 2017

July 4 Dylan/ Dead Celebrations



Dylan and the Grateful Dead kicked off their historic tour thirty years ago today in Foxboro Stadium on July 4, 1987. The Dead started the affair with a one-set performance that was lackluster, unimaginative, and not a good omen for the upcoming Dylan/Dead set. This was Dylan’s first show in eleven months, and he was rustier than an old dirt shovel in a porous toolshed. This show is only noteworthy because Dylan played his first live versions of “Queen Jane Approximately and “Joey,” and he also performed “John Brown” and “Chimes of Freedom” for the first time since 1963 and 1964 respectively. The next Dylan Dead gig at JFK Stadium in six days was an improvement, setting the stage for a brilliant performance on July 12. Their first joint appearance on Independence Day was nothing to boast about, but Garcia and Dylan have provided many thrills through the years on July 4.
www.tangledupintunes.com

1. 7-4-75 Legion of Mary, Great American Music Hall, San Francisco: This potent group featuring Garcia, John  Kahn (bass), Merl Saunders (keyboards), Ron Tutt (drums), and Martin Fierro (sax and flute), played a sensational show, highlighted by “Tough Mama,” perhaps Garcia’s finest performance of a Dylan song. It was a night of scintillating solos from Jerry, especially the last two of “Tough Mama” and one from a poignant version of Jesse Winchester’s “Every Word You Say.” Garcia hammers the blues on “Someday Baby” and “That’s All Right Mama,” and lays down the funk with Merl Saunders on “Boggie on Reggae Woman” and “The Harder They Come.” 

2. 7-4-86 Rich Stadium, Buffalo: Appearing on the same bill, the Grateful Dead, and Dylan (backed by Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers), contributed short sets for the simulcast of the second Farm Aid benefit concert, held in Austin, Texas. After a short, lackluster opening set, Garcia pulled off a heroic second set segment, considering Garcia was feeling ill, and he would lapse into a near fatal coma five days later. The set opened with “Cold Rain and Snow” and segued into “Fire on the Mountain.” Against a rambunctious beat, Garcia worked the fretboard with blazing precision, as if he could make amends for all the missteps of his recent past. Like a mythical figure, Garcia’s guitar playing onslaught continued during a biblical serving of “Samson and Delilah.”  

Bob Weir welcomed the national TV audience tuned in to Farm Aid. Sufficiently warmed up from the first three songs of set two, the Grateful Dead segued three of their finest compositions: The Wheel > I Need a Miracle > Uncle John’s Band. The jams were dynamic without superfluous meandering, and the vocal harmonies were superb. In the second set, Garcia, as he did on many occasions, came off as a heroic figure, doing his best work just when you counted him out. After the TV cameras were turned off, the rest of the show fizzled. Dylan’s performance was more consistent than the Dead’s, and he looked fine wearing a long sleeve red shirt under his black vest to go with his bouffant hairdo and dangling earrings. Dylan played twenty-four songs and Petty played eight during this professional performance. 

3. 7-4-2007: I’ve seen around 120 Dylan shows, so it’s hard to rank them, but this July 4 celebration in Montreal might be one of the ten best I’ve seen during the Never Ending Tour. There were several lively performances from the recently released Modern Times. Bob played electric guitar for the first four numbers and then plunked the keys for the remainder of the show. The surprise songs of the night were “Shelter from the Storm” and “Chimes of Freedom.” After a moving rendition of “Nettie Moore,” the set ended with “Summer Days” and Like a Rolling Stone.” The encores were “Thunder on the Mountain” and “Watchtower.” Dylan and his Cowboy Band rocked those last four songs as hard as I’ve ever seen them. Dylan was giddy and animated when he came out for his final salute from the audience. Denny Freeman had his best hour as lead guitarist in Dylan’s band. He may be the most underrated guitarist that Dylan has ever employed. 

Friday, June 30, 2017

Dylan & the Grateful Dead: A Tale of Twisted Fate





On the thirtieth anniversary of the first Dylan Dead show in Foxboro, Dylan and the Grateful Dead: A Tale of Twisted Fate, is now available on Amazon. http://amzn.to/2tGschP Happy July 4! Dylan and Garcia are the two most revered, beloved, and bootlegged American performers of our time, and this is a tribute to their combined eighty-plus years of public service. Thanks to Jay Blakesberg for the cover photo, and Robbi Cohn, Ben Upham, Chad Anderson, and Scott Gibson for the photos inside. 

A Tale of Twisted Fate chronicles Bob Dylan’s rapid ascent to immortality as the preeminent songwriter of his time, and contrasts that with the Grateful Dead’s long strange trip, during which they went from being a psychedelic band with a cult following to the most popular touring act in America. 

When Dylan & the Dead launched their historic 1987 tour, Dylan’s popularity was declining and he was out of touch with his muse. On the other hand, the Grateful Dead basked in the unexpected commercial success of their hit MTV video “Touch of Grey.” Inspired by his time with the Dead, Dylan experienced a rebirth as a performing artist. A Tale of Twisted Fate explores the influences, innovations, and legacies of the iconic careers of Bob Dylan and Jerry Garcia.        
Order on Amazon:  http://amzn.to/2tGschP
Kindle version will be available July 13

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Grateful Dead 1977: The Rise of Terrapin Nation, a new book by Howard Weiner






Grateful Dead 1977 on Amazon 

For the Grateful Dead and their devotees, 1977 was one long party from start to end, and author Howard Weiner takes us on that ride again. From the legendary gigs in Cornell, Englishtown, and the Winterland, to the releases of The Grateful Dead movie and Terrapin Station, this is a blow-by-blow narrative of a band peaking at the right moment in history. Once upon a time the Dead had the largest cult following in music, but before their days were numbered, they became an American institution, and ‘77 was the year that changed their fate. These psychedelic pranksters from the streets of San Francisco became the embodiment of professionalism in the thick of the schizoid seventies as they mobilized a new generation of Deadheads with inspired performances. A blueprint for future activity, 1977 catapulted the Grateful Dead on to the golden road of unlimited prosperity and fame.

Monday, July 21, 2014

Positively Garcia: Howard Weiner's new book available August 1

Jamming in the shadows of the Grateful Dead, the Jerry Garcia Band thrilled devoted fans for three decades with an alchemist’s brew of blues, rock, jazz, and gospel, as well as Motown and Dylan covers. Positively Garcia is the story of the rise of the Jerry Garcia Band from their early California club gigs through the band’s glory days in the early ‘80s. Author and Garcia aficionado Howard Weiner ranks JGB’s greatest shows, and explores the sublime solos and transcendent moments from those performances in essays that are accompanied by rare concert photos. JGB left behind an unprecedented trail of sonic inspiration, yet this rich musical legacy is largely unheralded. The chronicles of Positively Garcia shine a new light on an intimate and essential slice of Garcia’s prolific career. In the second part of this book, Weinera veteran of sixty JGB showsrecalls all the joys and madness associated with extreme touring. For Weiner, pursuing JGB was all business, and he took it very personally.

Howard Weiner is the author of the memoir Tangled Up in Tunes: Ballad of a Dylanhead, and he created and hosted Visions of Dylan, a series of programs that aired on 99.5 FM, WBAI, New York. These days, Howard resides near the Bronx Zoo.

6-16-82 MUSIC MOUNTAIN: THE GRATEFUL PILGRIMAGE

  In honor of the anniversary of Music Mountain, here’s chapter two from my latest work, The Grateful Pilgrimage: Time Travel with the Dea...