Musical Musing: Grateful Dead: Reckoning

The Grateful Dead first entered my musical listening orbit in 1981, when out drinking with friends, someone had mentioned they had seen the ‘Dead live on BBC2’s ‘Old Grey Whistle Test’, they had said it was really great, but very much acoustically based, no heavy kerangging noisy guitar solos,(or is it ‘soli’?).

The guy who said this was an old biker up at the bar we were drinking in, saying he was old probably meant that he was about 30, as me and my pals of the time, were 18 going 19, and 30 was ‘ancient’ to us then. Anyway, this guy had said that the Grateful Dead were great when ‘you were stoned’.

Strangely, that stuck with me for years, and once I decided that there was more to life than loud guitar music, I learned to appreciate the subtleties of the folk, blues , and country guitar sounds.

Which band captured those three styles so well for me, yes ladies and gentlemen, step forward -The Grateful Dead!

I bought ‘Reckoning’, the Grateful Dead acoustic double album from a record fair in 1987, around the time that the ‘Dead were enjoying a resurgence in popularity due to their hit with ‘Touch of Grey’, and the album ‘In The Dark’. I was listening to a lot of the new Americana based bands of the era, and it was time for me to explore the roots, by listening to Neil Young, CSNY, The Byrds and the Grateful Dead, music I had previously dismissed when younger, as ‘hippy music’.

Anyway, I already had a massive collection of Dylan cds, albums, and cassettes, and was going for those musicians and songwriters, who, as I saw it were similar to Dylan in style, lyrics, etc.

‘Reckoning’ recorded in 1980, is a great album , with Grateful Dead classics ( my favourites being ‘Ripple’ and ‘Bird Song’) alongside traditional folk ballads (‘On The Road Again’, and ‘Jack-a-Roe’) and country classics(‘The Race is On’ by George Jones) On these two discs, we are treated to some stunning acoustic guitar playing, in an album which to me is the forerunner to the ‘Unplugged’ era, when many rock bands played acoustic sessions on MTV. Its a really laid back affair, some which folk might refer to as ‘mellow’, and indeed poles apart from the lengthy improvisational psychedelic passages of the live versions of ‘Dark Star’, which they were renowned for.

I revisit this album and ‘Working Man’s Dead’ a lot, and once I have the bug, I usually play a couple of tracks from the tribute album’ ‘Dedicated’ from 1991 , which features Elvis Costello, Lyle Lovett, Suzanne Vega, and the Cowboy Junkies. As I often say, I would heartily recommend these to you!

I wrote to ‘The Wire’ magazine in 1998 in the pre-Internet age, praising the Grateful Dead, their continuing influence, and the Wire’s recent ‘Primer’ on the ‘Dead’s music-my comments are below.

I received a copy of the Space Ghost cd, featuring Sonny Sharrock for my efforts, and it was nice having a letter printed in ‘The Wire’, a magazine I still buy all these years later. Oh, and I still have a copy of the letter typed upon my first desk top pc!

Where has the time gone?

Musical Musing: The Road to Blind Willie Johnson.

Back in 1985, in the job I was working in , I was often sent to training courses in Glasgow or Edinburgh, and back in those days, you had to find your own accommodation by looking up the telephone directory of the time, and checking with colleagues whichever B&B, or hotel they had stayed in, did they recommend it and how much did it cost.

We were allocated a certain amount of expenses , and if you stayed in somewhere cheap, you had some spare cash to yourself to do what you wanted with. Some colleagues would frivolously spend this money on alcohol and cigarettes, others were sensible, buying books, or records. I was one of the sensible ones, in my opinion.

This was , I suppose, a small recompense to being away from home in a strange city, not knowing anyone or your way around the place, you made your own entertainment, maybe went to the cinema, or a concert, something along those lines, maybe a rock band would be playing at the Glasgow Apollo, or the Edinburgh Playhouse, if you were lucky.

On one of those trips, to what seemed to me , the vast teeming metropolis of ’80s Glasgow, I often visited Tower Records on my lunchbreaks , and discovered that in addition to the widest selection of music I had ever seen, they also sold books! I dived in there, books about The Doors, Patti Smith, Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, you name it, they had it in stock. There was a selection of ‘cult classics : ‘, ‘On The Road’, ‘Brave New World’, ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’, ‘The Master and the Margarita’ , stuff like that.

I bought ‘No-one Here Gets Out Alive’ by Danny Sugerman, his memoir of his time with the Doors, ‘Kodak’, poetry by Patti Smith, whose music I was really getting into, and ‘Motel Chronicles and Hawkmoon’ by Sam Shepard. Sam Shepard had also written the screenplay for ‘Paris , Texas’, a film which came out in that year, directed by Wim Wenders and soundtracked by Ry Cooder, who was providing me with a window into the world of country blues, which subsequently led me to the music of Blind Willie Johnson, whose ‘Dark Was The Night, Cold Was The Ground’, provided the theme to the movie. I played the soundtrack to ‘Paris Texas’ constantly during the long hot summer of 1985, as I started getting more eclectic in my musical taste (as mentioned in my review of Thurston Moore’s ‘A Sonic Life’, at the tail end of last year). Somehow, Robert Johnson seemed to be more of a thing for me at the time, as opposed to Blind Willie Johnson, but I bought an LP of Blind Willie’s music later on in the 90’s at a record fair in Aberdeen , for the princely sum of £10, it wasn’t bad, and also the cassette ‘Sweeter As The Years Go By’, on the Yazoo Label. I had read about his music and was intrigued to find out that John Fahey, the legendary guitarist, and a favourite of mine , was moved to tears the first time he heard Blind Willie Johnson’s music, and had referred to this as a religious experience when describing it later in his life. Blind Willie Johnson’s music is quite unique, his vocals guttural and intense, reminscent of those who came after him, like Howling Wolf, or Captain Beefheart. The slide guitar punctuates the vocals in a sort of call-and -response way.

Blind Willie sang of religious, biblical themes, his voice was far from angelic, but countered by the voice of Willie B. Harris, it works really well, gospel blues at its finest, with the slide guitar to the fore in most of the pieces.’ Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning’ , ‘ John the Revelator’, ‘City of Refuge’ and more.

So Blind Willie Johnson’s music led me to discover many great blues musicians, such as Ry Cooder, through the ‘Paris, Texas’ soundtrack and his eponymous debut album from 1970, also Missisippi Fred McDowell, Howling Wolf, and newer blues players like Corey Harris, Alvin ‘Youngblood’ Hart and the tremendous Tedeschi/Trucks band.

Worth a look also is the film ‘The Soul of a Man’ directed also by Wim Wenders

This film came out in 2003, and explores the lives and music of three of Wenders’ favourite blues musicians, namely Blind Willie Johnson , Skip James and J.B Lenoir, with stunning performances by the likes of Lucinda Williams, Nick Cave, Cassandra Wilson, and Marc Ribot exploring and interpreting the works of these talented musicians. Definitely worth watching.

Playlist:

Ry Cooder- ‘Dark Was The Night’ from ‘Ry Cooder’ -1970

Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band- ‘Tarotplane’ from ‘The MirrorMan Sessions- 1999

Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi- ‘Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning’ from ‘God Don’t Never Change’ (The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson) -2016

Tom Waits -‘The Soul of a Man’, also from ‘God Don’t Never Change’ (The Songs of Blind Willie Johnson) -2016