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Posts Tagged ‘David Grisman’

Day 129. The Animals, David Grisman and Jerry Garcia.

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

After listening to Eric Burdon and War earlier in the day, Celia pointed to a two disc compilation by The Animals for tonight’s rips. And I grabbed my Jerry Garcia and David Grisman discs.

When the Grisman / Garcia discs came out, it seemed like they were released just for me. At the end of high school and the beginning of college, after growing up with the Grateful Dead and finally getting into David Grisman after getting over my fear of the cover of ‘Hot Dawg’, the collaboration of these two (and really, the whole group on these recordings) opened my eyes up in many ways to what making music can be. These are recordings made by two guys that were getting together just for the love of getting together to play, and they had the means to record it as well. These were put out by Grisman’s label ‘Acoustic Disc’ and were a great combination of styles and influences. Bluegrass, country, jazz and Dawg and Dead all seeped in together. A great example is the song ‘Grateful Dawg’ on the first Grisman / Garcia disc, in which both musicians seem to trade solos in the other musician’s styles.  Part of the joke seemed to be that they were really making fun of each others cliches while also building up a set of trading choruses in good old jazz fashion. Each seems to out do the other with each chorus, and while you can’t hear any chuckles in the recording I can only imagine how much they were laughing at each other during playbacks. If you ever get a chance to hear ‘The Pizza Tapes’ (also featuring Tony Rice) you actually get to hear some of this joking around and playful ribbing between everyone. To me, this confirms that these projects were lots of fun for all involved, and the music on these recordings really seems to capture that spirit. Some of the music also comes from old folk traditions, some from when the two played together in different projects in the early ‘70s, but it all reflects a great love of music and being musicians.

After Jerry Garcia died, David Grisman went through the tapes he had and put together a number of discs that reflected the days the two spent together recordings. In one set of liner notes, Grisman noted how special these sessions were, and how much he would miss having them. Luckily, they captured quite a bit. And one thing that I learned from these discs is how much better music is when the players are having a good time.

Day 105. David Grisman.

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

I have mentioned once before (when talking about Django Reinhardt) that the cover of David Grisman’s album ‘Hot Dawg’ freaked me out as a kid. Sharp, angular, metallic bodies contorted around instruments make up the cover. It looks cold, and I remember thinking that this was a picture of people that had somehow been frozen into these forms involuntarily. Apparently as a kid, I was worried about being frozen into a form involuntarily. This probably came from some bad movie where a stop-motion Medusa turned men to stone, or some other magical evil… I can’t really remember. But I DO remember that David Grisman cover sitting in front of my dad’s records and those figures seemed to give me a cold scary stare. There is some irony here though, since the music on the album is highly influenced by jazz, bluegrass and folk music. Stephane Grapelli makes a guest appearance for a recording of his and Django’s ‘Minor Swing’ (the version I associated with the song until well into my teenage years). The opening number ‘Dawg’s Bull’ starts off with a quick pulse from the violin that slowly build up to the whole group playing some amazingly fast music. In unison. Very clean…

Now that I know the influences of this music much better, perhaps there isn’t such an irony to the cover art. This is 1970s jazz, a time period riddled with the cleanliness of fusion and the death of the 50s and 60s bop->hard-bop->out there jazz transitions. Not that the free jazz solo ever sold enough albums to be ‘replaced’ by another step in the evolution of jazz, but if John Coltrane had been alive during the time of Weather Report, I’d be curious to see how different the styles of jazz would have been. Probably not much different, and with recording technology (with multiple tracks and takes) became better it was probably unavoidable that jazz, as with rock, would move towards a similar slick recorded presentation. And though I still like ‘Hot Dawg’ quite a bit, and am amazed by the playing on the disc, the freer, looser feel on David Grisman’s Acoustic Disc label is the sound that I imagine he prefers. I wonder if ‘Hot Dawg’ recorded in the mid-90s would have sounded different. Little grittier, a little earthier.

Recordings are of course simply a record, not necessarily of a moment captured in time anymore, but possibly of many moments mixed together to get a performance that the artist wanted others to hear again and again. That’s hard to do. And as critical as I can be of what seems like a feeling of coldness on the part of ‘Hot Dawg’, I also have an image in my mind for some reason of listening to it in a dim room with just a fire in the fire place, and my dad laying on the floor and listening to it. Over the speakers, with the crackle of wood (and the snaps and pops of the vinyl) it probably sounded warmer then the CD I know have. And as long as I don’t think about that cover, this homey warmth is still the memory of this album that I have. No matter how many takes it took to record it.