These are “reading notes” – little stuff I cull when I read. I copy and paste the quotes into thematic documents (e.g., drugs.docx), so all of this has been “processed” out of the book, and up one level, into thematic or other kinds of buckets.
You may not find the quotes of greatest interest to you. Obviously I am doing this for my own purposes.
A Signpost to New Space. Cambridge,
MA: Da Capo Press.
took place, see http://jgmf.blogspot.com/2015/11/signpost-to-new-space-and-stoned-sunday.html
work. What I’m doing is my work, but I’m playing!” (Reich 2003, xiv). #why
[sic] Saunders at a small place in Berkeley and one by one, for ‘no reason’,
the rest of the Dead showed up too, and eventually they got on the stage and
started playing. As Jerry says, they just liked to hang out together. … ‘The
question is, can we do it and stay high? Can we make it so our organization is
composed of people who are like pretty high, who are not being controlled by
their gig?’” (Reich 2003, xv).
2003, xv).
art … is the commitment to growth and new possibilities, personal and
artistic” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], xix).
one is OK … I’ve made my pitch, I’ve put my stand in for the life side of the
cycle” (Reich intro to Signpost, Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], xxi).
Nick the Greek, was around the coffeehouse scene, early 1960s (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 7)
to all this” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 13)
music to acid: “it was like a series of continually opening doors” (Garcia
et al. 2003 [1972], 19).
that freedom means absolutely and utterly free, and it really doesn’t mean
anything of the sort” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 37).
cope with it, but I don’t think that I could be really that comfortable with
it, you know, because I … the place where I get strung out is … is .. I’d
like to be fair, you know, I want to be fair, so I don’t like to pull the thing
of having somebody at the door that says ‘No, fuck you, you can’t see Garcia’ (Garcia
et al. 2003 [1972], 48). #burden
Hart “last night”, I infer either 10/14-15/71 at BCT (Garcia et
al. 2003 [1972], 49).
is a haiku, 17 syllables” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 55) s-Ripple
Altamont is that periodically you have darkness and periodically you have
light, like the way the universe is in the yin/yang symbol. There’s darkness
and light and it’s the interplay that represents the game we’re allowed to play
…” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 57) #chiaroscuro
place where we can become more music, where we can play more music and have it
get to higher places and express finer and subtler things. And that has to do
with being able to more or less control the circumstances in which we’re
playing. And you can only play so much high music in gyms and then you’re
squeezing it out of yourself and it’s not really happening” (Garcia et al.
2003 [1972], 59).
“Because it’s all coming from my head, it’s going to at least agree. But
then you get this unified, too-much-agreement sort of sound, and you don’t have
that excitement of interchange” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 60).
doing a solo record. It’s as a composer, not a performer. I’m not going to try to
[61] be a band. I’m going to try to be a composer, because the 16-track is the
perfect way to do it” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 60-61).
studio. So why not just go and do the sound that you hear in your head? It’s
like scratching an itch. The idea of having that complex code of writing music
is so that you can get the sound in your head out, and it’s a very imperfect
way to do it. There’s huge, big flaws in the notation system because it only
tells you about pitch and meter; it doesn’t tell you about the shape of a note,
except in the crudest way. It just doesn’t cover the amount of sounds
available. Most modern composers invest their own way of writing music” (Garcia
et al. 2003 [1972], 61) #studio #ear
deal with a tune. To be a musician means to be a composer and to be a 16-tracks
recording virtuoso and so forth – it’s an expanded role” (Garcia et al.
2003 [1972], 61)
et al. 2003 [1972], 63
Sun is really the performance of an eight-track tape; Phil and I performed
it and it would be like four hands and sometimes Healy would have a hand in.
We’d be there hovering around the boards in these various places at Criteria
Studios, Miami, and in New York” (Garcia, Reich and Wenner 2003/1972, 64).
et al. 2003 [1972], 65-67, nice praise for MOTM and DDM. “The record is
one of my pets. I really like it. I was always sorry that it came out so fucked
up and then didn’t sell and all. It was one of our most expensive ones—it
might’ve been the most expensive one.
–how much? eighty thousand?—An easy
that” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 66-67).
expression. The Movie was, of course, another of his pets that cost them the
better part of a fortune. Part of the narrative I need to weave through is the
Dead’s bond of brotherhood, and then some, also, obviously, business partners.
My basic narrative is that Jerry considered walking away, or at least having
everyone on their own bottom, in connection with the hiatus. He’d become Jerry
Garcia, Robert Hunter would become Robert Hunter, the Godchauxs and Weir and
Hart all had to take on more for themselves. But the model failed, for all of
the reasons involved with going into business for yourself, and with a future
convicted felon who cut himself a $225,000 check and bailed. And in that
moment, I think the GD guys, for the first time, but not for the last, carried Jerry instead of him carrying
them. They threw him a life preserver, he probably needed it, let him save
face, probably didn’t even bust his balls too much for letting the serpent into
the would-be Garden. Jerry fucked up, and I think as from 1976 he essentially
parameterized his commitment to the Dead, as he had with Laird Grant and maybe
a few others – he’d never seriously consider leaving the band again.
boondoggles were a little bit of a Garcia trademark – we could think that way
about Aoxomoxoa, the Dead’s Europe
’74 tour, the record companies, and Egypt in 1978, in that frame. In 1973 he
considered working on a screen adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s classic Cat’s Cradle (the material core of
which, substance Ice Nine, furnished the name of the Dead’s publishing company,
run by longtime running mate and house anthropologists, Alan Trist). Four years
later he’d opt instead for Vonnegut’s Sirens
of Titan, a project picked up and put down a number of times which remained
undone at Garcia’s death. Definitely the “creative type” in this
respect, long on vision and balls, but implementation can be problematic. Hence
the managers, accountants, lawyers, record companies, ‘quippies, bodyguards,
typists, and all the rest.
et al. 2003 [1972], 67
like our swan song to Haight Street. … It was really a great day, but that was
the end of it” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 67).
“in debt to Warner Brothers for around $180,000” (Garcia et al. 2003
[1972], 68).
rehearsed for a month or so before the NO bust. January 1970? (Garcia et al.
2003 [1972], 68).
et al. 2003 [1972], 69)
Workingman’s? “The album was a tremendous joy. Being able to that was extremely positive in the midst of all
this adverse stuff that was happening … It was the first record that we made
together as a group, all of us” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 69).
off each other. It was the first record that we made together as a group, all
of us. Everybody contributed beautifully and it came off really nicely.”
praises songs, “that was the year we got turned onto singing” …
praises the mixes [Barncard] (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 69).
musical picture of what cocaine is like. A
little bit evil. [70] And hard-edged (Garcia
et al. 2003 [1972], 69-70) #drugs
Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 70, brief Wally Heider’s vs. PHR mention.
tried to block the whole trip out. You see, my mother died while we were making
that record. And Phil’s father died. It was raining down hard on us while that
record was going on” (Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 71).
et al. 2003 [1972], 71
yourself?
just going on a trip. I have a curiosity to see what I can do and I’ve a desire
to get into 16-track and go on trips which are too weird for me to want to put
anybody else I know through. And also to pay for this house!
anyone to think that it’s me being serious or anything like that – it’s really
me goofing around. I’m not trying to have my own career or anything like that. There’s a lot of
stuff that I feel like doing and the Grateful Dead, just by the fact that it’s
now a production for us to go out and play, we can’t get as loose, as we had
been able to, so I’m not able to stay as busy as I was. It’s just a way to keep
my hand in so to speak, without having to turn on a whole big scene. In the world that I live in there’s the Grateful Dead, which is one
unit which I’m a part of, and then there’s just me. And the me that’s
just me, I have to keep my end up in order to be able to take care of my part
of the Grateful Dead. So rather than sit home and practice – scales and
stuff—which I do when I’m together enough to do it—I go out and play because
playing music is more enjoyable to me than sitting around and playing scales.
Tom Fogerty.
Champlin, and Merle [sic] Saunders
has a small recording team of his own as well as composes and I’m going to gig
with them. It’s that kind of thing – a loose hangout.
outside the band, like with Merle [sic] Saunders.
It’s just that I love music. I love an opportunity to go out and play. I’m a
total junkie when it comes to playing. I just have to play. And when we’re off the road, I get itchy, and a bar’s
like the perfect opportunity to get loose, and play all night or whatever’s
comfortable. With guys that are good players, Merle [sic] or Howard or
anything, it’s always a complete open jam scene.
another group?
dig playing with Howard for a long time, or Merle [sic], all those guys. I
enjoy [74] playing and if I had more of me to go out and play those gigs, I’d
do it immediately.
better. It could have come out really fine,
in my opinion. I’m talking about the way it fell together, because none of the
material was written or anything. We either worked it out in the studio or it
was totally improvised; like “South Side Strut” is just a jam, it’s a
thin which just happened, with all those changes and horn parts, we did it all
live. It was very loose, but the results came out remarkably sophisticated.
et al. 2003 [1972], 75 JG We didn’t give a shit. We were just happy freaks,
man, we didn’t know anything about money, or bills, or anything of the rest of
that stuff.
the one who first really tried to get them organized. Maybe so he could rip
them off better. #Lenny Hart
Carousel? #v-Carousel
understand. At the time Ron Rakow was running the Carousel Ballroom and he got
called ‘mismanager’ and all the rest of that, stuff, but in reality there was
no way to make it work. … It was a great scene, even though it failed”
thought, “Ah, at least here’s a manager that we don’t have to worry about,
he’s an old business man and he’s Mickey’s father, well, we can trust him, of
course we can trust him, you know, he’s his father.
Altamont scene and he was looking for something to do – he came and hung out at
my house for awhile … Sam started looking into it and they discovered that
Lenny had really been taking a lot of money … Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 77 we
were recording Workingmans Dead when
we actually fired Lenny; we’d just been busted in New Oreland and things were
looking heavy, this New Orleans threat hanging over our heads … [Ramrod said
it’s him or me, they got rid of Lenny]
[July 1971] there was talk about “starting a small record company”.
is that still real?
still depends on … getting out of our present contract, or it expiring. … See,
Grunt Records is still RCA. … It’s not truly
independent. And our fantasy is to be completely
independent if we can do it.
object to the idea of record companies at all, in fact, record companies are good.
record cos, just put out their own stuff.] All we’re trying to do is survive
and be independent.
huge success … the idea would be to keep it marginal so we don’t have to
escalate our trip.
Garcia addresses rather obliquely. What is this?
and stay high?
recollections
spring ’71 as reference: It’s getting trickier and trickier to do it, it’s
getting harder and harder. In Boston we played for two nights and even so there
were still about three or four thousand people outside each night that weren’t
able to get in because the place was sold out, and the police maced them and
did all that … I mean you being to wonder why you’re doing it if what you’re
doing is leading people into a trap.
just sit down, and it’s all very close work. It’s more like working out with a
sewing machine than it is standing up and playing ball, which is the way
playing guitar is. It’s not such a totally physical trip. It’s little motions.
So it’s easy for me to sit down and play the pedal steel, I can play it for
eight hours in a row without hardly noticing it. But the New Riders are trying
to find another steel player, so they can tour more independently.
without it turning up on you somewhere”
ever could … ‘Altamont was the little bit of sadism in your sex life, that the
Rolling Stones put out in their music, coming back. It was the karma of putting
that out for all those years, it was that little bit of red and black.’
hadn’t been brought down … then Altamont would’ve never happened the way it
did.
like driving your car off the road. [Interesting: that’s what killed Jerry’s
mom.] I don’t think that there was any why
to it, really. She prpbably hadn’t had smack for awhile or something like that.
She probably had a few drinks or something after a gig, coming back to the
hotel, take a hit and on out, go to sleep for the night, and it was probably
more than she expected and she just died. That’s how easily it can happen, it
can happen to anybody if you don’t know what you’re getting, and that’s the way
it is when you’re having to deal with things that are illegal.
anything killed her, because she couldn’t go and get exactly the right hit for
herself of exactly the proper purity in a drug store and do herseulf up; she
wouldn’t be dead now. … I don’t think that fame killed her, I don’t think that
being a celebrity killed her. She just accidentally, like cutting yourself with
a razor or something, just accidentally died.
only reason people are talking about him dying. If Jim Morrison had been
anybody else, nobody would be talking about Jim Morrison dying. And that’s the
same with every other musician. Statistically, people die, and that’s all.
listen to all kinds of stuff, just all kinds of stuff.
but then “after a few weeks it starts creeping into the back of my mind
and I start thinking ‘Wow, what was that tune?’ And I go and find the record
and put it on. It’s like scratching an itch.” NB Jerry loved the sound
of RR’s guitar, like in Going, Going Gone
record] do you like?
Shit, that’s great. All the stuff in there, all those great parts. The Dylan
song is great, too. [I Shall Be Released] I love that song. I’ll probably sing
that with the barroom band.”
were on the East Coast. And I really dug being able to sit down and talk to
him. It was just like that kinda stuff you do where you’ve never met anybody
before, but you know what they do, and you respect them. We were both kinda
there cause we’d been on that tour-we’d met before, actually-on that tour with
Janis, that Canada thing. We got off on their music, of course, and they dug
our music, ’cause really, they’re kinda similar. We just have slightly
different viewpoints of an almost similar trip.
groovy grounds, in terms of mutual respect and understanding. It was good. We
talked about guitars, and pianos, and music … and I went over and dug his
studio. Just a friendly scene. It’s one of those things that sometime in the
future, I’d love to be able to spend some time and actually work with those
guys, actually play music together with them, under some circumstances or
another.
those Fifties Fender-pickers. I can hear where he’s picked up a lotta his
stuff. His approach to it is more or less orchestral. The kinda stuff he plays
and the music, is like punctuation, and structural. He’s an extremely subtle
and refined guitar player, that’s the way I think of him. I really admire him.
descended from barroom rock and roll, country guitar. Just ’cause that’s where
all my stuff comes from. It’s like that blues instrumental stuff that was
happening in the late Fifties and early Sixties, like Freddie King.
all my favorite music. Country and Western stuff. Just whatever. Ali Akbar
Khan. Crosby, Stills and Nash.
older ones, yeah. Traffic is good, Stevie Winwood is great. Some of them I
enjoy listening to, but I don’t enjoy them in the sense of the soul. There’s
something that I listen to music for which … Neil Young has it, but Elton John
doesn’t, for me. It’s well-executed and everything, it’s good music, but it
just has to do with how it makes feel. I love American music. I love Indian
music, too. I even love English music. Actually, there’s a lotta English stuff
which I like a lot, but I’m just tending to be general. You know what I think
of as being the English sound, the real sound, is like Pentangle. Pentangle, to
my ears, is the English sound, because it’s very much that sort of madrigal,
Elizabethan thing, very crisp. Economical. But it’s not in any of the trends.
It’s more basic.
that they do, their solo trips. I like Neil Young’s stuff a lot, it’s real
great. I like his sensibilities. The Band, I love the band, I really like the way
they play, and their idea of what music is, is really neat to me. Crosby, Still
and Young are into a political bag, which I don’t like that much. But their
singing’s so good, their whole thing is. They’re entertainers. Crosby’s such an
incredible ham, a ShowBiz guy, but it’s alright. Their singing is strong. Their
whole musical scene is so together. It comes across really well.
He’s a guy who goes too far, all the
time. Takes a lot of drugs, stretches his mind out a lot, he’s into some kind
of complex, competition scene with his father. Something which you and I
couldn’t know about, really. He’s too far ahead. But he’s a good dude, he’s got
a good head. I respect him and dig him. He’s not any kind of asshole or
anything, even when it seems like he might be. They’re all real good guys.
Graham Nash is a fine guy. Crosby’s a good old happy California hippie, L.A.
version.
singing. “I think that nothing really communicates like the human voice.
myself as a guitar player but hearing singing, and seeing it up close, has
kinda made me want to sing a lot; it just makes me want to do it, I don’t
really know what it is . . . and it’s real satisfying to sing. I’ve always
gotten off on a good singer, and that’s what I’m basin’ it on.
out anything?
probably happen one of these times, it’s a question of timing. Everything that
I’ve ever done on anybody else’s record has been a matter of timing, we’re both
in the same town.
companies and the music business structure that’s making it that difficult. It
should be possible for everybody to do everything, especially in music, where
music can only get better when people get together in different combinations.
But record companies wanta be exclusive. They’re getting looser and looser and
hopefully the thing could get [95] loose enough where everybody could do
whatever they want. That would be ideal.
learned from the most?
King is the guy I learned the most volume of stuff from. When I started
playing electric guitar the second time, with the Warlocks, it was a Freddie
King album that I got almost all my ideas off of, his phrasing really. That
first one, Here’s Freddie King, later it came out as Freddie King Plays Sutfin’
Music or something like that, it has “San-Ho-Zay” on it and
“Sensation” and all those instrumentals.
pedal steel?
in the days when I was a banjo player. I didn’t think that I wanted to get that
serious about it because I knew it was extremely difficult and that I’d have to
spend a lot of time to actually get into it. It’s so difficult, man, and my
playing is so mediocre I can’t begin to tell you how embarrassed I am about my
playing on the damn thing, really, it’s lamentable. Oh, I get off on it’s
really fun, but that doesn’t mean that I can do it well; it’s kinda like
standing up on a pair of skates, it makes you happy.
heard?
lot, these two kids in Stinson Beach, the Rowan
Brothers, Chris and Lorin Rowan.
I love their music. Me and Kreutzmann and Phil have been doing some sessions
with them because Dave Grisman,
who’s one of their managers, is an old friend of ours from bluegrass days (he’s
the guy that plays mandolin on American Beauty, there’s some nice mandolin on
“Friend of the Devil” and that, a real good musician). And these two
kids –one of them’s nineteen, and the other’s twenty two- from New England-just
write some really really pretty music and soulful songs, really high. It’s
fantastic, their music is just sparkly, brand-new, shiny. That’s like the
latest turn-on for me. They’re super, and they’re right at that point of just
starting out and nobody knows about them. I hate to see them go into the music
[96] business; I wish somebody could just say, “Here, man, here’s $5000 so
you can live for another six months without having to sell out. “The music
is too good for it. They could be, given the proper kind of exposure and stuff
like that, they could be like the Beatles. They’re that good, their music is
that good.”
#drugs
optimistic?
is another way of saying “space.” Music has infinite space. You can
go as far into music as you can fill millions of lifetimes. Music is an
infinite cylinder, it’s open-ended, it’s space. The form of music has infinite
space as a part of it and that, in itself, means that its momentum is
essentially in that open place.
bummers, it can contain your depressions, it can contain the black despair,
man, it can contain the whole spectrum. The blues is a perfect example. The
blues is that very effect, operating in a very sublime way. You hardly ever
hear anybody say they’re depressed because they’ve heard a lot of music. That’s
a pretty good example, right there. Even the worst music-the poorest, baddest,
most illthought- of music on earth-doesn’t hurt anybody.
album
going out and doing concerts or any of that stuff, I think it’s to get high.
yourself is to see everything else. And to see everything else is to become an
understanding molecule in evolution, a conscious tool of the universe. And I
think every human being should be a conscious tool of the universe. That’s why
I think it’s important to get high.
about being fully conscious. Also I’m not talking about the Grateful Dead as
being an end in itself. I don’t think of that highness as being an end in
itself. I think of the Grateful Dead as being a crossroads or a pointer sign
and what we’re pointing to is that there’s a lot of universe available, that
there’s a whole lot of experience available over here. We’re kinda like a
signpost, and we’re also pointing to danger, to difficulty, we’re pointing to
bummers. We’re pointing to whatever there is, when we’re on- when it’s really
happening.
rap. My notes on timing: ca. 6 mos. after first interview published in RS. Garcia
et al. 2003 [1972], 180 Owsley still in the joint. 205 Europe trip still in
future tense. 217 Ace almost done. 225 tonight, mixing Bobby’s album.
I’m an equal unity with everybody else in it and everybody else is really far
out, you know what I mean? Like Alan [Trist], man, Alan is fantastic, he’s like
some kind of cosmic diplomat. He’s a guy that there isn’t anybody; there’s no
way that ou can dislike him, you know what I mean, he never disturbs any karma,
ever. He’s fantastic, really man. … Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 113 I’ve known
Alan since he was eighteen and he and I met down in Palo Alto.
big pivot “two months ago” when he decided “yeah, OK, I’ll do
it. Garcia et al. 2003 [1972], 115: “I’ve gone a lot of places not
deciding and not choosing and not, and not willing in any way, you know what I
mean … it’s like up until like two months ago everything’s been free form, I’ve
been improvising, I’ve been taking it as it comes.”
reserve in terms of, you know, whether I’m going to run full out and use it all
or whether I’m going to, you known, lay back and see what happens, and I’ve
been laying back to see what happens for a long time now I feel like, you know,
but see, like, the whole Grateful Dead thing has been kind of like, ah, you
know, like waking up, you know what I mean, it’s like ah, you know ah, ah ha,
here we are. It’s drying out he wings and all that wrrr, you know, looking
around.
of the GD, man. It’s got like six or seven weird legs, mismatched pairs, and
one moth-eaten eagle wing and one bat wing, and it snorts fire and it’s
cross-eyed … and it jumps up and kicks around and laughs real loud.
the noisiest little kid I’ve ever known.”
peanut butter and jelly sandwich? JG: “No thanks, too dry.” He asks
for a cup of tea.
care whether it’s a joke or not. You know, if in doubt, take it as a
joke.”
et al. 2003 [1972], 183 PB&Js arrive
what’s happening, so I want to do what I can on the life-side of the whole
life-death cycle”
use what I could use for tripping out … to work on stuff.” artistic
freedom. JG more talk about commitment in life. Two months ago, Garcia et al.
2003 [1972], 198.
either one is okay. … but I’ve made my pitch, I’ve put my stand in for the life
side of the cycle.”
buy Jerry some cigarettes, and brings back some sunflower seeds.
sunflower seeds, putting lots of honey in a tea cup. Garcia et al. 2003 [1972],
214 she dumps something. Jerry stokes the fire.
“I don’t really care about food. I’m not really into my physical self very
much at all … some day I’ll pay for it.”
candy-striped camellias
consciousness”
equally and with little relish or with none at all. That’s from years of
smoking and, you know, beatnik living, you know, crackers and …”
yogurt, MG: Did I hear a call for yogurt? I have some yogurt. [turns out Jerry
did slyly eat a half a pb&j.]
Garcia: A Signpost to New Space. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press.
Reich and Wenner 2003 [1972], xi-xxi.
and Wenner 2003 [1972], vii-x.
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