Tolces, Todd. 1973. Jerry’s Bluegrass Boys. Melody Maker 48 (April
28): 35.
A FEW POINTS TO EXTRACT:
First, I believe the interview material and show observations are from March 13, 1973 at the Keystone in Berkeley.
He only mentions it as a quartet, so I doubt there was a fiddle player there.
Here are setlist bits we get for this date:
- Orange Blossom Special
- Jambalaya
- Panama Red (“halfway
through set”; with Chris Rowan and Lorin Rowan on
harmony vocals) - How Mountain Girls Can Love
Since we don’t have any setlist information for this show at TJS, this should probably
be added.
Second, we learn from Peter Rowan that the OAITW studio album was already
in the can by ca. March 13,
1973. The idea that it was recorded by mid-March just
blows my mind. Jackson (1999, p.
241) says OAITW “even cut an album at Mickey Hart’s studio, though it was
never released. ‘We weren’t too happy with it,’ Grisman said. ‘It was kind of
rushed. It didn’t seem to equal what we were doing live.’” (We then get
the “one of the best-selling bluegrass albums of all time” quote
about the eventual live OAITW record.) Not much to say except that these
two observations (album cut by March, and “kind of rushed”) would seem
to fit well together. Let me here just reiterate my plea for any and all
information/thoughts about the OAITW studio album. Let me also just
note how contemporaneous this is with the whole Muleskinner
project. Not sure what to make of that, just putting it out there.
Third, they were planning on doing “a few bluegrass festivals”,
but I have just reconsulted McNally (pp. 548-550, 554), and it looks like they
just played the one (6/8/73
Whippoorwill festival in Warrenton, VA),
according to him. That’s where I am on the issue of OAITW
at the summer 1973 bluegrass festivals, too. My question is, why didn’t
they play more than one, as Pete seems to have expected and as ads imply they
were planning to some degree?
Fourth, tiny I know, we learn that Garcia was carrying his banjo around on
the GD tour. Maybe we already knew that, but it’s fun for me to think on.
Fifth, here their “theme song” is said to be a Monroe
tune, “How Mountain Girls Can Love”. Maybe this is some inside joke
about Garcia’s S.O. Mountain Girl (Carolyn Adams). No idea.
Anyway, reading notes after the jump.
Tolces, Todd. 1973. Jerry’s Bluegrass Boys. Melody Maker 48 (April
28): 35.
Garcia always busy, running around gigging, sessions, etc.
“Garcia’s new band – called Old And In The Way”
“Along with Garcia on this venture is Peter Rowan on guitar and vocals
(formerly lead singer of Seatrain and Earth Opera), David Diadem on mandolin
(Rowan Brothers producer), and John Kahn on bass.”
“The group was casually formed, the way all Garcia ventures are initiated, a
few months ago when the love for bluegrass just brought David, Peter and Jerry
together. ‘We all live in the same town,’ Peter Rowan explained. … ‘It’s nice
being in a loose situation like this because there’s no pressure to produce on
a schedule. We’ve already recorded an album but I’m not sure when we’re going
to release it.”
“’Bluegrass is really hard for me,’ Jerry said
excitedly.”
Reference to “their second gig at the Keystone recently.” The only two-night
stands by OAITW at Keystone from the beginning on March 2 and the publication
date of April 28 were March 12-13 and April 27-28. For obvious reasons, I would
exclude the latter possibility and say that the gig he is referring to, and the
interview snippets, can be dated 3/13/73.
So, this show “was like an old family reunion. The Rowan Brothers … opened the
show … They closed their set with help from brother Peter supplying extra
harmonies and unwarranted theatrics as he leapt and bounded all around the
stage and finally jumped into the audience screaming while running to the back
of the room.”
“Meanwhile, backstage …”
“’We’re gonna do a few bluegrass festivals with Bill Monroe,’ Peter Rowan
beamed.”
“’Hey man,’ Jerry turned to me, ‘you know that banjos act funny at weird
altitudes? Why, my banjo sounded just great in Salt Lake
City [JGMF: ca. 2/28/73].”
Mentions songs “Orange Blossom Special” and “Jambalaya”.
“The band got off. Garcia occasionally smiled, letting his insides seep into
his outsides and picking off some nasty pickin’ licks. Everybody in the band
agreed that David Diadem was simply one of the hottest mandolin players around
town … Halfway through the set The Rowan Brothers reappeared to help out on
harmonies on an original tune appropriately titled ‘Panama Red’. It went off
quite well but the best all around song was their ‘theme song’: Bill Monroe’s
‘How Mountain Girls Can Love’.”
“Old And In The Way is a stable band. Even though Jerry Garcia will still
continue to perform with the Grateful Dead, Merl Saunders and Tom Fogerty, and
just about everybody in the studio, including the likes of anybody from Papa
John Creach to the New Riders, he’ll stick to his first love, bluegrass, as
will the rest of the band.”
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