BEARFOOT IN THE HEAD
Bearfoot in the Head
by Don Allred
April 5 - 11, 2000 Issue 14
April 5 - 11, 2000 Issue 14
Gov't Mule prepare to let the monster out to play.
photo: Danny Clinch
Help Us Get High
Shanachie
Buy Listen
Grateful Dead
So Many Roads: 1965-1995
Arista
Buy Listen
photo: Danny Clinch
Help Us Get High
Shanachie
Buy Listen
Grateful Dead
So Many Roads: 1965-1995
Arista
Buy Listen
Phish
Hampton Comes Alive
Elektra/Asylum
Buy Listen
Hampton Comes Alive
Elektra/Asylum
Buy Listen
Gov't Mule
Live With a Little Help From Our Friends (box set version)
Capricorn
Buy Listen
Live With a Little Help From Our Friends (box set version)
Capricorn
Buy Listen
Gov't Mule
Life Before Insanity
Capricorn
Buy Listen
So I'm checking out this band called moe., on Help Us Get High, a possibly
unique, certainly handy compilation of live jam bands, distilled from ? hours of
tape by truckin' experts, principally the Voice's own Richard Gehr (not the
gerbil guy). It faithfully presents the rewards and faux pies of listening to
oodles of noodles—100 years from today, it could stand as definitive
(Smithsonian, better get workin').
The moe. track, "Buster," is the first and longest. It's about a kid who
announces that he wants to be a bird and gets cautionary wisdom laid on him—a
timeless tale, especially related to tribal heritage vs.
the-need-to-explore-the-wilder-shores of Jam. Guitar takes over from voice, with some nice avid
pecking, hopping, pausing for dramatic effect, changing to a poignantly wavering
emulation of Jerry Garcia's voice, over enthusiastic "Ready for Takeoff!"
drum-clearance. Then he does ascend, though sort of hugging himself—but confiding in
us, bravely vulnerable. Drums and bass, sobered by this, provide steadying
support; guitar takes heart, blasts forth—and lives, to brag and marvel on and on
about it: "Whoohoo lookame Maw Ah'm uh Bird!!!" Very eventually, we get a big
cornball climax, to wildly enthusiastic applause—"Yay, it's over!"? Alas, I
fear not.
Life Before Insanity
Capricorn
Buy Listen
So I'm checking out this band called moe., on Help Us Get High, a possibly
unique, certainly handy compilation of live jam bands, distilled from ? hours of
tape by truckin' experts, principally the Voice's own Richard Gehr (not the
gerbil guy). It faithfully presents the rewards and faux pies of listening to
oodles of noodles—100 years from today, it could stand as definitive
(Smithsonian, better get workin').
The moe. track, "Buster," is the first and longest. It's about a kid who
announces that he wants to be a bird and gets cautionary wisdom laid on him—a
timeless tale, especially related to tribal heritage vs.
the-need-to-explore-the-wilder-shores of Jam. Guitar takes over from voice, with some nice avid
pecking, hopping, pausing for dramatic effect, changing to a poignantly wavering
emulation of Jerry Garcia's voice, over enthusiastic "Ready for Takeoff!"
drum-clearance. Then he does ascend, though sort of hugging himself—but confiding in
us, bravely vulnerable. Drums and bass, sobered by this, provide steadying
support; guitar takes heart, blasts forth—and lives, to brag and marvel on and on
about it: "Whoohoo lookame Maw Ah'm uh Bird!!!" Very eventually, we get a big
cornball climax, to wildly enthusiastic applause—"Yay, it's over!"? Alas, I
fear not.
What has happened to the youth of today? I become unmoved by eager beavers
overtaking a promising song with a teacher's-pet "sense" of dynamics. Lord, yes,
Child, Mickey Hart sho'nuff did study a World of Drums, so such doofus
displays are often traced to the Grateful Dead. However, consider their recent box
set, So Many Roads: 1965-1995 (Gehr essay included, but not with the version
somebody burned for me): five discs of mostly live, deceptively consistent
excellence. Among other things, we get to track Garcia's relaxin' on the
increasingly cozy snow-crusted axis between Miles Davis, Lou Reed, and sugarcubed Brian
Wilson. Like them, Jerry's inner G. keeps his bandmates in (the) shape (of
something) by inducing them to root around his space, whether he's ocupado or
not. But mainly, Roads goes something like this: Once upona time, the Dead would
ramble round, to setdown on your town, with their big vanguard-entrepreneurial
coat-load of percussion and play what worked out best with just a toe-tappin'
rhythm. And that was enough, that was fine.
overtaking a promising song with a teacher's-pet "sense" of dynamics. Lord, yes,
Child, Mickey Hart sho'nuff did study a World of Drums, so such doofus
displays are often traced to the Grateful Dead. However, consider their recent box
set, So Many Roads: 1965-1995 (Gehr essay included, but not with the version
somebody burned for me): five discs of mostly live, deceptively consistent
excellence. Among other things, we get to track Garcia's relaxin' on the
increasingly cozy snow-crusted axis between Miles Davis, Lou Reed, and sugarcubed Brian
Wilson. Like them, Jerry's inner G. keeps his bandmates in (the) shape (of
something) by inducing them to root around his space, whether he's ocupado or
not. But mainly, Roads goes something like this: Once upona time, the Dead would
ramble round, to setdown on your town, with their big vanguard-entrepreneurial
coat-load of percussion and play what worked out best with just a toe-tappin'
rhythm. And that was enough, that was fine.
At least when it came close enough to Overland Blues—something like official
White Hillbilly Doc Watson doing a song by official Black Bluesman Mississippi
John Hurt. Dancey, but too quirky to get stuck in the sweet-rut grooves so
many jammers have always tried to make honey with. A charming but persistent
sound, talkin' to you, Podner. So, G.D., wherever you are, pleeze roll another
"Dark Star" toward all us ever-budding Web smokers. Still, "The real punch line
is always: 'And then he died.' "—J. Garcia. But also, "One man gathers what
another man spills." Don't Bogart that life, my friend, pass it over in the
telling, the timing, the hearing, the cause and effect of the universe; where
understanding wears through, you still have to follow. At best, you enter the song
turning into itself, as the poet Al Young puts it. At worst? Well, if bum
notes, cold feet, and sure shots still get more cheers than jeers, or even if
they don't—long as that's the worst, why, you just lucky. That's all.
White Hillbilly Doc Watson doing a song by official Black Bluesman Mississippi
John Hurt. Dancey, but too quirky to get stuck in the sweet-rut grooves so
many jammers have always tried to make honey with. A charming but persistent
sound, talkin' to you, Podner. So, G.D., wherever you are, pleeze roll another
"Dark Star" toward all us ever-budding Web smokers. Still, "The real punch line
is always: 'And then he died.' "—J. Garcia. But also, "One man gathers what
another man spills." Don't Bogart that life, my friend, pass it over in the
telling, the timing, the hearing, the cause and effect of the universe; where
understanding wears through, you still have to follow. At best, you enter the song
turning into itself, as the poet Al Young puts it. At worst? Well, if bum
notes, cold feet, and sure shots still get more cheers than jeers, or even if
they don't—long as that's the worst, why, you just lucky. That's all.
Maybe the Dead's rocking-chair paranoia tainted Phish, whose own five-CD
Hampton Comes Alive is recommended only to those who don't mind spending a lotta
money on something less than half good (though less than half is still almost a
couple hours ' worth). But when isolation (behind sub-Teletubby wit,
jam-smeared ornamental shrubbery, and hothouse pop) becomes their
TeeHeads-strung-out-on-Steely subject, they testify: "Split Open and Melt" got me by sending out a
glittery, greedy spider-piano to really spin that yarn. Something about a
dusty, gray-brown recluse of a guitar solo, almost swept out the door by its
dogged determination to ride the keyboard-dictated changes, while weaving a new
motto: "Clumsy Is Real, Man!" So it's not necessarily a question of "Jam or
Pop?" re true Phish nature, as a growing minority debates. Each approach just
needs to push the other better.
Hampton Comes Alive is recommended only to those who don't mind spending a lotta
money on something less than half good (though less than half is still almost a
couple hours ' worth). But when isolation (behind sub-Teletubby wit,
jam-smeared ornamental shrubbery, and hothouse pop) becomes their
TeeHeads-strung-out-on-Steely subject, they testify: "Split Open and Melt" got me by sending out a
glittery, greedy spider-piano to really spin that yarn. Something about a
dusty, gray-brown recluse of a guitar solo, almost swept out the door by its
dogged determination to ride the keyboard-dictated changes, while weaving a new
motto: "Clumsy Is Real, Man!" So it's not necessarily a question of "Jam or
Pop?" re true Phish nature, as a growing minority debates. Each approach just
needs to push the other better.
Nevertheless, Phish, the Dead, and many lesser heads do tend to disappear up
their own butts. The subterranean wilderness patrolled by Gov't Mule often
seems more roomy, and eventful, too. Sure, you might be creeped out sometimes,
perhaps by the Leslie-amped(organ-sounding) guitars trickling medication into
"Thorazine Shuffle" on 1998's
Dose, or by the New Year's Eve "yeee-haaa!"s in the version on Live With a
Little Help From Our Friends, when lead Mule Warren Haynes (almost shyly)
announces, "It's time to let the monster out to play." "No Need to Suffer" 's
narrator may be Savior, Satan, and/or driven to madness (certainly to metal), by
empathy with an actual woman, I think (so maybe it's not exactly metal—but a true
power ballad nonetheless). There's also a "Towering Fool," whose winding
stare the singer nails with every steadily climbing note. Haynes seems to know
these people very well, but they aren't just projections: too many mirror-busting
details.
their own butts. The subterranean wilderness patrolled by Gov't Mule often
seems more roomy, and eventful, too. Sure, you might be creeped out sometimes,
perhaps by the Leslie-amped(organ-sounding) guitars trickling medication into
"Thorazine Shuffle" on 1998's
Dose, or by the New Year's Eve "yeee-haaa!"s in the version on Live With a
Little Help From Our Friends, when lead Mule Warren Haynes (almost shyly)
announces, "It's time to let the monster out to play." "No Need to Suffer" 's
narrator may be Savior, Satan, and/or driven to madness (certainly to metal), by
empathy with an actual woman, I think (so maybe it's not exactly metal—but a true
power ballad nonetheless). There's also a "Towering Fool," whose winding
stare the singer nails with every steadily climbing note. Haynes seems to know
these people very well, but they aren't just projections: too many mirror-busting
details.
Though he deals in decisive-sounding direct address, former David Allen
a-Coe-not-so-lyte (and accompanist) Haynes keeps obsessively reapproaching his
subjects, shielded at times by jaggedly juxtaposed time signatures, those
Thorazine tricklers, and/or tilting lanterns of vocal implication (a bit like Korn's
Jonathan Davis—or Fiona Apple). Even in the leadfooted moments (worth the
weight for the best songs on GM's latest, Life Before Insanity), the earth's
rumbling hungrily, shifting under him. (Volcano vs. Plate theory? The battle
continues!) Maybe everything's a jam. Warren's life sure is.
a-Coe-not-so-lyte (and accompanist) Haynes keeps obsessively reapproaching his
subjects, shielded at times by jaggedly juxtaposed time signatures, those
Thorazine tricklers, and/or tilting lanterns of vocal implication (a bit like Korn's
Jonathan Davis—or Fiona Apple). Even in the leadfooted moments (worth the
weight for the best songs on GM's latest, Life Before Insanity), the earth's
rumbling hungrily, shifting under him. (Volcano vs. Plate theory? The battle
continues!) Maybe everything's a jam. Warren's life sure is.
What really makes all this work is the way Matt Abts's drums and the bass of
Allen Woody (not the guy who married his daughter) rattle Warren's ax past
(or, if necessary, through) the Solemn Bog of Eternalist Solos. On the recently
expanded edition of Live, P-Funk keyboarder Bernie Worrell helps them shift the
dancing-in-yo'-face "Mule" theme overland toward Maggot Brain-era Dee-troit
(old Murder City). Bernie and young Derek Trucks are mission-accomplices,
provoking Robert Johnson's "32-20 Blues" to preach in slide-guitar tongues, midway
through the Nevilles' French Quarter (new Murder City). It's the kind of
work-release that makes the Dead's sporty skeleton mascot look a tad scrawny.
Allen Woody (not the guy who married his daughter) rattle Warren's ax past
(or, if necessary, through) the Solemn Bog of Eternalist Solos. On the recently
expanded edition of Live, P-Funk keyboarder Bernie Worrell helps them shift the
dancing-in-yo'-face "Mule" theme overland toward Maggot Brain-era Dee-troit
(old Murder City). Bernie and young Derek Trucks are mission-accomplices,
provoking Robert Johnson's "32-20 Blues" to preach in slide-guitar tongues, midway
through the Nevilles' French Quarter (new Murder City). It's the kind of
work-release that makes the Dead's sporty skeleton mascot look a tad scrawny.
The Mules sometimes submit their smoldering
Cream-Hendrix-Allmans-Monk-Sabbath bulk to a Free-Bad Co.-style restraining order. Yet how often they then
gamble on stretching out of one sense of grace, into the higher! It doesn't always
work. But "Cortez the Killer" 's* generations fall like rain past "Sad and
Blue as You," which lives in a tear that never falls. Johnny Neel's Hammond B-3
organ sprinkles Insanity's "Fallen Down" with impervious-to-the-agony
whiskeynotes. And Dose's cover of Blind Willie Johnson's "John the Revelator" ends, not
with judgement-rock thunder . . . just Warren's banjo hopping along past
guitar moans, quietly asking, "What's next? What's next?"
Cream-Hendrix-Allmans-Monk-Sabbath bulk to a Free-Bad Co.-style restraining order. Yet how often they then
gamble on stretching out of one sense of grace, into the higher! It doesn't always
work. But "Cortez the Killer" 's* generations fall like rain past "Sad and
Blue as You," which lives in a tear that never falls. Johnny Neel's Hammond B-3
organ sprinkles Insanity's "Fallen Down" with impervious-to-the-agony
whiskeynotes. And Dose's cover of Blind Willie Johnson's "John the Revelator" ends, not
with judgement-rock thunder . . . just Warren's banjo hopping along past
guitar moans, quietly asking, "What's next? What's next?"
Meanwhile, back at Help Us Get High, Jiggle the Handle (!?) jump right past
moe.'s buildup/setup, and their cornball climax, yet retain some of the reedy
Garcia-tone moe. used, vulnerability right in the midst of a bull's-eye. Boud
Deun's "Lincoln" sets us free to find a new illusion with a tight, warm, fully
packed electric violin, which Ominous Seapods should try to measure (up to),
judging by their preeny tourist-bait "Jet Smooth Ride' (ditto art-wankers
Hosemobile). Schleigo's got the (ever-) new illusion: wheelin' 'round with your
Baby, in winter Sunday sunlight (Cadillac'd by keyboard). Touchingly titled
"Biscuits" (in the oven?).
moe.'s buildup/setup, and their cornball climax, yet retain some of the reedy
Garcia-tone moe. used, vulnerability right in the midst of a bull's-eye. Boud
Deun's "Lincoln" sets us free to find a new illusion with a tight, warm, fully
packed electric violin, which Ominous Seapods should try to measure (up to),
judging by their preeny tourist-bait "Jet Smooth Ride' (ditto art-wankers
Hosemobile). Schleigo's got the (ever-) new illusion: wheelin' 'round with your
Baby, in winter Sunday sunlight (Cadillac'd by keyboard). Touchingly titled
"Biscuits" (in the oven?).
Grand Pillsbury Bake-off finale: "Lil' Betty Boop's been thinkin it ohvaah,"
and think it through with her if you dare, while Disco Biscuits are chasing
this American Beeootay around something like Grauman's Chinese Theatre, with a
Phantom of the Opera organ, decadent disco hi-hats bouncing on each other, and
guitars playing those spermatozoon wraiths swooping around Betty in Cab
Calloway's 1930s cartoon of "Minnie the Moocher." Holy Smokes, even if she was a
low-down hoochie-coocher, Biscuits jam the hard way in the direction of "There's
No Place Like Home," and I don't mean like Toto, Dorothy. All 'cause
barefootin' Betty kicked that gong around? But you kick it too, guys (compliment)!
and think it through with her if you dare, while Disco Biscuits are chasing
this American Beeootay around something like Grauman's Chinese Theatre, with a
Phantom of the Opera organ, decadent disco hi-hats bouncing on each other, and
guitars playing those spermatozoon wraiths swooping around Betty in Cab
Calloway's 1930s cartoon of "Minnie the Moocher." Holy Smokes, even if she was a
low-down hoochie-coocher, Biscuits jam the hard way in the direction of "There's
No Place Like Home," and I don't mean like Toto, Dorothy. All 'cause
barefootin' Betty kicked that gong around? But you kick it too, guys (compliment)!
* I think there is something about "Cortez," as written, and performed, by NY or GM, that can be self-revealing: the killer man, "dancing across the water," bad man, but then I lean in for thee killer guitar---how aware was he of this possible effect---? Maybe it doesn't matter, but, in any case, well-played, sir(s).
.
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