Friday, November 11, 2022

It's 11/11 !!!...remember the sabbath and keep it holy

Straight from the desk of "hatrack" himself, don't forget to take the time to hop in the ol' wayback machine, setting the controls to a more primal time.. and jam-on your favorite version of The Eleven today! 

Perhaps it's one of the longest versions performed (2/21/69)...the classic Live Dead version (1/26/69)...the galloping take from Two From the Vault (8/28/68)...or my usual go-to performance from what I also think is the best show of the late-Feb/early March run at the Fillmore East...3/2/69. 

Whatever yr' pleasure...put it on, cue it up and play it LOUD!!...let yr'self sink beneath the waters to the coral sands below and have a great weekend!

Terribly distracted...with good reason

While i will fully admit to my 3 week-long neglect to my journalistic post for an audience of none...which includes still owing these pages not 1 - but 2! - TTB concert reviews from Beacon Theater shows attended over a month ago...at least 2 more "bump-into" posts...recent musical recommends...pocketfulls of instantly forgettable musings...and other inconsistent flashes of dull mental lightning. And also realizing that i'm being unnecessarily obligated to absolutely no-one...i have only the following pictures and my most happy and over-the-moon pleasure to introduce to this den of silent echos, my excuse for my silence and the newest member of my life...Nelson.

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

10/19 Check-in

Whoosh...two successive nights of the TTB @ the Beacon last weekend def put a lil' dent in this can of beans...mercy! Both shows were beyond exceptional and featured setlists packed with unexpected covers played with exact precision & feel...classic originals that spanned their entire discography, including earlier solo material...and intense Mad Dogs-like chemistry & energy that allowed them to go from runaway train abandon to pin-drop quiet, raw emotion at the mere glance of a guitarist. Detailed reviews to come, for sure...

Other distractions last week included the 4th sad Sunday in a row on the gridiron for my Steelers...(my?)...which was a swift kick of reality to my balls after such an otherwise magical musical weekend. But the super-psyched yang to that salty yin was the highly anticipated start of the 2022 NHL season. The Pens went 2-0 and scored an unbelievable 12 goals in the process...with Sid netting 2 goals and 6 assists to earn him NHL's first-star player of the week. 

(...i know...we lost last night...and the 'Lers beat Tom Brady on Sunday...its been a real topsy-turvy 48 hours that i'm still trying to process) 

The wife and i have also started the ball rolling this week to finally get a new dog...so my attention and energies have been all over the place these days. Its involved a crazy mix of emotions that bounces from guilt to excitement and from sadness to anticipation at any moment. I still miss Hunter terribly...probably more than i let myself admit...but i don't think that will ever ebb from the shores of my heart. Still, i can't ignore the happy sparks felt at the possibility of what this pursuit will produce at the start of our search.  

I'll be back in a day or two to make good on the promise of tales involving Trucks-ian encounters.  

Till then...might i recommend some music from another, pretty good guitar player that you might have heard before...James Marshall Hendrix. I know that i'm being a total contrarian on this one...but mark my words...that guy is talented and well-worth yr' time! Seriously though...i feel like my turntable go-to's this year have involved a heavy rotation of either funk/soul groovers or obscure, experimental/instrumental filled playlists...with some recent live GD releases & the TBB 4-LP "I Am The Moon" thrown in for good measure. So when i happened upon the few Hendrix records on my shelf this week that have gone woefully underplayed for far too long...i quickly shined up those plastic biscuits and have been spinning them non-stop on the platter ever since. 

1983...goddamn...what an enveloping lysergic symphony of sound that still is to these ears. 

I was introduced to the Beatles too early to realize that what i considered to be their playful, cartoonish style was actually a partial...if not entire...by-product of the progression of their drug experimentation and use. But when I dug into Hendrix as a teen, it was impossible to ignore the obvious Owsley influence on his sound, lyrics and over-all vibe. I was also old enough to know what "high" was by then...but had no personal experience with it (yet). However, i sure-as-shit knew that Hendrix was deeply steeped in "highness"...and my immediate immersion into his cannon would become an important catalyst for me to continue searching for similar musicians that also refused to color inside the lines. Like i said in a previous post...musical connections are cool. 

...but i digress...the list of things to do today has grown as i've typed this...laters. 


Wednesday, October 5, 2022

A prelude of unexplainable frustration...aka, my intro to Derek Trucks...

I’ve always loved the connections that link musicians and bands together over time. You get hooked on a band…then learn that their keyboard player used to play in this other band before that…you dig into that band…you love it…and eventually find a live recording from 5 years ago that features a sit-in by a guitarist you’ve never heard of before and instantly love…you dig into that person’s back-catalog and learn that they were heavily influenced by a jazz musician you’ve never heard of and also, deeply steeped on the blues records of another artist that you’ve yet to discover…so you dive headfirst into the catalogs of those two musical worlds…and eventually, your head and shelf-space quickly become overpopulated with all of the musical links, side-tangents and rabbit-holes that are now currently bowing every shelf in the house with the weight of their collected recordings. 


For example…


i got hooked on the Grateful Dead in 1994 > then proceeded to nerd-out on other, similar bands from that era & went full-hog into collecting GD bootlegs > got blown away by the cassettes that featured the live GD/Allman Brothers Band-related collaborations of 2/11/70, 6/10/73, 7/28/73, 12/31/73 > saw my 1st ABB concert in 1996, introducing me to Warren Haynes in the process > picked up the new release “Live From Roseland”, by his side-project Gov’t Mule…was absolutely blindsided by his blistering instrumental take on the primal lysergic GD staple “St Stephen” during their extended jam “Trane” that instantly secured the Mule’s permanent place in my personal musical pantheon (it would be another 12-18 months before i got into John McLaughlin/Mahavishnu Orchestra via his work on the historical Miles Davis albums “In A Silent Way” & “Tribute to Jack Johnson”…and realized that the Mule’s “Trane” also featured an eyebrow searing take on Mahavishnu’s “Eternity’s Breath”…pushing my love & respect for this “side-project” band to soaring new levels) > immediately bought tickets to their upcoming local show @ Roseland on 5/13/1998, with another outfit - the Derek Trucks Band - as opener > had my mind liquified by live music all night long and even witnessed Allen’s bass- playing bow the front windows of Rosebud outward with the brute, sternum-shaking force of his low end…setting the bar unbelievably HIGH for the next 50+ Mule shows i’d attend over the years.


But above all else, i was absolutely thrown…and honestly, spooked…by the playing and overall style of the 18 year-old guitarist that opened the show. The combination of youth & skill he displayed that night was something my brain simply couldn’t and flat-out refused-to comprehend. It was like 2 + 2 suddenly equaled 3. He built universes of relentlessly explosive sounds and sinewy melodies, only to tear them apart, flip them upside-down and turn them inside-out to the delight of my puddled brain…all while maintaining the most peaceful, beatific look as he played…eyes closed, body still…essentially shedding his mortal shell to become a conduit...a divine portal almost...thru which transmissions were received from the farthest of galaxies and the highest of spirits. My immediate admiration & respect for him was only matched by my frustration to understand what i just saw. How can he look so young, display such skill, focus so deeply, transport me so far and yet, make it look so GODDAMN easy?!?! Before that night, I had never witnessed a guitarist play with as much fire and passion without also falling into the trope-trap of being an over-emoting cartoon on-stage, assaulting you endlessly with in-your-face flashes of frenetic fret-work fueled more by ego than by soul & spirit. 


And now…it’s almost a quarter-century later…and I’ve yet to figure out what I saw that night…let alone, makes sense of everything else Derek has conjured right before my eyes in the 60+ shows i’ve seen him perform (w/the DTB, ABB & TTB) following that introductory night back in ’98. From that point forward, the strong musical connections that I forged that night - from the GD to the ABB to GM to the DTB - planted the seed for me to become the all-in apostle, ride-or-die disciple, full-blooded fanatic of this amazing guitarist who was 4 years my junior...and who i would also embarrassingly nickname - the manchild - for several years to follow...


(which is only slightly less awkward than the more recently embraced “D-Train” moniker I’ve been using)


(…i’m so sorry, Derek.)


His transitive music has always spoken to me as much as his humble & grounded demeanor has acted as a shining example of humanity and husbandry in the process, continually inspiring me to catch him wherever and as often as I can in the process. The rewards of which have been nothing short of pure joy & satisfaction for my mind/body/soul at every new show I attend. Not to mention, having a few occasions of magic and luck help to color my always wonderful experiences through years of fandom. Two of such examples I'll elaborate on in the next few posts/days to mark & celebrate getting to attend this weekend's Tedeschi Trucks Band shows at the Beacon Theater...so stay tuned!






Friday, September 30, 2022

dog-tags

i moved a speaker
off the mantle
and nudged his
collar

it made that 
everyday sound
that's been absent 
for over
two years now

keeping the urge for
tears at bay
while looking out
the back door

it hits me
how much i miss
you
how long it's
been
since you've
been
by my side
with the world
beneath
our feet
the sun
in
our eyes

Feeling ill with Oteil...

I (easily) spotted Oteil Burbridge (former ABB bassist/current Dead & Co. bassist) a few folks behind me in the check-in line at the Jacksonville airport, while my wife & I were desperately trying to head home from the weekend-long Wanee Music Festival in 2007. The discount off-site hotel that we stayed at had given us both legionaries-level cases of the flu that still remains in the top 5 sickest times of both of our lives. Which probably explains my unusual approach for a quick pic rather than offering the friendly handshake and customary “Thanks for doing what you do”-style that has been my hit-and-run, don’t be “that guy” approach to hero interaction. And it also explains the strange expression upon my lily-white face in the picture of us below that depicts a music fan burning alive with fever from the inside, hoping he's not passing the plague along to this giant of the bottom end. He was gracious, friendly and obliged my fever-dream fueled picture request without hesitation...and thankfully, without any awareness of the internal battle of germs being waged violently inside of me...as the shutter snapped for the shot. #covid07? Sorry 'bout that, Oteil. 



Side note - Our parting handshake also helped confirm something for me - the dude has MASSIVE hands...and afterwards, I fully understood why he has to play a six-string with giant mitts like that...mercy!


Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Part 2 of 2 - ...and heroes can be saints

The memory of Allen Ginsberg’s poetry reading at CMU on April 8th, 1994 will forever exist in my mind in full technicolor detail and with immediate recall. In the sense of personal and spiritual gravity, i count the experience of attending this reading as one of my life’s highest times. Oddly enough, contrary to my life lived of the continual observer…compiling unimportant details, facts and stats into a mental database for instant reference in service to absolutely no one but myself…I’ve never been able to remember how I heard about or even knew the reading was happening. Maybe a mention on the local college radio station? A City Paper shout-out perhaps, under the extensive weekly “literary events” listings? From overheard rumblings mumbled a few aisles away while digging at Jerry’s? It’s all a black screen and a white page until that night. 


My first memory is scoring an on-campus parking spot close to the venue and immediately liberating a flyer for the event off of a nearby telephone pole after exiting the car. 


Another personally uncharacteristic aspect to this night was that although my introduction to the Grateful Dead universe…and parallel to that, its obsessive world of live music taping & recording…was still a year away…I have no idea what prompted me to grab the micro-cassette recorder, that i infrequently used to document spontaneous poetic brainstorms, to then use it to record what turned out to be such a personally historic experience. Thankfully, the reward of that oddly-timed instinct has been my ability to revisit that amazing night with my recording ever since.


I knew having an expectation for AG to include any of the handful of poems I was already familiar with from his historical cannon of classics - Howl, Kaddish, America, A Supermarket in California, etc. into the evenings “setlist” would be foolish. And while my suspicions were correct, the pieces presented from his latest collection “Cosmopolitan Greetings”, were still instantly illuminating and delivered warmly, with monkish languidly and wisdom dripping from every stanza. We were also treated to his harmonium-assisted interpretations of material taken from William Blake’s “Songs of Innocence” & “Inexperience”, which would often involve audience participation that allowed us all to convene with his creative genius. 


As the reading drew to a close, I sat stunned and silent in my chair, unable to comprehend what I had just witnessed and took part in. It had instantly blew open mental walls and widened creative parameters for me and still continues to echo boldly in the catacombs of my mind & soul to this day. Everything I experienced that night was like finally getting to attend the type of church service or prayer meeting that, up until that point, had only existed in my mind. I felt that the entire reading was unmistakably holy and spiritual…but academic and philosophical too…mystical & mythical…intoxicating & empathetic…soulfully healing & fulfilling…and a truly lucid literary day-dream turned evening of undeniable reality with a heaping side-order of inspiration to last a lifetime.  


Most of the crowd shuffled outside, choosing self-reflective cigarettes and scholarly discussion in the courtyard over remaining frozen in their folding-chairs in hopes that their reality would eventually reform. So, its wasn’t until after those few additional moments of extended catatonia that i snapped “awake” in my chair to discover my copy of AG’s “Collected Poems - 1947-1980” anthology sitting in my lap. Apparently, along with the micro-cassette recorder, I had also grabbed the massive book on my way out that night with equally unknown intentions in mind that I’ll never remember or understand. But of course, in hindsight, i’m eternally grateful for the unconscious instinct behind it to this day. 


I grabbed the red-covered book and sprung from my chair, walking straight towards the abandoned lectern and folding table adjacent to it, now loosely populated with professors, grad students and other "brotherhood-of-the-elbow-patch" members crowded around AG. None of my actions that followed were premeditated. I was simply executing a plan that I wasn’t even aware i was an accomplice to. I sheepishly moved closer to the action of the buzzing hive of folks trying desperately to engage in self-serving conversation for personal validation. AG noticed me almost immediately standing loose-kneed in the back of the crowd, actively avoiding any eye contact and motioned for the adoring half-circle to take a break from their own brilliance to let this visibly shaking youth step forward to meet him. 


I swear…when those dozen or so people stepped back to reveal the balding, bearded bard of the Beats standing directly in front of me…well, I swear a few things really…


…he was absolutely glowing…ok, maybe not “glowing”, per se…but I saw an unmistakable “aura” or “light” surrounding him that i will argue the existence of till my dying day. I think he was even f’n floating a few inches above the ground too. In fact, i’m pretty certain that’s when i started to “float” or was “without any ground below me” too. I also don’t remember saying anything…at all…not a single word. It was LC Greenwood and full-size candy bars at Halloween all over again! All I could do was present him with my copy of his book in one hand and hand him a black Sharpie with the other. He took both, locking eyes with mine and smiling, as if to say with silent reverence - “I understand…everything is alright…you are safe…you are loved…and you are the universe.” 


After happily signing and dating the 1st page of my book, he returned it back to me, still silently standing there like a glacier. I was fully unprepared for what came next as AG offered his open, extended arms to me. Without blinking, I found myself embracing my poetic hero in an unexpected but unbelievable hug of love & humanity. I think i managed to mutter a “thank you so much…i love you” style babble-blurb as i turned to leave, still floating inches off the ground as i exited the side door of the building. I felt like I just hugged an angel. And looking back now some 28 years later, I’m absolutely certain that i did. 





2 side notes: 

  • AG signed my book, adding the date of the reading…but also included a circled “AH” as part of his signature. Which I’ve since learned is part of the “Om, Ah, Hum” Buddhist mantra used to purify the mind, speech and heart. But of course to the outsider, would be seen as an acronym for “AssHole”, which was my mom’s best guess the first time I showed the book to her. Funny, not funny, mum.
  • That 2nd semester, I took all of the influence previously passed down from Professor Bernard…mixed it with my recent diet of post-WWII American Beat-related and inspired literature…and infused it with the excitement from meeting AG…and decided that my next chapter of my educational and actual life involved attending the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the buddhist-based Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. I independently researched the school, requesting brochures from the college and seeking-out testimonials from former students to help guide my decision. In my typical habit of quitting the game on 4th and inches with the ball just outside the end-zone, I requested and filled-out my application, even securing a check from my dad to cover the costs of applying…only to eventually loose ALL confidence and momentum…and NEVER…MAILING…THE…FUCKING…THING…IN. I was so sure that I would be turned down by Naropa that I figured I’d save them the time to do so themselves and deny myself the chance before they could. This has stuck in my side ever since. There’s a lesson to be learned here with the help of some banal wording and overly used, statements of cliche…so pick yr’ poison and chase yr’ dreams, folks…it's as simple as that.