Sunday, December 11, 2011

Europe '72: Stakladen, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark (4/16/1972)



From the opening moments of Greatest Story Ever Told we get an immediate impression of both the performance space and the "head-space" of the band. The music has the sizzle of a charged particle – it's driving and focused. The various elements in the sonic presentation are tight and compact, with very little distance between the instruments. And yet the sound is not congested like Newcastle – it's simply smaller, tighter, thicker and less ambient...and thankfully in tune.

Jerry is ripping throughout this Greatest Story Ever Told – homeboy clearly warmed up before hitting the stage. Speaking from experience, it's virtually impossible to play that deftly when you're ice cold. I recall hearing an interview with Jerry years later where he explained that he would routinely practice for 2-3 hours before gigs. I'm not sure if he had that kind of free time on the Europe '72 tour...but he's ready to roll from the first down beat. Listen to the chunky synchronization of Bobby’s guitar, Billy’s snare and Keith’s left hand as the Greatest Story outro jam wraps up.

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The novelty not withstanding, the Dead are playing in front of roughly 700 people in a university cafeteria. The liner notes describe how the stage is set up at the far end of the room – and it sounds like it. A quick lesson in room acoustics: when you are positioned at an end point in a room, you are subject to massive amounts of low frequency peaks. This tends to cause the bass to sound tubby, muddled and slow. In addition, playing an audio source in close proximity to a room's boundary node creates a rapid slap-echo and a truncated decay of the reverb.

Kudos to Jeffrey Norman's masterful mixing skills – with all of these sonic issues present in the master recording – Phil's bass sounds punchy, the drums are controlled and you can still hear Pigpen’s tambourine cutting through as clear as day.

The more I listen to the Aarhus show, the more it reminds me of the recordings we used to make at the original Knitting Factory on Houston Street in New York City. The head engineer, James McLean had modified some Radio Shack PZM microphones with Crown elements and mounted them inside a wooden housing, suspended from the ceiling about 15' from the stage. The resulting recordings were always spot on – with a well-defined sound-stage, a crisp stereo image and an uncanny room presence. If I were to play you one of these tapes, you'd swear you were sitting in a folding chair, ten rows back in that dusty hall with its signature sweater-lined ceiling. Listening to Aarhus 4/16/72 gives me the same eerie feeling of realistic sonic immersion.

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Listen for the clinking beer bottles before the start of this solid version of Sugaree (more about this later). All of the necessary signature Jerry licks and Pigpen organ fills are present, giving it an almost studio-like quality. The very tasteful and subtlety powerful crescendo in the last reprise of the first verse in the 5th minute is also worth noting. There's just enough emphasis in Jerry's vocals to accent the sincerity of his plea to the song's namesake. All in all, a tight rendition – one of the tour's best.

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With every passing song, it becomes more apparent just how much fun the boys were having at Aarhus. For instance, I love how Jerry and Keith are "hanging out" in the background, playing around in the 2nd minute, as Chinatown Shuffle comes to a close. The typical European synchronized clapping resumes after Black Throated Wind...to which Billy obliges with a whimsical, pulsating roll on his snare drum.

As is par for this tour, the Tennessee Jed and Mr. Charlie are both rock solid and feature some fantastic guitar work from Mr. Garcia. It's hard to believe that we're only into the fifth night of a 22-show tour and I'm already taking (the once maligned in my eyes) Tennessee Jed for granted as a first set monster. Who'da thunk it?

Also very endearing, the minor flub at start of Beat It On Down The Line draws some laughter from the audience. For what it's worth, Billy’s got this Beat It On Down The Line in his back pocket – solid. His attack is hard-hitting and bristling with energy.

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Looking back at the notes from my first pass through of Aarhus Set 1, my preliminary impressions spoke of an almost pedestrian effort that was "not without its charms" – no major highs – no major flaws. Upon further review, those initial notions were way off. In fact, the first set of Aarhus represents a stunning effort – with its compact simplicity, effortless musicianship, upbeat disposition and energized feedback loop between the audience and the band. Much like the well-developed, layered flavors of sophisticated Indian cuisine, the complex spices of Stakladen creep up on your aural pallet. By the time China-Rider hits, your wiping the sweat from your brow and asking the waiter for another glass of ice water.

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The first set of 4/16/72 really takes off with the arrival of China-Rider – a song sequence that comes of age on this tour. Its organic maturation is made manifest as the band delves deeper into the continental realms, with its true majesty come full blossom in the iconic 5/3 Paris performance – the high water mark for the early expression of this legendary composition.

There are so many beautiful, artistic moments during this China-Rider. Take for example the very hip call and response at the end of first intra-verse mini-jam – at 1:21 Billy presents an almost melodic line (his drums are tuned perfectly) that Keith answers at 1:25 during the beginning of the “Crazy cat” verse.

Then, during the 2nd minute, after the modulation to E, we experience what can be argued is the essence of China-Rider...Jerry blowing a crisp, singular lead over the changes...Keith throwing down stout yet dexterous chord melodies...while Bobby is toggling between supporting rhythms and leading counter-melody ideas.

Pay attention to Keith’s third part harmony during the transitional section. His ideas are exploratory and innovative, as he floats between Jerry’s primary and Bobby’s secondary-melody. As the jam continues, Phil adds another melodic element to the mix – essentially giving us four melodic devices working in concert. In addition to the lead instruments, Billy’s snare accents also add much to the musical tapestry, especially when you consider them in relationship to Bobby’s rhythmic contributions.

The truth is, in the 4th minute Bobby takes the lead and Jerry falls into a supporting roll – the tables have been turned. A major aspect of why China-Rider blossoms during the spring of 1972 is the development of Bobby’s rhythmic lead in the transitional section. With each plate appearance, his stroke has been getting more confident and by the time we reach Aarhus, Bobby is ripping line-drive doubles into the gap.

At the 5:02 mark we have a brief, subtle interjection of Phil’s 12-beat 7 vs. 5 motif. He's carried this concept with him all the way from merry old England – and he's not about to let it go now. Phil's musical falafel is again in full effect!

:06 seconds into the I Know You Rider Keith introduces a repetitive, tight left-handed roll. It's quite impressive that he's able to maintain this thought for the remainder of the song sequence. Throughout this tour Keith is continually exploring new musical areas that the band had not harvested prior to his joining the ensemble. In many ways, the group as a whole is sowing seeds in one concert and harvesting them in subsequent performances.

As the Dead dance the razor's edge between independent invention and group-think improvisation in Aarhus, we have a crystallized demonstration of why China-Rider was such a crowd pleaser throughout their storied tenure. I can't say enough about this bifurcated composition and how it is presented on this tour – there is so much going on. Granted, this is a written blog but (...I give up...) the Europe '72 China-Rider's are beyond words. You simply have to listen to them over and over again to truly appreciate their brilliance.

In the 3rd minute we have Jerry showcasing more open-chord banjo finger style and Phil utilizing a sweep-picking technique at the 3:55 mark. I love when Phil starts dropping chords – rock bass decadence at its finest!

The last go-around of the Rider jam section, just before the reprise of the chorus is great stuff. We have Jerry flashing more of his open banjo picking...Keith's masterful chord melodies and Phil filling in (no pun intended) the spaces left behind. Add to that an array of snare shots and myriad other accents from Billy's kit and you have the icing on the cake for this smokin' China-Rider. The proverbial cherry on top comes in the form of Jerry’s upper register lick at 4:20, which is skillfully answered by Keith at 4:33 – and again at 5:01.

Damn!

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For apparently unknown reasons, Donna is M.I.A. from the Stakladen show. Her absence becomes most apparent as we reach the Playin' In The Band. Prior to this instance of Playin' Bobby had been introducing her to each of the European audiences. Tonight...not so much. With all due respect to Donna, she's not missed in the least.

A quick and focused pass through of the verses gives way to the jam portion of the work. The entrance to this Playin' jam is light, open and airy – featuring some nice interplay between a major scale motif in Keith’s right-hand and Jerry’s rolled-off, feedback induced guitar bites. As the jam section gradually builds, it begins spinning in on itself. As it spins inward it grows faster, harder and denser. This Playin' jam is a primer in basic physics and centripetal force...

For the sake of this experiment, cue up Track 1 / Disc 2 of Aarhus. Sit yourself in a well-oiled desk chair and as the Playin' jam begins, give yourself a really strong spin. Better yet – have an assistant spin you – it's far more effective (and they can catch you if need be). As the boys' musical train pulls away from the station, pull your legs into your chest. You will find that you both start to spin faster and faster still. I recommend you keep spinning on the chair for the remainder of Disc 2...

Some highlights worth noting from the 4/16 Stakladen Playin':

* Check out Phil and Billy’s conversation at 4:30

* If you drop the needle at the 6:14 mark, you will hear Jerry introducing an alternate version of Phil's 12-beat falafel motif.

* General observation – Keith handy work is omnipresent throughout. He has an uncanny knack for playing multiple rolls simultaneously. As the rhythmic glue, he fills the spaces within the push-and-pull expansions of his band mates. As a soloist, Keith adds his own unique flavors and accents to the mix. And in his roll as a traditional member of the rhythm section, his piano helps support the foundation upon which the innumerable musical expressions are built to soaring heights.

* From out of the underbrush in minute 7:00 springs Jerry with a frightening tiger freak-out. This is no melt-down – instead it's just a full-on tiger attack...ROAR! This bombastic barrage swells to a furious crescendo at 7:20. As Chef warned us in Apocalypse Now "Never get out of the boat!"

Willard: Absolutely goddamn right! Unless you were goin' all the way... Kurtz got off the boat. He split from the whole fuckin' program.

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The gradual introduction of Good Lovin demonstrates again just how tight the sound is in Stakladen. Pay attention to Billy's snare and Jerry's guitar. The room end-point sonic characteristics are clearly present – namely an almost instantaneous slap echo, a tight sound stage and shortened reverb decay.

Dig on Jerry’s over-reverbed, recessed wah-wah noodling between minutes 3:00 and 6:00. He has no responsibility towards the structure of the overall groove – he’s just laying back and having fun. It’s very cool to hear Jerry play with such free, creative abandon. At 4:47 we have the return of the accented 12-figure – the falafel thread continues...

We have more examples of the Aarhus acoustics in minutes 8:00 through 11:00, especially as the music quiets. Again, focus on the boundary reflection present in the staccato shots of Keith’s punches, Billy's snare, Jerry’s reverb and the decay of Pigpen’s vocals. All of these sonic elements give you a well-defined mind-impression of the long, thin nature of the room – with the band stuffed-in at one end. Turn up the volume and give it a good listen.

The middle sections of the Europe '72 Good Lovin' jams are some of the quietest, most intimate moments on the entire tour. They're the kind of grooves that give me a feeling of "Shhh…we don’t want to wake up the people in the next room." A fantastically expansive dynamic range is on display as the band bobs and weaves around Pigpen's rap in minutes 6:00 and 7:00 – dances through the spaces of 8:00 and 9:00 – ultimately advancing the collective kinetic energies to a peak in minutes 10:00 and 11:00.

Variations on Phil's (now-famous) falafel groove return at the 13:17 mark. Upon further, more acute listening, this 12-beat figure sounds a lot like the negative/mirror image of the Good Lovin' intro itself – it's frequency having been shifted a half-cycle in space-time. It's as if the groove exists as the “dark side” or underbelly of the prototypical pop-rock bass line. It’s so oddly familiar and yet equally as foreign at the same time...

In Rocky Mountain High, John Denver sang about "Comin' home to a place he'd never been before." Carl Jung referred to this phenomenon as the "shock of recognition" – Gestalt Psychology, the "Ah-ha!" (Thank you Mr. Gans). In this moment, the individual becomes aware of truths he has always known but has not been able to express in words...

In this way, the recurring falafel motif tantalizes the inner thoughts of the listener. A musical mandala of sorts – an idea common to everyone, everywhere. Jung spoke of these ideas as "archetypal images" from humankind's "collective unconscious." There have already been several moments like this hidden in the deeper recesses of the Europe '72 box set – Phil's falafel motif just happens to be more pronounced and oft repeated. And so it is here in Aarhus, Denmark, almost 40 years later – through Phil we all relive a dream we dreamed one afternoon long ago.

The seed was planted at 13:17, with the musical idea taking root in Jerry's improvisational unconscious – although he never fully commits to it. At 14:47 Phil reclaims the idea and settles us into a well-developed groove...

Could he be any more aggressive in minute 17:00 as the primary Good Lovin' theme returns? I love the natural distortion of his bass tone...he has totally over modulated his amplifiers.

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Mr. Peabody has set the WABAC Machine to 1970 for this Dire Wolf. It doesn’t sound remotely like the same band that we’ve been enjoying on this tour, let alone during the previous song. Instead the open-chord country feel is raw and unsophisticated. The whole presentation is archaic when compared to the nominal Spring 1972 sound.

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Are those more beer bottles being cleared before Cumberland Blues? That clinking sound reminds me of when The Blues Brothers played Bob’s Country Bunker. After finishing the set, the band has to make their way through all the empty beer bottles to get off the chicken wire-lined stage.

* Jerry’s thin (i.e. bridge-position pick-up), reverbed, twangy, bended flat-picking solo during the first jam in Cumberland Blues is really hot.

* At the 4:30 mark, Keith extends the coda before the start of the final Cumberland verse. Jerry is clearly looking for a cue (visual or otherwise) for when he should start his vocal.

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Listen for more beer bottles before the El Paso. You can practically hear Bob scolding Jake and Elwood Blues outside the Country Bunker:

"You know you boys owe me a lot of money for that beer you drank tonight, Goddammit!"

Jerry’s unvarnished, arpeggiated running solo throughout the El Paso is endearing and real – especially in first half of minute 2:00. He revisits the same high-registered triplet feel at the 3:10 mark.

Furthermore, there is something very human, natural and “correct” about the tone of a Fender Strat plugged into a Fender Twin amplifier, with the reverb cranked way up. It screams early American Rock & Roll. I think as a red-blooded American, I’m genetically programmed to like that set-up, no matter what’s being run through it. The fact that Jerry is a masterful player just adds to the experience and the mystique of the mythical Fender tone...

Which leads us straight into the Deal. The Nash Strat is in full bloom. In particular, focus on the two vastly distinct tones presented in the solo section. During the first go-around Jerry’s clearly using the neck position pick-up. This pick-up sits closer to the middle of the guitar strings, thereby creating a fatter, rounder tone with less bite. Listen how he switches to the bridge pick-up for the second pass through the solo. The guitar takes on a cutting, biting, edgy tone. The same great "Jerry feel" resonates – there's simply a wholly different attack and tonal presentation on exhibit.

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Disc 3 of April 16, 1972 consists of one giant, multi-transitional song sequence. Although each song stands alone in the progression, musical markers exist within each composition, clearly denoting where the boys have been and where they intend to take us. For example, there is an obvious Other One cue at 7:40 of Truckin'.

Before we reach that point however, Bobby alters the first verse of Truckin' to include the line “Aarhus, New York, Detroit and it's all the same street.” Say that ten times fast.

Much like the instances of Playin' in the Band on this tour, Truckin' is a song where the Dead can summon a musical peak at will – seemingly out of nowhere – WHAM! Within a 30 second window, they deftly move from a chill two-chord vamp to a lightning quick crescendo and then bring it back down to a subdued, yet energetic groove.

At 4:47 of Track 2 (labeled Jam), Jerry reverts back to the over-reverbed tone first visited on Good Lovin'. It's as if he turns around mid-jam and cranks the Reverb knob on his amplifier up to 11. His tone takes on an almost surf guitar nature.

Phil is ALL OVER this jam. He lays down a cool thematic idea around the 6:00 mark. At the time, the band is engaged in collective, free-form noodling. With the introduction of this latest motif, Phil moves the conversation onto a whole new tangent. It's not quite the falafel motif but it’s same basic concept. These off-accent 6/8 grooves represent an overriding mindset that Phil has on this tour. On their own they are quite exceptional – what makes them even more special is how much the rest of the band enjoys latching on and taking them for a ride.

It's quite remarkable just how black the background is (thank you again Jeffery Norman and crew) and how forward Phil’s tone is in the mix during the Disc 3 Jam. Equally as amazing is how respectful the audience is for this (and every European) performance. It’s so quiet in the cafeteria that you can hear more beer bottles clinking at 9:08. Wow – they really take this Jam to the outer reaches of deep space. As a dear friend of mine would say...thrice as nice!

Minute 14:00 brings us a loose interpretation of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Flight of the Bumblebee. Having a nimble set of fingers on the keys creates the potential for interesting melodic moments like this. It was unthinkable to expect similar expressions before Keith's arrival in the band. Moreover, it wasn't until Bruce Hornsby's stint in the 90's that such interludes were remotely possible yet again.

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The students of Aarhus University are greeted with a kinder, gentler entrance to The Other One. The unusually delicate nature of The Other One introduction stands in stark contrast to the hard-hitting, probing Jam that proceeded it.

Interestingly, The Other One theme is woven throughout the fabric of the extended transitory sequence, however the song structure itself only plays a minor part in the final, tailored product that is Disc 3. In fact, it isn't until approximately 20 minutes into the musical menagerie that Bobby slips in the lone first verse of The Other One. The lyric serves almost as an afterthought to the harmonic concepts linking the different songs in the Second Set exploration.

Looking back at the tour as a whole, it is clear that the Aarhus Other One-Me & My Uncle-Other One is merely a dress-rehearsal for the "real deal" that comes further down the road...how's that for some blatant foreshadowing?

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After a brief Phil & Billy duet introduction, the band springs into a lilting and nimble Not Fade Away. As I referenced earlier, the Stakladen performance has a small-room feel to it – much like seeing regulars gig at your neighborhood dive bar. The room acoustics, the general proximity of the band members to you and each other in the sound stage – everything feels tighter and more intimate...

Take for example the two-plus minute span that begins with a pair of snare shots at 3:16 of the first Not Fade Away jam. Jerry settles into a triplet feel around the 7th fret of his Nash Strat like dropping into a well-worn, comfortable couch. Billy rolls up alongside with own story to tell. Brother Phil then punctuates the conversation with a set of corpulent accents at 3:32, to which Jerry happily replies with his own sliding country licks at 3:46. All the while, Keith, Bobby and Pigpen patiently shovel the coal to keep the rhythmic engine fires burning and the train a-rollin'...

Upon reading my initial notes, I went back and listened again to the aforementioned segment in a high quality near-field monitoring environment (at a decent decibel level I might add). Closing my eyes, I felt like I was standing directly in front of the stage. The many years and thousands of miles melted away before me. All that remained was the Grateful Dead – live – in my face and ears – thumping at my chest. I was completely enveloped by the music – blissful. In that ecstatic state, I think I might have even kicked over a beer bottle or two.

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With yet another Jungian archetypal reference – this time a brief Mountain Jam interjection from Jerry at 5:33 – we trip into a delightful Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad. Enjoy Jerry's playful triplet idea at the 1:44 mark – and the sudden surge of band-wide energy at 3:30. They were most certainly living in the moment – moving, breathing and functioning as a single cohesive body politic.

Jerry rides his Nash Strat atop another wave of over-reverbed, West Coast surf tone onto the beaches of the Not Fade Away reprise. As Bobby & Pigpen delight the audience with more primal call and response, Jerry offers up one last music thought for the night– a cool, repetitive counter-melody in the upper register at 1:53.

The charged, loose, almost sloppy close to the show is befitting the small venue experience. As the third and final disc fades into our collective memories, the generally reserved Stakladen crowd is left cheering and shouting for more, more, more! No encore is needed nor delivered – what more is there to say?

And so we leave the cozy comfines of the Aarhus University cafeteria – back down the road to Copenhagen for a date with a Danish television audience. As always, thank you for reading. Stay cool, stay focused and by all means stay tuned!

© Aaron Miller – 2011

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Europe '72: Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen, Denmark (4/14/1972)



This stop at the Tivoli Concert Hall is the first pre-booked gig of the tour – the opening concerts at Wembley Arena were last minute changes (after the Rainbow Theater shuttered its doors weeks before) and the 4/11 show was a logical addition, given that the ferry to Denmark leaves from Newcastle.

It's clear from the opening chords of Bertha that the band is enthused and focused. It's also readily apparent that the acoustics of the Tivoli Concert Hall are worlds better than that of the first two venues on the tour. Whereas Wembley Arena sounded compressed, forced and forward - and Newcastle damp, congested and weighty - Tivoli is loose, airy and flowing - providing the band with space for movement. The room decay is natural and pleasing [e.g. the tom intros to Mr. Charlie and Black Throated Wind], the vocal blend is tighter and the instruments have a warm and inviting tone. All of this translates into a more energetic performance from the boys. Perhaps the renewed energy also stems from the band finally getting out of the UK and into one of the more intimate venues they were originally scheduled to play. In this way, Tivoli was a little taste of home away from home.

The Bertha is standard for this era – by which I mean nimble, full of energy and ripping. The Me & My Uncle features a quick tempo, solid lead work from Jerry and strong vocals from Bobby...thankfully his laryngitis has cleared (jet lag and screaming through a few One More Saturday Night encores will take its toll).

Keith's playing in the first set must be highlighted - he's absolutely tearing it up. He's very low in the mix (this goes back to what Jeffrey Norman was discussing at the AES Convention - see my earlier blog post for more details), so you have to listen closely but MY WORD it is certainly worth paying attention to. Here are some first set Keith highlights for your consideration:

* His use of 7th chords and syncopated interplay between his right and left hands in Mr. Charlie is amazing - the rhythmic foundation he lays down makes for a very funky, chunky rendition of this Pigpen classic.

* Keith's solo in You Win Again - wow! Stop for a moment and appreciate the subtlety, nuance and comfort with which the Dead dispatch this traditional country swing song. It’s uncanny for an American rock band - especially one so rooted in psychedelic flights of fancy and raunchy, thunderous R&B. [In fact, name another band from 1972 that could move effortlessly from a Hank Williams country swing to up-tempo bluegrass, through a half-hour mind expanding musical experiment and a assortment of pop songs in the course of a single evening.] Give this You Win Again a couple of listens – dig deep. Listen closely to Bobby and Keith’s cadenced relationships and the tasteful phrasing of Jerry's vocals and guitar licks.

* Chinatown Shuffle – there is something about this recording and this room that sets the stage perfectly for Keith to shine. The Tivoli offers us a natural, grand piano sound – one that's open, uncongested – one that floats effortlessly in the overall soundstage. This Chinatown Shuffle demonstrates Keith as the consummate listener and interpreter of his band mate's ideas. For example, notice how he emulates the triplet feel from the end of Jerry's solo and seamlessly slides it into the opening phrase of his own solo.

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The Europe '72 tour features a host of excellent stage banter - and this night in Copenhagen has one of my favorite threads sewn through it. Before the start of You Win Again, Phil tells the audience that they don’t need to clap in unison; that they (the band) won’t necessarily play a song in that tempo. Jerry and Bobby add (in keeping with their purist, free-wheeling sensibilities) that the audience can do whatever they want to. Bobby then asks by a show of hands, how many people in the crowd can understand what they're saying – apparently not many. So, not only has the audience never heard this music before, they don’t even comprehend the group's basic efforts to communicate. The Danish audience is undeterred and the unified applause returns after the following song...(to be continued)

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Loser is a primer in the concept of dynamics. As Jeffrey Norman discussed at AES , the fact that the microphones were run direct to tape and given the minimal amount of compression used in the mixing/mastering processes, the overall product is extremely dynamic. In Loser we experience the gamut - from the low, empty spaces of the verses [listen to the decay of Jerry's voice and the snare drum], up to the booming crescendo of the refrain “Last fair deal in the country!”

** Side note: Sweet Suzie lives. Much like a baseball geek memorizes statistics about his favorite team, I too find myself combing the aural records of the Dead, in search of meaningless minutia. One such quest is to find the last Loser where Jerry mentions "Sweet Suzie" in the refrain. I know she passes away soon after this tour (although I've heard rumors that she made a brief appearance decades later)...any further insight you might have into this maddening pursuit is always welcome. **

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The Me & Bobby McGee features Bobby and Keith fusing into a single, four-armed rhythmic creature - as they trade-off right and left hand responsibilities. Jerry showcases excellent pinched harmonics at the 2:10 mark and some more open-chord banjo finger picking at 5:20. During the sing-song refrain, check out the 3 vs. 4 tension manifested by Keith and Phil - and the cut-time interplay between Phil's bass and Billy's snare/ride cymbal combo.

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Meanwhile, back to the fantastic banter thread...The audience returns to the synchronized clapping after Me & Bobby McGee. Phil may have given the crowd a stern talking-to earlier in the set but it's Bobby who rises to their defense, grabbing onto their pulse - kicking right into a brisk Cumberland Blues intro. You can almost see their beaming smiles as the rest of the band follows suit. Yet another prime example of the humor and imagination in the Grateful Dead’s music and stage presence.

Never mind the novelty of the scenario - this Cumberland is hot! The Tivoli's acoustics provide a perfect canvas for the vocal harmonies and the band pays worthy tribute to their folksy, acoustic roots. Jerry’s flat-picking solos get more aggressive and sharper with each passing verse and by the second go-round in minute 2:00 he’s just flying! It's no 4/8 Cumberland but it'll do just fine, thank you very much.

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Disc 1 closes with another solid Playin' In The Band - it's a little rough to start but it opens up into a solid intermezzo jam. The 4/14 Playin' is thick, rhythmic and driving. Unlike much of the first set, there's not a lot of perceivable air in between the instruments. On the contrary, the music has a weighty feel - like a dense, dark mass hurtling through space.

The tritone dissonant chord presentation at the 4:20 mark, Keith's 10-note chord forms mixed throughout, and Jerry's tasty "tiger melt-down" just before the reprise in the 7th minute are highlights of this Playin'. In addition, Billy’s interpretation of the 10-figure in between verses is remarkable – and certainly worth a deeper listen. Take some time and scan back through these interludes a few times. Also, his cymbals during the resolution in the 9th minute provide more evidence of the Tivoli's acoustic signature.

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The Tennessee Jed from 4/14 is the best of the tour. The slow crescendo developed in the jam section is simply epic!

Big Boss Man - Check out the little two-step drum fills as they turn into the second go-around of Jerry’s solo. Billy is locked in...deep in the pocket.

Bobby calls out a "Baker's Dozen" for the intro of Beat It On Down The Line. His pronouncement is off-mic and very low in the mix but if you pay close attention you can hear it. Yet another reason to crank up the volume (as if you needed any more)...

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Rumor has it that one of the working titles for this box set was Europe '72 - Spring of the Stand-Alone Shit-Kicking Truckin' ;) Although someone in the marketing department of GDP shot down the idea, the sentiment is more than understandable...and the 4/14 second set opener bears witness. The jam after the first "Going home" verse is vibrant and riddled with potency.

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The Brown-Eyed Women is an excellent example of Phil's round, cutting bass tone and his unique roll as a third part harmony instrument. In this way, Phil Lesh is unlike any other bass player in rock and roll history. In the 3rd minute, from the resolution of the bridge straight through the next verse, you can very hear some very cool counter-melody work from Phil.

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The final Looks Like Rain of the tour puts a bookend on the offerings of Disc 2. Phil's high harmony is stunning, especially in the "Stray cats" verse. We are treated to one last foray into the brilliance of Jerry's pedal steel - his solo is completely in control, tasteful and (in my humble opinion) perfect. The interaction between the pedal steel guitar, piano and organ from the 2:00 mark on is emotional, evocative and still gives me chills...even after several listens.

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The other working title rumored for consideration of this release was Europe '72 - Just Skip to Disc 3. Granted, this suggestion makes complete sense but the "powers that be" felt there were far too many Disc 1 & 2 highlights throughout the tour to move forward with this title.

With that said...Disc 3 of Tivoli 4/14 opens with a very interesting 29+ minute Dark Star. One that demonstrates with great clarity the breadth of the Grateful Dead's musical vocabulary and myriad skills. In particular the 4/14 Tivoli Dark Star highlights their innate facility for what I refer to as "group-think-improvisation" and "thematic improvisation."

The opening 8 minutes of Dark Star are fairly routine, with the band introducing the primary melodic and harmonic structures of the composition. Then in the 9th minute we hear staccato call and response ideas bandied between Jerry and Billy...and with the genesis of that simple musical relationship the "group-think" process has begun. Keith joins the fray with some upper-register staccato ideas of his own - in direct response to the melodic ideas presented by Jerry.

At the 10:15 mark Phil establishes a variation of the 12-beat (7 vs. 5) motif that grabs Bobby's attention. Within a few more measures, the anchor has been set and the rest of the band has vectored on a new tangent. Minutes 11:00 through 17:00 takes us through a complete mixolydian meltdown - with some tasty interchanges between Keith and Jerry in minute 12:00 - and various themes represented (most notably an obvious Sugar Magnolia tease just before the return of the main theme and Jerry's first verse lead vocal - see if you can pick it out).

With the arrival of minute 19:00 we are treated to another cut-time groove offered up by Billy (he seems enamored with these alla breve jams - they have popped up throughout the first four shows of the tour). This is where things get really interesting...

Ladies and gentlemen allow me to present to you the Grateful Dead's completely contrived and yet thoroughly serendipitous musical concept of "thematic improvisation." Perhaps the best way I can describe it is by means of some random anecdotal evidence...

The other day while walking in Manhattan I passed by a gentleman wearing an IDF (Israeli Defense Forces) hat. It didn't strike me at the time but as I entered the subway at 53rd and 5th I started thinking about the summer I spent in Israel as a teenager and this amazing falafel stand just off of King David Street in Jerusalem. Before long, I had decided to change my initial plan - bail on Penn Station and stay on the E train a few extra stops to hit Mamoun's Falafel in Greenwich Village. Mind you, I wasn't even hungry before I saw the hat but within minutes I had subconsciously changed my course of action and was soon mowing through a delicious falafel sandwich...I digress...

(With the arrival of minute 19:00 we are treated to another cut-time groove offered up by Billy)...this alla breve groove is appropriated by Phil and by the time minute 20:00 rolls around his downward-moving chromatic theme (floating in thought between a Mind Left Body Jam and Uncle John's Band) from the previous night is front and center of this Dark Star jam. [It's at this point that I wish I could sing into my blog to mimic Phil's baseline - however, the motif is so distinct, if you drop the proverbial needle at the 21:00 mark, I'm confident it will jump out of your stereo and punch you in the eye.] By 21:39 the full chord voicing is developed by Bobby and the band is suddenly toying with that odd, strangely familiar movement from Newcastle.

Who knows exactly what Phil heard/saw/felt/smelled/tasted that keyed this musical memory from the 4/11 concert...and for that matter, who cares? I just find it fascinating how Jerry's "Morse Code Jam" from the 4/8 Wembley Arena Dark Star was introduced by Phil during the 4/11 Newcastle Truckin' and developed into an "almost but not quite" Uncle John's Band groove. And then three nights later, the 4/11 Uncle John's Band-ish groove is reanimated by Phil and transmogriphied into yet another unique yet vaguely recognizable offering for us in Tivoli...and by 21:51 we’re deep into...Phil's Falafel Jam!

Tonight the passage has more structure - the band runs through the chord changes in a sequence of four rotations - hinting at a resolution after each quadrant. It feels as if they are ambivalent about resolving the tension. Musically, it makes sense to complete the thought, wrap it up and move on. In fact, the progression is structured in such a way that resolution is almost impossible to resist. However, I get the sense that the band wants to hold onto the idea as long as they can...

Like a bird in a gilded cage, the thematic improvisation is trapped, yet free to sing, grow, move and take itself and the band to higher, only dreamed of reaches...so long as the cage (the moment) remains closed (in the present). As soon as the cage door is opened, the idea will certainly fly away...and there is a risk it will not return. And yet, the door must be opened because something so beautiful was never meant to be held captive. It's the risk every performer must take. Such is the nature of live improvised music.

Vis-à-vis this stylized, thematic improvisation, the Grateful Dead are evolving as a band writ large before their audiences' very eyes, ears and hearts - developing musical ideas and contextual landscapes on both inter- and intra- performance levels.

The tension from the thematic passage lasts and lasts - with its eventual resolution into a two-chord vamp jam around minute 25:00, once again reminding us that we're still within Dark Star. All shreds of the chromatic-tether-to-reality structure have been stripped away and we're adrift in free-form space by the second half of the 25th minute. Bended minor 2nd figures from Bobby and pinched harmonic, wah-wah infused madness from Jerry takes us through the 28th minute...

A total melt-down of time, signature and key ensues and at 29:18 we are greeted with a prelude to the Sugar Magnolia on deck. You can tell that Bobby has turned to face Billy's drum kit as he chunks out the march-like opening rhythm of Sugar Magnolia on his semi-hollow body Gibson ES-345.

Here we find ourselves at the end of a 29+ minute exploratory Dark Star and seemingly out of nowhere Bobby's hints and teases come to fruition and we're dropped right into Sugar Magnolia...with Jerry still holding onto some of the spacey weirdness. While the rest of the band has fully embarked on the Sugar Mags, Jerry's Dark Star persists. The way he gradually morphs his eerie, bended figures straight into an A-major country swing is simply brilliant!

Another stellar example of vintage Grateful Dead musical juxtaposition. Much like in a dream – two almost seemingly incongruous thoughts or mind-spaces (a chaotic, time-bending Dark Star and a beautiful, uplifting Sugar Magnolia) are thrust together. Scene 1!–CUT!–Scene 2! And yet as diametrically opposed as these ideas might seem when considered alone…the amalgamation makes complete sense in the dream-like state of a Grateful Dead concert. Furthermore, it is only upon waking from the dream that the dreamer is capable of comprehending the absurd beauty of the fused perceptions as present therein.

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A relatively lack luster Sugar Magnolia slides right into Phil's ubiquitous Good Lovin' intro. Pigpen cruises through the opening verses and chorus and Jerry's Dom7-flat9 chord drops us headfirst into the jam section...

* We get a Caution tease from Jerry at the 7:30 mark

* Bobby doing his best Keith Richards imitation at 9:25. Take a listen and tell me that isn't the signature chord-strut from Can't You Hear Me Knockin'? - nice!

* Also check out Bobby playing a half-time Good Lovin' intro theme against the cut-time of Billy’s drums at 15:46

Pigpen is still with us and the Good Lovin’s and Caution's of this tour harken back to a more raw (quite frankly) sloppy Grateful Dead - loose, boozed-up, drugged-out bluesy mayhem. By the spring of 1972 the Dead have certainly started to evolve beyond their impulsive R&B foundations but Pigpen keeps them rooted in that earthy, musical sty. The "musical ghetto" of the blues. The anchor that Pigpen represents is a double-edged sword of sorts. The musical ghetto of the blues is where the Grateful Dead came from and yet by April 1972 this band wanted to soar - it wanted to fly to new uncharted heights. Pigpen was keeping them true to their roots but in doing so, he was also holding them back.

Europe '72 serves as Pigpen's swan song. He gave it all he had every night, leaving it all on the stage. Unbeknownst to them, it was also the band's opportunity to say farewell to Pig and everything he represented. Oddly enough, it stands as a tribute to Pigpen that soon after his demise (late 72 – early 73) the Grateful Dead's music took off at warp speed - rocketing in an unencumbered, jazzed-up, funky improvisational way. As sad as it was for his mates to lose their dear friend and only true front man, Pigpen in his passing allowed the band to be free. The bird in the gilded cage was liberated at last.

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Whereas normally it’s Phil's walking bass line that drags the band into Caution – at 4/14 Tivoli, it’s Jerry’s rolled guitar line that introduces the song. Jerry teased it earlier in Good Lovin' and here we go...

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The room acoustics are again laid bare in the tom tom introduction of Not Fade Away.

I’ve always said that certain instruments want you (almost compel you) to play a certain way or play certain songs. For instance my Telecaster begs me to play Johnny Cash tunes as soon as I strap her on. The Nash Strat wants Jerry to play the Not Fade Away riff...I’m convinced of it. There is something about the tone and feel of that guitar that is perfectly suited for the chunky, Bo Diddly beat of that classic song. Some of the effortless, bended pedal steel licks between minutes 1:10 – 1:30 serve as evidence to this symbiotic relationship.

There is a very cool sequence that starts at approximately 4:00 into the Not Fade Away jam. Jerry gives a deliberate chord cue that he's ready to move the band into the impending Goin' Down The Road Feeling Bad. Bobby interpolates Jerry's idea at 5:03 - flipping it on its head - turning it into his archetypal secondary lead from the China-Rider transition jam. I can picture the grin on Jerry's face as he grabs onto Bobby's gambit and lays his lead over top. Pure joy!
A solid Goin' Down The Road Feelin' Bad follows, only to have the band hesitantly stumble back into the Not Fade Away reprise – Oy!

The call and response vocals traded between Bobby and Pigpen at the end of the second Not Fade Away pay homage to the slave field songs from the Mississippi Delta that bore the blues, jazz and practically all American music to follow.

***
Bobby and Billy offer up a tasty little James Brown shuffle just before the well-paced One More Saturday Night encore that closes the 4/14 Tivoli show. This rendition is chock full of Albert King styled, Chuck Berry licks from Jerry throughout. Certainly an all-to-familiar yet fitting way to end a very special evening in Copenhagen.

As always, thank you for reading. Stay cool, stay focused and by all means stay tuned! We're off to Aarhus – do me a favor and save me a spot in the cafeteria.


© Aaron Miller – 2011

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Europe '72: City Hall, Newcastle, England (4/11/1972)




The liner notes for the 4/11 show describes City Hall in Newcastle as a dour, cement room with evenly space columns throughout. Certainly not an ideal performance environment. From the first few notes it's quite apparent that the band is struggling with the room - they are fighting the terrible acoustics - clearly the room is fighting back.

An interesting room - an even more interesting crowd. Newcastle, England is a port metropolis on the River Tyne, populated with folks affectionately referred to as "Geordies." A people with a rich history as hard working coal miners, dock hands, ship builders, heavy drinkers and brawlers with a unique, at times perplexing English dialect. The most excitement these blokes are accustomed to is rooting for their beloved Newcastle United footballers when they play the arch rivals Black Cats of Sunderland in the Tyne-Wearside Derby - or scrapping in the street after sucking down many a pint of the iconic brown ale that bears the city's name...

Enter this rag-tag band of hairy hippies from the west coast of the U.S. - with their long hair, tie-dyed amplifier covers and all the trappings of a gypsy caravan. In between the songs of the first set, if you pay close attention to the data collected by the single audience microphone, you will hear the Geordies slowly warm to the alien-music-invasion that has descended upon their fair city. In the same right, you will hear the band slowly warm to the environs (more about that in a moment)...

The show opens with a Greatest Story Ever Told that may be terribly out of tune but features an excellent extended jam at its close. A sluggish Deal follows and for a brief moment our prospects look dim that this afterthought of a gig, in a semi-hostile venue might let us down. Just in the nick of time, in swoops our unsuspecting hero Pigpen to revive the band with an energetic Mr. Charlie. With failing health and all, he lights a fire under his band mates...the boys flip the proverbial switch and we're off to the races.

There is some funny banter that precedes the Tennessee Jed - Bobby jokes that Jerry has telegraphed the next song by playing the signature Jed lick. But since the audience has never heard the song before - no harm, no foul.

The Big Boss Man that follows is a testament to the Grateful Dead's solidly planted roots as an R&B band. In particular, focus on the thick, rhythmic interplay between Keith, Bobby and Billy. Pigpen's lead vocal and harmonica work is dripping with blue-collared authenticity. The Nash Strat cuts through the groove with clarity and bite.

A laughable false start to Beat it on Down The Line brings a smile to my face, even after several listens. This band is tight, dialed-in and telepathically connected like nothing I've ever heard before - and yet they are able to maintain a looseness and uncanny sense of humor in their playing and on-stage demeanor.

Weir butchers the Jack Straw - we'll let him slide this time. He makes amends with a fantastic rendition later in the tour.

A fairly lack-luster first set turns on a dime with the China-Rider. The best way to describe this China-Rider is "workman-like." In fact, the entire show up to this point is gritty and workman-like...just like the venue, the town and its people. Check out Phil's mini-solo that starts in the later stages of minute 4:00 and climaxes at around the 5:15 mark of the China Cat - beyond excellent! Another fine example of Jerry's pedal steel feel and open banjo picking style can be heard during the 4th minute of the Rider.

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As I listened to the first set of 4/11/72 I was struck by a personal analogy from my days chasing the boys around North America. The Dead's experience playing in the cold, damp, dour musical mausoleum of Newcastle's City Hall was much like driving my 1978 Buick Estate Wagon up the New York State Thruway in the frigid, overnight hours March 21, 1990. She was slow at start up and fought my ever-pressing right foot as each tenth-mile marker passed. But then - almost magically - after 40 minutes on the road, her 348 cubic inch V8 warmed up and she found her RPM sweet spot. Together we hit critical mass, blew out the carbon from journey's past and VROOM! We were off...

...and here we find ourselves back in time, cruising aloft on a soaring China-Rider that lands us at the outset of 4/11/72 - Disc 2.

** Side Note: my folks and my mechanics told me that the Buick wasn't suitable for a round trip to Manhattan. Meanwhile, she made the four-day, 1000 mile round trip from Setauket, NY to Hamilton, Ontario without incident. **

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As is customary for my analysis of Playin' In The Band, I am drawn to Jerry's wonderfully sustained entrance into the jam section of the composition, which is far more subdued than the previous versions on the tour. At the outset, he positions his wah-wah pedal to achieve a low-pass filter effect on his tone. And so begins the deeper reaches of the 4/11 show...

There are fantastic examples of rhythmic teamwork in this Playin'. Keith is very present, filling in the holes left between Phil and Bobby's pops and accents. Dig Keith's cut-time right hand technique in the 4th minute, which Phil reintroduces in the 5th minute. Generally speaking, throughout the jam section Keith's right hand plays call-and-response with Jerry's lead; while his left hand remains in-step with Bobby's rhythm. More so than earlier in the set, the entire band is really feeling it - playing well within each other's spaces and movements.

All of this thematic interplay climaxes in the later stages of the 6th minute, from which they plateau and then gently glide back towards the introductory Playin' 10-figure. This soft landing is beautifully represented by a cascading waterfall of open-voiced sus2 arpeggios in Keith's right hand.

Just before the Playin' reprise, dig on Phil's D-Dom7 arpeggios - now that's power!

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Here are a couple of "items" to check out during the subsequent handful of songs:

Next Time You See Me - I love the juxtaposition of this chunky, roots R&B tune immediately following an iconic psychedelic rock anthem. Jerry's neck-position pickup delivers a full-bodied, rounded, upper midrange tone for his solo.

Looks Like Rain - Focus on the last few measures of Jerry's pedal steel solo. The melodic and harmonic structures are simple and yet simply stunning. He reprises these harmonic ideas at the 6:20 mark of the outro section. Also, pay heed to the counter-melody of Phil's bass in the solo section.

** Side Note: I wonder if these Geordies have ever seen, let alone heard a pedal steel guitar before. **

Big Railroad Blues - Listen to Billy at 2:10 and beyond of the solo section, how he keeps turning over the beat. Fantastic use of the ride cymbal for accenting and syncopation.

Good Lovin' - I love the tasty little intro Billy offers on the snare rim and the bell of the ride cymbal. He gradually lures Phil into his powerful signature bass figure. After the Dom7-flat9 chord that drops us into the jam section (minutes 3:00 - 4:00), check out the syncopation between Jerry's guitar and Billy's snare/ride cymbal combo.

Jerry loosens up a lot during the jam and in the 7th minute he introduces some of those interesting triplet, suspended leads often featured in Dark Star and Playin'. We then get some more open banjo picking at the 9:35 mark.

Ramble on Rose - Keith's playing is playful and replete with whimsy. Check out the totality of his right-hand work that starts during the introductory measures and carries straight through the first bridge. In addition, pay attention to Keith's Über-honky-tonk chord melodies that support Jerry's bouncing, energy-filled first solo. Fantastic!

As I mentioned in my blog post after the AES Convention panel, a single transducer microphone was used to record Keith's piano. Even with this limiting factor working against him, Jeffrey Norman's superb mixing enables Keith to shine on the 4/11 production.

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A charged Truckin’ opens Disc 3, with Jerry showcasing his phrasing skills with innovative intra-verse fills and licks. Interestingly, the band completely chunks the peak of the first iconic crescendo but they continue to maintain a high energy level even after the misstep. This example of musical persistence (which borders on stubbornness) highlights one aspect of the Dead's playing from this era that I find endearing. Namely, even when they miss a big hit (like they did with the climax in this Truckin'), they don't get discouraged. Instead, they keep fighting - seemingly motivated by the flub - as if offended by their own error.

Right after the reprise of the "Going Home" verse the band falls off the edge into an Other One'esque jam...and there's still 10 minutes to go in the song...very cool.

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The jam out of Truckin', through the Drums and Other One is the apex of the 4/11 performance and deserves a closer look...

Minutes 12:00 - 14:00 of the Truckin' jam lays bare vintage Grateful Dead collective/individual improvisation. They're each doing their own thing - Keith is in his Cecil Taylor mode, Bobby's playing with fragments of his iconic two-note-bended-rhythmic figure (which you can still hear today at a Furthur show), while everyone else is cruising along unencumbered by the conventional constructs of group improvisation...

...and then in the 13th minute Billy and Phil marshal together a tasty motif that loosely resembles an amalgamation of a groove. It's not that the band grabs hold of the idea - it's more akin to an origami boat catching and moving with the subtle currents and eddies of a gently rolling rivulet. Check out the Winton Kelly styling offered up by Keith during this stretch of music - a la Kind of Blue.

Also, dig on the rhythmic illustration introduced by Phil at the 15:35 mark – a carry over from the "Morse code" concept offered by Jerry during the previous show's (4/8) Dark Star. It’s a structure of 12 beats – a 7 and a 5. In actuality it's an oddly accented 6/8 idea that has more of a 12 "feel," given how Billy and Phil are accenting the time signature.

The band toys with time, melody and harmony until all is melted down. Just before the Drums section begins, the Other One theme is briefly referenced. It's clear that Billy's Drums is merely a prelude to the massive The Other One which is just around the corner.

After a solid 4 minute introduction, Jerry unhinges the groove with a series of parallel octave phrases (a concept I usually associate with Bobby) and after a minute or so they are back into the customary 6/8 cadence. The potency of the music ebbs and flows in two-minute intervals until the band lands firmly in the Other One groove at the 7:00 mark.

From a sonic standpoint, it’s remarkable just how black the background is during the quiet sections of this performance. Clearly, there’s still evidence of the inherent mechanical distortion that Jamie Howarth described at the AES Convention (see my earlier blog post for more details). But for the most part, you can crank up the decibel level on playback - there's a clean, dynamic presentation of the soundstage, stereo image and a spatial dimensionality between the instruments. Kudos again to the entire crew who made this production a reality.

My favorite part of this jam - a non-descript, chromatic movement down the major scale first appears at the 10:00 mark and is picked up in earnest at 11:30 - this Uncle John's Band(ish) motif dominates the next several minutes of the performance.

** Music Theory Side Bar: My beloved guitar teacher Ron Parmentier (may he rest in peace) explained that this downward chromatic movement was actually a continuous ii-V-I-ii-V-I movement up the scale. At its essence, this is the basis for all popular western music – you will find it throughout the Jazz Real Book, as well as the Beach Boys and Beatles repertoires. **

There’s a hint of resolution to the chromatic theme at 12:43 – you can feel that the band wants to end the tension and "turn it over" but the ii-V-I maintains. Finally, a minor chord resolution arrives at 13:45 to relieve the tension and return us to the tonic (in this case E).

Listen to Bobby’s very subtle strike of the Sugar Magnolia A7 chord at 14:03 - foreshadowing for things to come later in the set.

As the 14th minute progresses, we move gently into a very quiet finger picking respite from Jerry, reminiscent of Simon & Garfunkel's Sound of Silence.

Much in the same way Bobby's idea at 14:03 hints at Sugar Magnolia – in these quiet moments, Jerry's melodic phrasing and idea creation is pointing us towards the Comes a Time, whose arrival is imminent in the next 10-12 minutes.

From out of this idyllic scene develops a total melt-down into atonal space – feedback and all – punctuated by Phil’s staccato accents and chord bombs. The band slips into a few minutes of free-form improvisation...Billy announces his return to the stage with some basic hi-hat work at 20:01...the maddening din builds to a full crescendo by the end of the 20th minute...two semi-psychotic breaks from reality manifest in the 21st minute...By the beginning of the 22nd minute, Phil introduces a loosely theorized walking bass line, which turns into a quasi-Caution jam by 22:30...On second thought, there is nothing "quasi" about it – by the 23:00 mark we’re in a full-on Caution Jam – whether it’s listened in the liner notes or not – which Jerry turns over at 23:22 into the traditional Other One theme...and we've landed in the second verse by 25:00.

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After a quick resolution to The Other One, Jerry wastes no time and slides us right into the introductory chords of Comes a Time. Once again, I love the juxtaposition of the outrageously twisted, psychotic juggernaut of Other One, immediately followed by the beautiful, sorrowful, torch song ballad Comes a Time.

Without getting into too much theory, the chord progression and melody of Comes a Time speaks to Jerry’s intimate knowledge of the American Song Book (the collective works of composers such as Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, Duke Ellington, Cole Porter, etc.). The beautiful lyric aside, Comes a Time offers us a primer in classic song-writing tension and resolution. In addition, it serves as a perfect example of a modified ii-V-I progression that I referenced earlier. The first verse is A – E – Bm – D – A (I-V-ii-iv-I).

The other thing I take away from Comes a Time – even in this early incarnation of the composition (it was first played 10/19/71) – is Jerry’s mastery of the three primary skills required of a guitar player. My beloved teacher Ron Parmentier (may he rest in peace) stressed that any player worth a damn should have the ability to play through the chord changes, play the melody and blow over the changes (i.e. improvise competently). Jerry nails all three facets in this Comes a Time. In particular, listen to how he evokes the gut-wrenching meaning of the lyric in his first pass over the melody.

The set closes with an energetic Sugar Magnolia that heats the Newcastle crowd to a rolling boil and one of only two versions of Brokedown Palace played on the tour. If you listen closely to the first verse of Brokedown you will hear "recognition applause." This is significant in that most of the show was comprised of songs foreign to the audience. Brokedown Palace on the other hand was featured on the celebrated studio album American Beauty, which was a hit in the U.K. The ubiquitous One More Saturday Night encore closes the evening's proceedings with a blast and we're off to catch the ferry to Denmark.

As always, thank you for reading. Stay cool, stay focused and by all means stay tuned...I'll see you in Copenhagen!


© Aaron Miller – 2011

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Europe '72: Wembley Empire Pool, London, England (4/8/1972)



Please indulge me as I get a little personal as I start my blog post for the 4/8 show...

The original Europe '72 album made me a Dead Head - plain and simple. I remember the day I found my dad's three-record LP like it was yesterday. I took it upstairs to my bedroom, somewhat bewildered by the cover art (Dude, what's with the ice cream cone to the head?), slid the first record out of its sleeve and dropped the needle from my Sansui all-in-one stereo system into the groove - what came out of my speakers would change me on a subconscious level and help shape my life from that moment forward...

The first song on Side A of the first record from the original Europe '72 release is Cumberland Blues. By the time that first track finished playing in my tiny bedroom in Setauket, NY (sometime in the fall of 1985 I believe) I was cooked...done...reborn...a "Head."

That very same Cumberland Blues was plucked from the 4/8 show at Wembley Empire Pool, London, England. I distinctly remember freaking out in my bedroom - dancing up a storm - jumping on and off of my bed (picture the church scene from The Blues Brothers if you need context) - so much so that I was making the needle skip on the record. Forget the fact that I didn't want to scratch my dad's LP, I wanted to be able to hear the entire song without interruption... I had to teach myself how to dance with reckless abandon (i.e. get my freak on) while still allowing the needle to remain in constant contact with the vinyl.

Fast forward to September, 2011 with the release of the Europe '72: The Complete Recordings release. It's Sunday morning and I've got Disc 1 of the 4/8 CD in my stereo system. My 5 year old son and I are grooving to the music, whoopin' and hollerin' while we boogie together in our den. Track 7, Cumberland Blues kicks on and he starts flailing around the room like a boy possessed. So much so that the CD starts to skip!

I quickly turned down the music and explained to my son that he had to learn how to dance in such a way that he could enjoy the fullness of his freak-out, while still letting the CD play without skipping. Then it hit me, like a ton of bricks. My world had come full circle - the proverbial snake eating its own tail. I must admit that my eyes teared-up later that evening, reliving the moment when I taught my son how to do what I had taught myself 26 years prior. A new head had been born and an old head had been reborn.

This music truly transcends time, generations and dimensions. Simply stated - there is nothing like The Grateful Dead - and there has never been anything quite like this box set.

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And now for some "hard hitting analysis" of 4/8/72...

In all honesty, the show starts out with some solid but forgettable renditions of some classic tunes (Bertha, Me & My Uncle, Mr. Charlie, Deal, Black Throated Wind, and Next Time You See Me). As I discussed in my 4/7 blog, the acoustics of the Wembley Arena (pool) were brutal and it's clear that the band was struggling to find its footing during this opening song sequence. I also think that the adrenaline from night one of a 22-show tour had worn off and the boys were feeling a bit jet-lagged.

And then, as if someone had flipped a switch back stage, the band is shot out of a canon with a signature version of Cumberland Blues - truly one for the ages. Perhaps the best ever. Check out the way Jerry brings the jam section home with his melodic lead-in just before the "A lot of poor men got the Cumberland Blues" verse. I still get chills just thinking about it.

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The Tennessee Jed is solid (as is the case throughout this entire tour). In particular, check out the pinched-harmonics during Jerry's solo at the 5:15 mark.

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Playin' In The Band

Kudos again to Wiz and the crew who recorded these shows, as well as Jeffrey Norman and everyone responsible for remixing and mastering the music for release. The mix, soundstage, presence and separation are insane! You can hear the individual instruments and voices so clearly - Pigpen's scratch percussion in Playin' is as clear as Jerry's guitar.

Jerry's intro into the Playin' jam section is my favorite of the tour...the old, timeless, sustaining wail of a banshee - tasteful and haunting.

Check out the arpeggio interplay between Keith and Jerry in the 8th minute.

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Good Lovin'

Some of my friends have been complaining that listening to the Good Lovin's from this tour is analogous to suffering through that story that your grandfather has told you a million times. But he's old and he's dying and you have to pay him the respect and let him tell his story again, even though you don't want to hear it. To a certain extent I don't blame them for this opinion...but at the same time the 4/8 Good Lovin' has some really tasty jams in it...

Take for example the 5:00 mark where Bobby offers up his counter-lead riff from the China > Rider transition section; with Keith and Jerry trading off rhythmic figures.

It's pretty cool...take what you can get. AND, it's Pigpen's last tour, so I don't want to hear you complaining. Shut up and listen. And definitely don't let me catch you skipping ahead on your CD player (yes, I'm talking to you Mike!)

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Looks Like Rain

I must admit that I've never been a huge fan of this song - excepting for those heart-wrenching breaks up when I was 15, this song has had little meaning for me. I must say, the few times it popped up on this tour with Jerry on pedal steel have really brought me around. Beyond the novelty of the pedal steel - the interplay of the piano, B-3 organ and the pedal steel is very alluring. The pedal steel acts like a second organ, blending with the other keyboard instruments melodically, chordally and tonally. Check out Jerry's inter-verse counter-melodies.

On a side note, the casual observer may not be able to appreciate just how difficult it is to play the pedal steel - and how different it is from playing the guitar. The fact that Jerry was masterful at both is quite impressive.

Also, take note of Phil high harmonies. If you hear him sing these days with Further (give him a break - he's 71) you might not think he has a clue. In 1972, he had a fantastic voice and this rendition of Looks Like Rain is a testament to his abilities.

By the way...when's the last time you heard a band stretch out for an 11-minute mind-bending psychedelic fest and the slip effortlessly into a lilting country love song?

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The almost obligatory Casey Jones closes the first set. Much to my dismay, Bobby’s secondary guitar lead in this song is often overlooked. The clarity and separation of the recordings in this release highlights how strong Bobby was in a supporting role to jerry’s solos.

Also worthy of note, Keith’s rhythmic compliment in songs like Casey Jones and straight rock songs like One More Saturday Night can’t be overstated. His playing is simply fantastic.

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As set break commences an announcement from the stage references the free programs scattered on the seats throughout the arena. The Book Of The Dead - a reproduction of which is included in the limited edition box set. A sweet, bonus treat for those of us fortunate enough to score one of the 7200 steamer trunks.

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Truckin'

On the whole, the Truckin' jams on this tour are fantastic – 4/8 is no exception. The way they’re able to maintain an almost climactic energy for several minutes is remarkable.

There is some really cool rhythmic interplay around the 10:30 mark...dig it.

The 4/8 Truckin' represents yet another very cool thing about this tour - the presence of the stand-alone Truckin' - as a complete entity. Much like Playin' – you get the song, the jam and the reprise all in one complete package. Although The Dead use it as a transitional piece here and there during the spring of 1972, in the first half of the tour there are a handful examples of stand-alone Truckin's that are simply phenomenal.

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Big Railroad Blues experienced its peak in 1971. I hesitate to write it but by the spring of 1972 it’s pretty much stuffing in the pillow...a throw away tune. There are tasty moments (cool Jerry licks and solid drumming from Billy) but for the most part…eh

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Disc 2 has some excellent moments but on the whole...I give it a solid B. Now, Disc 3 is a totally different matter all together. Hold onto your butts - this ride's about to get bumpy!

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Dark Star (32:09 of beautifully scary perfection)

Check out the 6:00 minute mark and beyond - Jerry introduces a 5/4 "Morse code" figure and turns over the entire jam…Billy grabs hold of the idea and BOOM we’re cruisin’ – and hard! The jam continues with Phil referencing the 5/4 Morse code figure well into the 10th minute - the main Dark Star theme returns just before the start of minute 11:00.

The jam that evolves in minutes 17:00-19:00 comes out of nowhere. Classic Grateful Dead – someone develops an idea...someone else grabs that idea...transmogrifies that idea...pushes it forward...hands it back and now we’re approaching minute 20:00 and we’re in full-on chaos!

Check out bobby’s chord-melodies in the 23 and 24th minutes – hints of Sage and Spirit percolate throughout this section. Bobby's overall chord representations are timeless – vintage Bob Weir. His chord forms, rhythms and movements are recognizable throughout his tenure with the band. I'm confident you will hear fragments thereof if you go and see Furthur play today.

The 28:00 minute mark is spectacular for its demonstration of thematic improvisation within the Grateful Dead's paradigm. Jerry introduces a very simple, melodic major groove, the band latches hold and develops it into a complete musical movement unto itself. This A-major groove is where Sugar Magnolia is born…

The closing minutes of Dark Star are sprinkled with hints and flavors of the Mind Left Body jam, accented by Bobby’s chromatic walk-down to a solidly grounded A-major chord. Essentially, the band is firmly rooted in Sugar Magnolia 3 minutes before the song actually starts. I find it incredible how they managed to turn over the groove from a full-on arhythmical melt-down into a country-swing-psychedelic jam – the essence of the Grateful Dead personified within a 4:00 span.

31:30 - Jerry introduces a little of the pedal steel from Looks Like Rain, as they refrain the Dark Star theme into Sugar Magnolia. Sweet!

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The Sugar Magnolia is solid and by all means rocking. I love how Phil grabs the end of the Sunshine Daydream section by the throat and tells his band mates...Yeah. Here’s my walking bass line. Take this Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks) and shove it up your ass!

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Bear with me here...

The second set of 4/8/72 is a primer on transportation and its relationship to the Grateful Dead lore, mythology and libretto writ large. Not withstanding the train song Casey Jones that closes set 1 - the second set opens up with us (the passengers) in a truck, which then turns into a big railroad, chugging along down the line. After being slowed down through the pedestrian Hurts Me Too, we are immediately launched headfirst into a vortex - hurled across space, time and inter-dimensional areas in the cosmic, hypersonic, warp-drive-enabled spaceship that is Dark Star...

Our Dark Star galactic transport reenters Earth's atmosphere, slowing to a supersonic-then subsonic airplane, eventually morphing into the multicolored, rainbow-bus of Sugar Magnolia. The bus came by and I got on the out-of-control freight train of Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks)...hurtling down the mountain, struggling to maintain its tentative grip with the rails. Our second set encores with One More Saturday Night, which I've always imagined as a big block, V8 Pontiac GTO convertible screaming down the highway with the stereo blaring at full blast.

To take my transportation analogy one step further, the Grateful Dead show from 4/8/72 also has the subterranean Cumberland Blues, as well as the road songs Black Throated Wind and Beat It On Down The Line. Trains, trucks, men digging holes in the ground and walking the highway – real life incarnate. Throw in some mind-bending, time-travelling spaceships and you've got yourself one hell of a concert event my friend.

Thank you for reading. Stay cool, stay focused and by all means stay tuned...I'll see you in Newcastle!



© Aaron Miller – 2011

Monday, October 24, 2011

AES New York 2011 - Grateful Dead Europe '72 Panel Discussion



This past Saturday, I had the esteemed honor and privilege of attending a panel discussion at the AES Convention in New York City that focused on the technical wizardry behind the Europe '72 box set. I'm hopeful that an audio recording of the panel will become available. In the mean time, here are some thoughts and recollections from what the panel shared with those in attendance:

AES New York 2011 - Grateful Dead Europe '72
Saturday, October 22, 9:00 am — 10:45 am (1E15/16)

Moderator:
Sam Berkow

Panelists:
Gary Lambert - Grateful Dead Historian
Jamie Howarth - Tape Transfers and Plangent Processes Speed Correction
Jeffrey Norman - Mixing Engineer
David Glasser - Mastering Engineer

Abstract:
In the spring of 1972, the Grateful Dead toured Europe with a new (and modified) Ampex MM1100 tape recorder in tow. The tour, and subsequent LP release, finds the Dead at one their creative peaks. In September 2011 Rhino Records will release a massive CD box set containing every note recorded on this 22-show tour —over 70 hours of music on 73 discs, surely one of the most ambitious rock and roll box sets to date. This Workshop will bring together the production and engineering team who have been working on restoring, mixing, and mastering this historic music. Musical excerpts from the project will be presented, and the project workflow and creative challenges will be discussed.

You can purchase the mp3 of this AES panel by following this link:
http://www.softconference.com/aes/sessionDetail.asp?SID=281053

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After waking up from my sidewalk sleeping bag, I rubbed the early city mist from my eyes and wandered around the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center with my finger in the air, in hopes of scoring a miracle ticket to the Europe '72 panel discussion.

OK, you got me...a short trip on the LIRR and a cab ride from Penn Station got me to the Javitz Center in plenty of time to register my free exhibits pass and purchase a ticket to the Europe '72 panel discussion. All in all, money very well spent. The discussion was extremely informative, awe inspiring, eye opening and more enjoyable than I had expected.

Sam Berkow, a friend and colleague dating back to my Masterpiece A/V days supporting the String Cheese Incident, opened the proceedings with sweet, humorous and heartfelt welcoming words. Accompanied by a thoughtful slide presentation, Sam followed up a brief introduction to the Grateful Dead and the significance of the Europe '72 tour by introducing the panel members; describing the roll each person played in the project...

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Gary Lambert started the discussion by offering a personal anecdote about the day his box set arrived from Rhino Records. Apparently he spent much of the first day just staring at the steamer trunk in amazement (it's nice to know I wasn't alone. I must admit I squealed like a fat kid at Friendly's when mine arrived). Gary then gave us some excellent historical background information about the band as well as the economics/logistics of the tour.

Gary raised an interesting point about the logistics of tour and how that played into the sonic consistency of recordings that were produced. Because they were trekking all over Europe, crossing international borders, the Grateful Dead - who were legendary tinkerers - were required to keep their equipment manifest uniform. This in turn, forced them to use the same gear from night to night. Twenty-two shows with the exact same equipment and stage set-up.

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To me, the most fascinating and technologically complex (i.e. over my head) aspect of the panel discussion followed as Jamie Howarth described how his team applied the Plangent Processes Playback System to mitigate the wow, flutter and sonic distortion present on the master reel recordings.

The technology behind this system is explained here:
http://www.plangentprocesses.com/

The modified Ampex MM1100 used to record the Europe '72 tour was state-of-the-art for 1972. With that said, there were inherent limitations with the transport - motor slippage, speed variations, scraping of the oxide on the tape as it passes over the metal recording-head, etc. All of these "issues" translated to wow, flutter and audible distortion on the master 14" reels.

After the analog reels were transferred into the digital domain, Jamie's team "chased the bias" - a 160 kHz tone that ran throughout the recordings. This gave them a reference to lock onto, thereby allowing them to greatly diminish the wow, flutter and distortion of the master recordings. The "before and after" audio samples Jamie played were simply staggering. He also played a recording from a stethoscope held against an MM1100 in operation. One doesn't realize just how much noise is present in an older recording, until it's no longer there...talk about disproving a negative.

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Jeffrey Norman walked us through the arduous but rewarding task of mixing the (now corrected) 24 bit/96 kHz multi-track recordings. Explaining in detail how he mixed the entire project in ProTools, using a custom Neve console with Flying Faders II, Fairman TMC and Z-Systems Z-CL1 compressors and an assortment of EQ's and plug-ins.

You can read a bit more about his facility here: http://www.mockingbirdmastering.com/facility.html

I especially enjoyed listening to Jeff describe the philosophy he applied to his work on the Europe '72 box set, approached each show like he was mixing a studio album. Given the consistency of the on-stage set up, Jeff set his pan based on photos taken from the tour. Appropriate EQ techniques were applied to the individual instruments/voices and very (almost non-existent) compression was used to provide a proper blend to the overall sound. Jeff explained how his experience as a mastering engineer has taught him that minimal compression in the mixing stage allows for maximum dynamics in recording. It also provides the mastering engineer maximum flexibility with which to apply his craft on the final product.

No preamplifiers were used on the Europe '72 tour. Instead the individual 16-tracks were run through a stage-split (allowing for front of house and monitors to be mixed) and straight to tape. This provided a very dynamic recording. Keep in mind that Keith's piano was recorded with a single transducer microphone, which explains the often unique tonal quality of his instrument and why his presence is often very low in the mix. Jerry's guitar and pedal steel guitar ran through an A/B box and straight into a close-mic’ed Fender Twin amplifier - no effects or stereo signal like later in years.

When questioned about his approach to the particular sound of each venue on the tour, Jeff elucidated that his goal was not mix the recordings in hopes of reproducing Aarhaus or Lille. Rather, he allowed the ambient information from the mono audience microphone, as well as the overhead drum mics to reproduce the room presence and ambiance. This comment validated my experience with the box set - as I've found that acoustic characteristics of each venue are clearly defined within the first few snare/tom hits on Billy's kit. {Check out Newcastle, Amsterdam and Hamburg for examples of this acoustic phenomenon}

The other interesting, if not endearing part of Jeffrey's presentation was his retelling of the way in which the digital audio files moved around the country between Plangent Processes on the east coast, Jeff in California and Air Show Mastering in Boulder, CO. I get a huge kick to think that the 24 bit/96kHz master audio files for the (in humble opinion) single greatest CD release in the history of the universe bounced around the country, inside a FedEx truck on a memory stick and a portable USB hard drive...

I remember how exciting it was to receive cassettes, then DAT's and CD's in the mail from friends during my early days of trading tapes. It was like the proverbial Christmas morning (even for a Jewish kid from Long Island). I wonder if Jeff and David ever enjoyed a similar rush during this process.

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The final panelist to present was David Glasser - the mastering engineer from Airshow Mastering. Accompanied by Sam Berkow's slides, David briefly described the gear he used and his philosophy to mastering. Minimal compression (as David put it "the meters barely moved"), Sonic Studio's soundBlade and a discerning ear were Dave's primary tools as he added the final touches to this seminal CD release.

Something to keep in mind...while discussing the process of dithering down the 24 bit/96kHz master recordings to the final 16 bit/44.1 kHz CD product, David mentioned how "no one would ever be crazy enough to tackle this project again." Therefore, he (along with the other team members) decided to retain the 24 bit/96kHz masters. I can only imagine that at some point in the future, there will be a 24 bit/96kHz release of this magnificent, one-of-a-kind box set!

As if I needed any more reason to feel cosmically connected to this box set - at the outset of his presentation David thanked his partner at Air Show, Charlie Pilzer. It turns out I sold Charlie a pair of Duntech Sovereign speakers several years back:

http://www.duntech.com.au/english/products/classic-series/sovereign.html

Several of Sam's slides showed a pair of monstrous speakers (powered by Ayre amplification) in David's mastering studio. For a few minutes, I fantasized that my Sovereigns were used in the mastering of the Europe '72 box set. Talking to Charlie after the conclusion of the panel discussion, it became clear that "my" Sovereigns are used in the Tacoma, MD Airshow studio. The box set was mastered on Dunlavy (SC-IV's I think) at their Boulder, CO studio.

Either way...it's a small world (but I still wouldn't want to gift wrap it)

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The panel concluded with several audio samples from the box set (The Stranger, Tennessee Jed and Playin' In The Band) as well as some Q&A from the audience. All in all, it was a fantastic experience and well worth the effort required to get into the city so early on a cool Saturday morning. I will keep my eyes and ears peeled for any recorded documentation of the panel - if I find anything I will certainly make it available on this blog.

As always, thank you for reading and stay tuned...


© Aaron Miller – 2011

Friday, October 21, 2011

Europe '72: Wembley Empire Pool, London, England (4/7/1972)


And away we go...

The first show of the Europe '72 tour (and interestingly the pre-anniversary of my first Dead show 4/7/87) opens with The Greatest Story Ever Told...for the greatest tour ever played. Like many other songs in the spring 1972 repertoire, The Greatest Story Ever Told is new - still forming and evolving - from a band at the height of its powers.

It's fascinating to consider that the Grateful Dead in April of 1972 was introducing so many new songs into the mix as they rapidly approached the end of an era - with Pigpen literally dying right in front of them. April 7th was no exception. The third song in the first set is Chinatown Shuffle - a brand new tune from Pigpen, a man with less than 30 shows left with his band mates. Listening to the energy and ferocity with which Pigpen attacks this offering, you'd never know he was in such bad health. Simply put - Pigpen rocks each show on the Europe '72 like it was going to be his last. (I know it sounds cliché but we should all be so inspired to face each day with the same stance).

The other aspect of this recording that strikes you from the word "Go!" is the acoustic characteristics of the venue. The Dead are playing in what amounts to a giant swimming pool. The energy (and the sound) has the feel of a bullet shot inside a cement fish tank - live and bouncing. It's raw, ripping and unsophisticated. And yet, at the end of Me & My Uncle Phil asks the monitor engineer (Sparky) to take some 500Hz out of his mix. Classic! Even in this unruly acoustical environment, we have Phil trying to fine-tune the sound; to tame the beast as it were. This offers a small snapshot into the Grateful Dead's contribution to the rock world - namely, the perfection of live sound reinforcement.

Pardon me...I misspoke before - it's not a gun that's being shot in the fish tank - it's a CANNON!

The band is leaning forward in tempo, pace and energy - adjusting to the acoustics of the room. Speaking from experience, the only way to fight the second, third (and sometimes fourth) points of reflection is to make sure that the primary sound waves from the stage and PA outweigh the other noises bouncing around the room...

In this way, we experience the Grateful Dead as a chameleon - adapting to their environment, allowing it to somewhat dictate who and what they became on stage. They are feeding off not only the energy from the audience but the room and "the moment" as well. The Grateful Dead was a band of consequence and circumstance. Harkening back to their days as the house band for the Merry Pranksters - living in the moment - being part of the scene - while simultaneously creating the scene. The Möbius strip that is the Grateful Dead's legacy, as the unwitting, unknowing, resistive pied pipers of and for the San Francisco counter-culture.

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The first China-Rider of the tour speaks to Jerry's deep banjo roots. Check out the open, finger-picking styling at the 4:56 mark (pardon me...my timings won't always be exact - I'm taking notes in my car) of the China Cat jam. Jerry reprises the idea just before the start of Rider and again at the 1:50 mark of Rider. Also, take note of Jerry's staccato arpeggios during the "Sun will Shine" verse. Tasty!

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The Black Throated Wind / Loser / Mr. Charlie sequence of songs is a testament to the tone of the Nash Strat and what the instrument brings to Jerry's arsenal. The weeping, lilting, sorrowful pedal steel moans of the country ballads - and the beautiful, bright, bell-like twangy tone cutting through Pigpen's seminal groove.

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Before the Beat It On Down The Line they ask the people in the back of the venue if they can here - again referencing that the band actually cares what they sound like. After the audience says "No!" Phil responds accordingly "Turn it up man!"

The BIODTL itself is absolutely ridiculous - the best of the tour - and arguably the best ever played in any era. Check out Jerry's lead into the third time around during the jam. It's reminiscent of his pedal steel solo on Hello Mary Lou featured on the album The Best of New Riders of the Purple Sage.

In his introduction of BIODTL Bobby explains how it was written by Jesse Fuller, a one-man-band folk musician from Oakland, who didn't get his start until he came to the UK. So, here we have an example of the transatlantic trade of music, writ large. American folk music influenced a generation of European musicians, who in turn brought their bluesy-rock back to the U.S. during the 'British Invasion.' Here, the Grateful Dead return the favor by importing their uniquely transmogrified, psychedelic blues/folk/rock amalgam.

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The brand new tune, Tennessee Jed is ripping throughout the entire tour - and the 4/7 version is no exception. I have to admit that prior to the release of this box set I never liked it much. Now it's easily one of my favorite songs from this era.

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The tour's first Playin' In The Band matches the show; high energy, clean and all business - get in...get out! The band explores some of the realms that will open further as 1972 progresses but this incarnation of the song is far less adventurous than its subsequent counterparts.

Playin' embodies the Grateful Dead vis-à-vis the concepts of transformation and transition. Much like many of the other new songs on the tour, Playin' is evolving right before our eyes (ears). It's in its musical infancy at this point, coming to us at the tail end of the Pigpen era and the introduction of Keith. As the band morphs, Playin' is the vehicle through which it transforms. The Grateful Dead are leaving their "American Jam Band" phase and moving headlong into their jazzy, improvisational '73-'74 phase. Playin' is a major cornerstone of this era.

It is interesting to witness the transformation of the song during the tour as the band transforms. Further more, consider how after Pigpen's departure the song itself transforms from a stand alone composition to a transitional song that sustains throughout the band's remaining years. Playin' is used to take us from Truckin' into Morning Dew, from China-Rider into Crazy Fingers...in and out of various song combinations or even split up with a Playin' Reprise thrown in at the end of a set or during the following night's performance.

(This clearly has the makings for a thesis paper - grad school, here I come!)

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The Other One > el Paso > The Other One sequence is one for the ages and worthy of an entire blog post (much like the Playin') unto itself. For the sake of brevity (I know, I know...this initial post has gone on far too long) I have decided to condense my study into a short collection of highlights:

* My guitar teacher Ron Parmentier (may he rest in peace) would always yell at me "There are no triplets in Jazz!" - clearly it's Jerry's fault that my playing is riddled with them.

* During minutes 3:00 and 4:00 Jerry and Billy are engaging in a 3 vs. 4 battle - turning over the time signatures - over and back and around again.

* The song starts out gang-busters but by the end of the fourth minute, they've slipped into a full-on meltdown.

* There are hints of Weather Report Prelude at 6:00 minutes and change - Bobby started working out these ideas in '71 and they carry on through this performance

* Check out the diminished call and response between Jerry's guitar and Pigpens organ (a la '69) during the verses

* Minutes 14:00-16:00 of The Other One represents the Grateful Dead in a nutshell. It starts out in total chaos...nightmarish. During the 15th minute, Billy suggests an up-tempo cowboy rhythm, which Bobby grabs and offers a Me & My Uncle tease...the whole band saddles up and flies into a soaring, country, psychedelic jam with Phil laying down a Caution bass line...all of which melts down by minute 17:00...and then a nice, melodic rebranding and we're slid right into a tasty el Paso.

* Take note that you can hear The Other One during most of the el Paso - with Billy, Keith and Jerry continuing the 3 vs. 4 battle from earlier in the sequence.

* Listen for Bobby's sneeze at 4:21 :)

* The Other One comes back hard and aggressive. Interesting - Phil is playing the intro bass line, Jerry's riding lead, Keith is playing from the refrain and Bobby is playing his part from the main verse...all at the same time.

* Right at the 3:00 minute mark, Jerry changes the time figure, Billy grabs hold of the idea and turns over the entire jam - accenting a 5/4 time signature (count it for yourself).

* The time signature battles resolve at 6:15 when Jerry reintroduces the primary theme. Talk about ebbs and flow of time, meter and tempo. Yikes!

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There is great banter at the end of Disc 2, with the audience being asked to return to their seats: "The thing is, the cops don't have enough room to dance!"

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The Sugar Magnolia is super hot and full of energy - especially the Sunshine Daydream section. Focus on the tone of the Nash Strat - pure electricity.

The super-high energy carries through into the NFA > GDTRFB > NFA. This performance harkens back to '71, the heyday of this legendary sequence.

They encore with a rough, workman-like One More Saturday Night and send the audience home with a smile.

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I know this was a massive post and I thank you for making it to the end. This box set has moved me in ways that I didn't expect and I have a lot to share. I hope you've enjoyed this glimpse into my love of this music, this band and this tour in particular.

Hopefully, I will see you soon with my thoughts on Europe '72: Wembley Empire Pool, London, England (4/8/1972).


© Aaron Miller – 2011