- Grateful Dead and Old and In The Way founder Jerry Garcia is in the news in three separate stories this week.
- First: A bronze sculpture of Garcia’s right hand, missing two-thirds of his middle finger, has been installed at the Santa Barbara Bowl. The sculpture is located in the Jerry Garcia Glen, which was officially dedicated during a private reception Wednesday evening, November 10. The 75-pound, 18-inch-tall bronze hand rests eye-level atop a small boulder in the wooded glen’s stone courtyard, about 150 feet from its gated entrance. The sculpture, created by artist Tom White, was commissioned by Scott Brittingham, who is chairman of the American Classic Campaign for the Santa Barbara Bowl Foundation. The foundation raises money for improvements and beautification. Brittingham donated $1 million to the glen through his own Brittingham Family Foundation. A self-described Deadhead —a follower and fan of the Grateful Dead—Brittingham saw Garcia live in numerous shows between 1978 and 1994, before Garcia died from a heart attack in ‘95. “Other than his smile and his beard and his long hair, his hand is one of the most distinctive things about him,” Brittingham said.
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The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia
The Wheel – A Musical Celebration of Jerry Garcia will benefit the Rex Foundation and feature performances from several of Garcia’s bluegrass cohorts: David Nelson & Friends, Electric (David Nelson, Barry Sless, Robin Sylvester, John Molo, Mookie Siegel), Peter Rowan Blue Grass Band (Peter Rowan, Jody Stecher, Keith Little, Paul Knight) and Jesse McReynolds featuring Garrett McReynolds and Steve Thomas.
Woodstock Records
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- Jesse McReynolds & Friends have just released a tribute CD to Garcia "Songs of the Grateful Dead"
- -from Jambands.com Brian Robbins
Oh, it’s a funny ol’ world – with a long, long road that runs in a great big circle around it.
Back in the days when a young Jerry Garcia was immersed in the world of bluegrass music, his list of picking heroes included the McReynolds bothers, Jim (guitar) and Jesse (mandolin). In fact, when Garcia and his buddy Sandy Rothman took off on their now-legendary cross-country bluegrass vision quest in 1964 (on the wings of a snow white ’61 Corvair), one of their goals was to track down “Jim & Jesse & The Virginia Boys” – the McReynolds and their band of ace players. Although the young crusaders did manage to hear the brothers live, a moment of post-show shyness kept them from actually meeting the McReynolds brothers in person. Rothman and Garcia soon went back home to California (Garcia eventually fell in with a different crowd – but that’s another story) and Jim and Jesse kept on rolling and picking. And that was that.
46 years later, the road has come around in one of its karma-guided circles.
Jerry Garcia may be gone, as is Jim McReynolds (who passed away in 2004), but Jesse McReynolds is still making music. His newly-released Songs of the Grateful Dead finds the 81-year-old McReynolds paying tribute to a friend he never met, with folks such as the New Riders’ David Nelson, Stu Allen (JGB), and even Garcia’s long-ago co-pilot Sandy Rothman, joining in on the fun.
Right off the bat, you need to know two things: this is not another “Pickin’ On …”-style tribute album loaded with high lonesome versions of the subject’s tunes set to a bluegrass tempo. What you have are songs played in a manner respectful to the original arrangements with the payoff being moments like when the break on a nicely-chugging “Franklin’s Tower” opens up and Jesse McReynolds’ sweet little mandolin leads the jam – it’ll make the hair stand up on your arms.
Secondly, McReynolds doesn’t sound his age – not at all. His voice is strong and full of emotion throughout the album. For someone who wasn’t familiar with the Dead’s music (it was Rothman and McReynolds’ wife Joy who convinced him to consider the project), ol’ Jesse simply nails the sadly-sweet emotion of “Standing On The Moon” and “Stella Blue”. At the same time, he’s totally comfy with the rapid-fire barrel-assing charge of “Alabama Getaway”, becoming the character in each song much the way that Garcia used to.
McReynold’s mandolin is the star of this collection, however, easily meeting the challenge of playing everything from the already-grassy “Deep Elem Blues” and the mando-ready “Ripple” to the rollicking swagger of “Deal” or the slow hip-sway of “Fire On The Mountain”. Simply put: it all works.
An added bonus is the album’s final track, “Day By Day”. A new tune featuring music by McReynolds and words by Robert Hunter, “Day By Day” nestles in nicely alongside the rest of the songs in this collection. (Will there be more Hunter/McReynolds collaborations in the future? There deserves to be …)
All in all, Songs of the Grateful Dead is just what it should be: an album full of wonderful tunes done with respect and love. Jesse McReynolds’ excitement over “discovering” the music of the Dead shines through – big time.
Jerry would’ve loved it.
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