Dead to the World 4/22/09

Wavy Gravy stopped by at the start of the show to talk about a bunch of events he’s doing in the next few weeks. He’s at the Ashkenaz in Berkeley tomorrow and Friday nights; info on the Ashkenaz site. There’s a brunch at Scott’s Seafood Restaurant in Jack London Square (Oakland CA) Sunday, May 2, 11 am to 1 pm, a benefit for Camp Winnarainbow. There’s a showing of Michelle Esrick’s film about Wavy, Saint Misbehavin’ on Friday, May 8, 6:45 pm at the Regal Cinemas Riverfront Stadium Twin in Santa Cruz, California, part of the Santa Cruz Film Festival. Q&A with Wavy after the movie. And on Thursday, May 14, there’s a cocktail party at Trader Vic’s at 9 Anchor Drive in Emeryville California, a benefit for SEVA, with music by Henry Kaiser.

Cold Rain and Snow
Picasso Moon
Never Trust a Woman
Stagger Lee
Cassidy
Truckin’->
Smokestack Lightning
Grateful Dead 7/23/90 World Music Theater, Tinley Park IL

Alligator
That’s It for the Other One
New Potato Caboose
– Grateful Dead, Road Trips 2.2 (2/14/68 Carousel Ballroom, San Francisco)
Bob Weir interview 7/18/84

This interview was done before I had any idea I was going to become a radio producer. I was gathering stories for a book, Playing in the Band: An Oral and Visual Portrait of the Grateful Dead. So the audio quality isn’t as good as it ought to be, and I hadn’t yet learned to keep my yap shut while the subject it talking. But the stories are good!

Weir: While we were working up “Alligator,” a friend of ours, John Warnecke … His father had a cabin on the Russian River. It was late spring. We packed up and went to that place and worked up a few songs, among them the first few strains of “The Other One” [the “he had to die” part] and “Alligator,” and one or two others. Most particularly “The Other One” and “Alligator.” “Caution” we had been playing for a while.

We had a little sort of a stage, a platform that I guess was for a tent, on a bluff over the river. We set up all our equipment, and you couldn’t see it from down on the river, which was about 30 feet below, because of the bushes and foliage.

We’d been watching the canoers come down the river for several days. We had one of the feedback scenarios that you hear in “Caution,” mere everybody just opens fire with all the electronic weirdness that we bad at our disposal at the time. We had all our PA gear set up so it was facing down at the river.

First off … I had a bullfrog croak that I could do through a microphone that sounded fairly convincing. If you put it through the entire PA and everything we had, it sounded like a 40-foot bullfrog. So we’d wait for the canoers to get right underneath us and then I’d open up with the bullfrog. We’d have them diving out of the canoes.

Pretty soon we’d just open fire with everything. We’d wait til they got right underneath us and then, “Ready, aim, fire!” and we’d blast them with sonic weirdness of a hellacious sort.

It was about a week and a half we spent up there — after they fished me out of jail…. I was arrested for throwing a water balloon at a cop. He was conducting an illegal search on a car belonging to a friend of mine, directly below 710 Ashbury. I considered it to be an illegal search; the car had probably been parked there for quite some time, and probably was malfunctioning and he was probably trying to see if anybody really owned the car. But I thought this was an illegal search, and it incensed me. And besides, we were having a water balloon fight inside the house at the time.

I got him from the third-story window. I didn’t actually hit him; I got it right next to him in a perfect bomb-burst pattern on the pavement. It got his shoes probably full of water.

Gans: What was the charge?

Weir: Assault on an officer. He wouldn’t have busted me, but after that I had to go out in the street and just kind of sit there and look at him and grin.

Seeds and StemsDavid Gans w/ Mike DiPirro 4/17/09 Camp Zoe, Salem MO

5 thoughts on “Dead to the World 4/22/09”

  1. Great show tonight (4/22/09) from start to finish.

    I was reminiscing with you about seeds (that never got planted), stems (that poked thru the paper), album covers (that had cool art), price shock (when an oz. started to cost over $20), etc. Remember the $15 lid?

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