Latest News

Here is the latest news from David Gans, producer and host of the Grateful Dead Hour.

Keller and the Keels!

I heard Keller Williams had a new CD and I emailed a request for a copy in time for tomorrow’s marathon. The CD arrived late this afternoon, and I was surprised and delighted to see that it’s a collaboration with Larry and Jenny Keel! The disc is called Grass, and it’s a treat! Larry is a killer flattop player, and Jenny is a fine bass player, and the three of ’em sound terrific together. Another pleasant surprise – and most propitious for the KPFA marathon – is that there are two GD songs on the CD – “Loser” and “Dupree’s Diamond Blues” – plus one of Jerry’s old bluegrass favorites, “I’m Just Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail.”

Donna the Buffalo on tour in the west

Very nice article about Donna the Buffalo by Jim Harrington in today’s San Jose Mercury News. An excerpt:

“Our music is . . . not easily pegged,” says vocalist-guitarist Jeb Puryear, 38, from his home near Ithaca, N.Y. “In fact, I have a hard time explaining what we do. It’s not like our sound is very unusual. In some ways it’s very basic, and in other ways it’s kind of different.”

Drawing on everything from Cajun and country music and reggae to bluegrass, the band is sometimes described as “a melting pot.” But “we can’t stand that description” either, says Nevins, who plays fiddle, accordion, acoustic guitar and scrub board and does vocals. “It makes you sound like this hodgepodge, eclectic mess, and we are really way more direct and focused than that. . . . What we like to call our music is original American dance music.”

Country, rock, reggae, zydeco, old-time – it’s a powerful combination. I had a long talk with Jeb a few years ago, and when I suggested that DTB’s sound wasn’t about instrumental virtuosity, he interrupted me and said, “That’s good, because we don’t have much.” He want on to note that the band emerged from the old-timey music scene in Ithaca, New York, where the emphasis is on the collective groove rather than individual virtuosity. It’s very true that they don’t have any flashy solos, but that doesn’t seem to bother anybody on stage or in the audience; their extended “jams” provide an excellent vehicle for both kinetic and spiritual meditation.

That’s one of the things I liked about the Grateful Dead: they’d give you a song with some powerful ideas and then take off on a collective exploratory mission that provided a fine space in which to ruminate on the philosophical question.

I get that same feeling when listening to Donna the Buffalo: ain’t no place I’d rather be than right here, right now, thinkin’ it through with my butt and my heart and my mind.


Update:
Michael Marlitt emails this report from Portland, Oregon:

Portland was another great show. Only a couple hundred showed up so the balcony of the former porn house was closed off and you could walk to the front with no trouble at all. There are about 15-20 feet between the stage and the seats, so there was plenty of dance room for all who were so inclined. Sound quality was superb (I’m told Seattle wasn’t that great).

This was my first ‘post-Jim’ show (last I’d seen was Grassroots 2004) so I wasn’t sure what to expect. I’d heard cd’s but had my doubts. All doubts were erased about 20 seconds into the show. Kathy Ziegler has very nicely filled out any holes left by Jim’s departure and Bill Reynolds’ bass is a perfect fit for Tom Gilbert’s drum line. All night Tara and Jeb seemed to be in perfect synch and willing to stretch things out. Ring of Fire was tight and sweet, Forty Days and Forty Nights was incendiary, Conscious Evolution (which I gather was the encore in Seattle the night before) was stretched beautifully mid-set, a gorgeous Funky Side, a moving Killing a Man, ah the list goes on. I honestly can’t say there was a weak point except leaving and thinking of all the songs they left unplayed! I’m purposely skirting any strict set list because you at shows upcoming should have some surprises waiting and, honestly, I can’t remember very well…

I keep thinking that some day we’ll all look back at these days and think how very lucky we were to see Donna in such laid back venues with family and friends. The best un-kept secret in music today!

The Thin White Puke is at it again

From the New York Times:

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Conservative commentator Ann Coulter, speaking at a traditionally black college, joked that Justice John Paul Stevens should be poisoned.

Coulter had told the Philander Smith College audience Thursday that more conservative justices were needed on the Supreme Court to change the current law on abortion. Stevens is one of the court’s most liberal members.

“We need somebody to put rat poisoning in Justice Stevens’ creme brulee,” Coulter said. ”That’s just a joke, for you in the media.”

Tribal stomp posters for KPFA

Tribal Stomp Poster
Tribal Stomp Poster
Tribal Stomp Poster

These are three of the six posters donated by The Rock Poster Society for the KPFA marathon. The posters were created to commemorate the Chet Helms Memorial Tribal Stomp in Golden Gate Park on October 30, 2005. The six artists are Gary Houston, John Van Hamersveld, Dave Hunter, Dennis Loren, Carolyn Ferris, and Nels (JAGMO) Jacobson. These are official, numbered posters from the show.

We have three sets of six posters.

If you’d like to have these posters, please call KPFA at 510-848-5732 or 1-800-439-5732 to make a pledge.

TRPS is also looking for donations to help poster artist David Singer, who has some major health problems. Please see this post on Uncle John’s Blog for more info.