For me, the cultural (and some of the musical as well) aspects
of the 60s officially ended on April 22, 1977.
That night, my friend Marty and I saw the Grateful Dead at
the Spectrum in South Philadelphia. By
then, the Springsteen influence had helped me to delve deep deeper into rock and roll past, while I also was dipping my toes in the waters of the burgeoning punk/new wave scene at the same time (some of which also was indebted to what came before). But I still was on the classic rock/hippie music train, at least to a degree.
then, the Springsteen influence had helped me to delve deep deeper into rock and roll past, while I also was dipping my toes in the waters of the burgeoning punk/new wave scene at the same time (some of which also was indebted to what came before). But I still was on the classic rock/hippie music train, at least to a degree.
This review of the show says the band played for over four hours. Not even close. I guess illegal substances make you unable to tell time. |
That night I stepped down off the train, not to return for
quite some time.
Simply put, the Dead were awful. Out of tune, off-key,
uninspiring, meandering. Noodled around for 7-8 minutes between songs. Yeah, I completely understand that maybe I didn’t get it.
That I am not part of the “club.” That I needed to ingest some chemicals before
and during the show.
But I have seen hundreds of shows, and that was one of the
worst, if not the absolute worst.
Also, hated the scene itself – lots of “dancing,” little of
it in time with the music. Lots of wasted military folks from the nearby Naval
Yard. A smoky haze above the stage, which made it hard to see and somewhat
difficult to breathe.
.
And I know that every one of these is a “get off my lawn”
comment.
At the time, I was sort of a lukewarm fan of certain Dead
albums: “Europe 72,” “American Beauty,” “Workingman’s Dead,” “Mars Hotel.” I
actually liked the song “Terrapin Station” (the album this tour was supporting) – overblown orchestral histrionics
and all.
Things got off to inauspicious start with “Promised Land.”
As my old friend Bill Myers said, “Leave it to the Grateful Dead to make a
Chuck Berry song boring.” Indeed. And it went downhill from there. I really
like “Deal,” but it never clicked, and whoever told the Dead they should cover
Motown hopefully never made any more musical suggestions.
But this hippie and tuneless fest pushed me away from the
Dead for many, many years. While I can appreciate some of their catalog these
days, part of me still has a bad taste in my mouth.
I probably just don't get it. And I probably never will.
I probably just don't get it. And I probably never will.
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