Though he was quite possibly the brightest and most philosophically articulate interviewee of his era in popular music, Jerry Garcia was not the guru that the media canonized in his name. While charismatic and charming, he refused to be a leader -- not of the counterculture that flowered in his hometown neighborhood, the Haight-Ashbury of San Francisco in the '60s, nor even of the band, the Grateful Dead, for whom he played lead guitar for 30 years -- "You can call me the boss, man, just don't expect me to make any decisions."
He was a guitarist, and in the course of his 34 years of public performance, he covered more musical genres more brilliantly than any musician of his time. In one single album, the Dead's 1969 masterpiece Live Dead, he plays rock, blues ("Death Don't Have No Mercy"), atonal weirdness ("Feedback"), and as good a fusion of rock and jazz as there ever was ("Dark Star"). Somewhat later, he and David Grisman laid down superlative country and folk, while their bluegrass project Old and in the Way revitalized the form.
By Dennis McNally
(Dennis McNally is the author of a biography of Jack Kerouac, Desolate Angel, which led to his being the Dead’s official biographer, and its publicist since 1984. His work on the band, A Long Strange Trip/The Inside History of the Grateful Dead, was published in the summer of 2002. This essay originally appeared in the program booklet for “A Long Strange Trip: The Legacy of Jerry Garcia”, a September 19th, 2002 NYGF concert featuring Jorma Kaukonen, The Persuasions & Tony Trischka.)
“You can call me the boss, man, just don’t expect me to
make any decisions.” Photo © 2001 Susana Millman.
Merkin Concert Hall just before showtime. Some patient fans
hold out for “miracle” tickets to the sold out concert.
Jorma Koukonen takes a break from email and
computer solitaire with Barry Mitterhoff (mandolin)
and David Spelman.
Tony Trischka (banjo) and Barry Mitterhoff backstage at Merkin.
Tony’s banjo waits for him on stage.
The Persausions, who got their start singing on
the streets of Brooklyn over 35 years ago, with
Jorma, Barry and Tony.
“These are heavy songs,” said Jerry Lawson, lead singer
of the Persuasions, when talking about Garcia and Hunter’s
work. ‘It Must Have Been The Roses’ — those words will
make you cry.”