|
July 1, 2007
In 1991, the Grateful Dead began a series of live, archival releases
called "From the Vault." The first fruits were titled, naturally enough, "One From the Vault" (a 1975 show from San Francisco) and "Two From the Vault" (a Los Angeles concert from 1968). Since
then, there have been more than 50 officially sanctioned live albums from the
band -- none of them a follow-up to this series.
Sixteen years later, the Dead are finally issuing "Three From the Vault," a
1971 concert from Port Chester, N.Y. Even the official press release offers no
particular explanation for the decision to revive this line, stating that it
simply represents "the band's longstanding policy of gleefully monkey-wrenching
the space-time continuum whenever and wherever possible."
Whatever. What is most interesting about "Three From the Vault" is not the
backstory but the sound. It documents the band at an especially intriguing
moment: fresh off the releases of "American Beauty" and "Workingman's Dead," their two strongest studio efforts, and
stripped down to a five-piece lineup: just guitarist Jerry Garcia, drummer Bill Kreutzmann, bassist Phil Lesh, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan on keyboards and harmonica,
and rhythm guitarist Bob Weir. It was the most conventional rock 'n' roll setup
in the Dead's long history (usually they had a second drummer, Mickey Hart, and often a second keyboard player as well),
and coincided with the period in which they were most focused on fully realized,
well-structured songs.
The set features the world premieres of "Bird Song" and "Deal," and the
second ever performances of five other songs, including such staples as "Playing
in the Band" and "Wharf Rat." Only a few songs stretch out beyond the 10-minute
mark. In some ways, this release could be considered the Grateful Dead for
non-Deadheads.
"Three From the Vault" is one of the first results of a comprehensive
licensing agreement that the Dead signed last year with Rhino Entertainment to
manage exclusively the band's intellectual property. Rhino now oversees
everything from the band's live archive and its Web site to its merchandise.
(Grateful Dead Productions retains creative control, and the deal does not
include the band's music publishing.) But whether the Rhino deal inspired the
resurgence of the "Vault" series or whether it was coming anyway ... well,
who knows?
From his Bay Area home, Bob Weir discussed the reopening of the Vault, the
vagaries of the archiving process, and what he refers to as the Dead's "rock 'n'
roll Dixieland" approach to collective improvisation. "The music happens
somewhere between what the band does and what the audience captures," says Weir.
"So if you're going over their heads, it doesn't amount to much."
MSN Music: So this album is part of the "Vault" series, as opposed to the
"Dick's Picks" series, or the other one-off live releases from the Dead's
archive. Can you explain the distinctions between all of these, or is it vague
to you, too?
Bob Weir: It's pretty vague from my end. It makes sense to the archivist,
though, and that's what matters. There has to be some sort of system, and the
guy who set it all up for us is a classically trained archivist, so I trust his
sensibility.
But do you know why one album is part of one series and another album is
part of another series?
No, I don't, but he does, and the people who follow this stuff closely do --
or at least I hope they do! I don't pay that much attention to our old stuff,
really. I have bigger fish to fry.
How involved are you in the archival releases? Do you actually participate
in the process, or do you just sign off at the end?
The guys in the band really aren't all that involved. We all have different,
ongoing projects that take up our time: I have my band Ratdog; Mickey and Phil have their own things going. So I
think I can speak for everybody that we look at our archives as our past
accomplishments -- we're happy with them, proud of them, but not really all that
concerned about them. There's only so much I'm going to be able to enjoy going
back to that stuff.
Read more of this exclusive interview on page 2
>>>
|