Who might have influenced Jerry Garcia?
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- James Quillian
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Who might have influenced Jerry Garcia?
Does anyone have an idea as to what if any steel player Jerry Garcia might have been influenced by to play the kind of licks he used in Teach Your Children Well? Those lines are incredibly simple and useful in a lot of other contexts. A lot of his licks sound as if he sound like he took some of Buck Trent’s electric banjo sounds and converted them to the steel.
Curbside Jimmy's New Act
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlzieFLE5no
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlzieFLE5no
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- Dave Mudgett
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Listening to his playing, I have always assumed that West Coast players like Tom Brumley and Ralph Mooney were big pedal steel influences for him. He also played an early ZB, as did Tom in the mid-late 60s with Buck Owens. I seem to recall him also mentioning other players in interviews back then - Emmons, Green, and so on. Possibly also Clarence White's Tele playing. You may be right about Buck Trent - Jerry did play banjo. I think it's safe to say he took in a lot of different musical influences throughout his life.
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Banana from the Youngbloods. He played steel on the second Youngbloods record, Earth Music, and I believe Jerry Garcia bought his guitar.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YV_R_O8V79U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YV_R_O8V79U
Last edited by Joachim Kettner on 26 Jul 2012 5:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Allan Kelly
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Was this the Les Dawson lick you were thinking of Richard?
- David Mason
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He and Duane Allman had a mutual admiration society going. Though Garcia rarely played slide, he would take one out for "It Hurts Me Too" and once in a while for some interstellar transport during "Dark Star." I've actually thought that he may have cut back on slide from hearing Allman, in the same way he thought he wasn't a good enough steel player. He would've had no idea that every tiny little minutiae of that period would be sacrilized, and incessantly picked over - imagine what you could sell "Garcia's lost steel guitar tapes" for! The later 70's Grateful Dead slide playing was usually Bob Weir, somewhat painfully learning while earning. They'd both break one out once in a while, "Little Red Rooster" comes to mind but I'm not going digging for it.
Garcia was not a blues guitarist, and the Dead were not a blues band. They could swing like crazy, but it was more like a straight up 6/8* than a way-backbeat dotted eighth - if that makes sense. It's actually kind of odd - they played the Fillmores with the various black Kings any number of times and Garcia's in-tune bending skills were strong, but they almost played blues like a guilty white folkie. Maybe they figured that enough other people were taking care of it, a sentiment which has proven to be overwhelmingly true.
http://deadessays.blogspot.com/2009/08/ ... -dead.html
*(or 7/8, or 11/8....)
Garcia was not a blues guitarist, and the Dead were not a blues band. They could swing like crazy, but it was more like a straight up 6/8* than a way-backbeat dotted eighth - if that makes sense. It's actually kind of odd - they played the Fillmores with the various black Kings any number of times and Garcia's in-tune bending skills were strong, but they almost played blues like a guilty white folkie. Maybe they figured that enough other people were taking care of it, a sentiment which has proven to be overwhelmingly true.
http://deadessays.blogspot.com/2009/08/ ... -dead.html
*(or 7/8, or 11/8....)
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This may be pure conjecture, but it seems possible that Buddy Cage may have been an early influence. Before replacing Jerry as the 'New Riders' steeler, I believe that he was working with Ian and Sylvia Tyson in their group, 'The Great Speckled Bird'. During that time period, both groups routinely traveled in many of the same circles. I also seem to remember both of them being on that ill fated train tour through Canada where (according to the documentary), there were incessant jam sessions among musicians from different bands.
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He was listening to all the top players from an early age, probably studied a lot of the same recordings many of us grew up with. Besides those already listed here he gleaned licks from Jimmy Day, JayDee Maness, Buddy Emmons and Bobby Black.
Bobbe tells a revealing tale of his first meeting Jerry in a nightclub bathroom.. http://pedalsteelmusic.com/?p=131
Jerry Garcia on playing pedal steel, interviewed by Bonnie Simmons on KSAN radio, January 23, 1976:
Simmons: [A listener asked] whether you plan to do a lot more steel work.
Garcia: I don’t think so. The instrument is too difficult for me, frankly. I’d have to play it an awful lot, and I’d need about ten years to get to where I would want to be in relation to some control over it.
Simmons: Do you still practice at all?
Garcia: No. You can’t really practice it; it’s too hard. I can only play it, y’know.
Bobbe tells a revealing tale of his first meeting Jerry in a nightclub bathroom.. http://pedalsteelmusic.com/?p=131
Jerry Garcia on playing pedal steel, interviewed by Bonnie Simmons on KSAN radio, January 23, 1976:
Simmons: [A listener asked] whether you plan to do a lot more steel work.
Garcia: I don’t think so. The instrument is too difficult for me, frankly. I’d have to play it an awful lot, and I’d need about ten years to get to where I would want to be in relation to some control over it.
Simmons: Do you still practice at all?
Garcia: No. You can’t really practice it; it’s too hard. I can only play it, y’know.
- Mark Eaton
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If Pete chimes in on this thread he could give the definitive answer. The way I remember the story (and it's been a number of years so I don't claim 100% accuracy) from Peter was that he and Garcia were driving somewhere in Jerry's "legendary" Corvair, and they heard a Buck Owens song on the radio, which no doubt had Brumley on steel and they both decided they needed to learn how to play the thing. Don't know the time frame of who started first.Jim Cohen wrote:I know that he and Pete Grant were steel pickin' buddies. Not sure if they started around the same time or if Pete had a few years on him, though...
At a regional steel jam I was telling Pete that one of my favorite concerts of all time was in 1973 on a beautiful sunny San Francisco day. It was at Kezar Stadium, next door to Haight/Ashbury and the original home of the 49ers back in the day. Opener: New Riders, Buddy Cage on steel at that point. Middle act, Waylon Jennings and The Waylors. Headliner: Grateful Dead.
Peter told me that he and Garcia were off to the side backstage near Mooney and watching everything he did with rapt attention.
Waylon said in an interview that he was a little concerned how he and the Waylors would go over with the largely hippie crowd. No need to worry - the crowd ate it up. After Ralph would take a solo the place went nuts and you could see ol' Moon grinning from ear-to-ear.
Kindred spirits.
Mark
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Here is the link to Pete Grant's site with that essay:
http://www.petegrant.com/flash_garcia.html
http://www.petegrant.com/flash_garcia.html
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Garcia
I was at my store, Scotty's Music" in St. Louis and whole bunch of long haired people came in and all I said to them was "Howdy". I didn't know who they were.They got really riendly and in fact invited me to the Keil Auditorium in St. Louis for their sound check. I went and there was a ZB steel guitar sitting on stage with a Sho Bud amp and a guy was playing on it. He asked me to sit down and play some on it. I did and and this guy was sitting on the floor looking up and when I hit a lick he would say, "far out" and asked how I played that. Of course I showed as I would any other person. I still didn't know who the band was. I went to the concert that night and I then found out it was the Gratedful Dead and the steel player was Jerry Garcia. Jerry set me in a chair a few feet from him ON STAGE. I was ejoying the show until a guy tapped me on the shoulder. I turned around and it was Bob Heil from Marrisa, Il. He said to me, "Scotty, turn around". I did and there was no one behind the stage anymore. Bob said nobody is allowed behind stage when the Dead are playing. I got so embarrassed I got off the stage. The net time that the Dead came to St. Louis and the New Riders were with them and both bands came to the store and we had a kind off the wall jam session. Somtimes Buddy Cage would play the steel and then I would play. I owned Lloyd Green's old double neck Sho Bud with the yellow streak on the front and that is the guitar we played on. They came to the store one more time and anytime they would get within 200 miles of St. Louis they would call me and I would take my reel to reel tape recorder to the motel and took several tapes of the Steel Guitar Convention with me and after their concert we would listen to them the rest of the night. I took pictures and even put up a mike and recorded that jam session. I sold Jerry a double neck MSA and when it came time to pay for it the manager said to me, "Whats our price"? Jerry put his hand on his shoulder and said, You pay this man full price"! Wow! Jerry and I coresponded for awhile and we exchanged LP's with each other. He sent me every LP the Dead and New Riders had and I sent him all of my Midland steel guitar records. Its odd - a guy devoted to pure country and one of the most respected guys in rock and roll getting together and being so friendly with each other. Jerry Garcia and DeWitt "Scotty" Scott Bob Weir and the rest of the band were very friendly too! Scotty
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Garcia
I notice that I made a few type written mistakes in my article but I don't know how to correct them. I don't see the word "edit". Sorry - Scotty
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