Your comment at 24:15 sums it up perfectly for me. "I can sell this, I can land this, I can get out of this". I've never been in Jerry's head, obviously, but I've been to numerous shows where I really felt like he, and the band, had worked themselves into such foreign territory, so far out in the weeds, that the outcome seemed in question. I think that's what Jerry really lived for in Dead music, and it's how they kept material fresh, even though they played it hundreds of times over the years. Spot on sir!
I'm here because I always caught shit telling everyone Jerry was a monster player. I just enjoy hearing what I always knew but couldn't articulate. Jerry!!!!!
@@billc2147 said the same thing - I think the last 5 years or so Jerry was around I enjoyed the JGB more than the Dead for a few reasons, but I loved that musically he was either soloing or if Melvin or Kahn were soloing you got that PLUS a great dose of Jerry's rhythm alone against it. He was so damn good
The noise at 22:32 after hearing Jerry made me laugh. We’ve all been there just bumbling, mumbling and stumbling through while the music catapults you into areas you never knew existed. Great job, keep up the good work.
Brilliant stuff, by you and of course by the Dead. Love everything about it. Yes, Jerry is a genius and for me will forever be one of the most engaging and innovative guitarists of all time. Let’s also shine some love and light on Bobby. Would LOVE to see Michael spend a video (or more) on Bobby’s style, especially his incredible use of inversions and fascinating rhythms.
Just picked up Cornell 77 yesterday.....what a show! Nice breakdown....I no longer play out as I'm old and disabled but I still keep my acoustic close by when the mood strikes....thanks a lot....very nice!
Great take on one of the best performances of this song ever. We did this as a three piece and had a blast with it, obviously nothing close to the original but it always brought the house down despite our 20 something naivete back in '99 or so.
And by the way you rock at explaining the planing it out for the d# and D and Gits was so clear and the switching was strategic every chord and the notes the follow. great
Michael, I still would love you to do Row Jimmy from Cornell with a slide! Jerry was really good at slide and that solo is just amazing. I requested row jimmy long ago and you came through but would love if you could show some slide guitar techniques .
Somehow this concert has surfaced and resurfaced as one of my favorites. I drove around with a cassette tape for years and then graduated to a CS version. Now I have it on my digital library. So many great memories. Thanks for featuring.
and agree with you Mike about the aspect of Betty Boards- Cornell and Buffalo '77 especially, they have their own incredibly unique tone that when you hear them blindfolded, you know what show you're listening to.
Best bit: 'Don't D on my D#'. That's life, Michael. That is life. That is the best friend/marriage/corporate/educational advice I've heard in a LONG time. Great video.
Hey Michael, thank you so much for finally getting to this one. It's by far my favorite song and this version in particular has something so special. So happy to have you break it down and give us some insights on it. Respect from Montreal!
Could not agree more, a great lesson. You need to listen so intently when playing this improvised rock music with structure. It's so much fun when that happens with everyone. Playing this on drums is a challenge. Had no true idea until I learned 50 tunes for a Dead tribute. There's so much going on.
"My gut instinct would be to try" I believe that encapsulates what Jerry and the Dead were always doing and what they'd want you to do. Don't play like we play it, play it the way you think it might work for you. Michael, as a non musician myself, your videos are of great value in teaching me how to listen and have vastly enhanced my enjoyment of music, especially the Grateful Dead. I'll give an example. For the first time ever, I realized I was wanting to hear (and most likely always have) a ripping guitar solo after the words "You keep us on the run" Well you get one, eventually, but first Jerry makes you kind of wonder where is that solo? It's there, but he first starts to make you listen for it, for him, because he's down low, and now he's got you hooked into listening for him. Where he is going to go? Not where you thought he would go. And that is the phantasm he and the band produce, as when it happens, even though now you know it's coming it leaves you a bit breathless, like you saw a magic trick and have no idea how it worked as you watched the entire time. So, Mr Palmisano, thank you for helping me see (hear) the magic in a way that makes it even more so!.
The Crimson, White, and Indigo concert recording always blows my mind with sound quality…the video too for that matter! (Not that 89 was so long ago 😅) Always a nice surprise to get great sound quality from older dead show recordings!
Great lesson and solid advice on playing risky lead over risky changes. There are no definitive versions of any of the Dead’s songs, that’s how they can keep them alive. Thanks Micheal
I'm so glad these tapes exist because I can't remember the shows I saw back then. I know I was there but who can remember. Lol. 🎸☮️☮️ I was at the Capitol theater in Passaic NJ and in Hartford CT. in 77'.
micheal I'm so glad I found ur channel a couple months back this is wat every late beginner and intermediate player need. I've given up on guitar years ago and kept coming only to quit again bc I don't know how to put everything together and this just shows how all of this stuff go together. thanks for everything!!!
This composition clearly demonstrates the Dead's incredible musical sophistication. I really don't have a favorite Dead tune. This is one of them but then there Deal. Then there is China Cat & St. Stephen etc. How can you pick just one? For me this has been on going for the last 55 years.
Love you right back, especially when you talk that *technical* talk. I have been here for a year now! While it is a *mini-guitar* a ukulele, I have learned the most crucial lessons from you; *keep it in your hands, play it every day*, and LISTEN. Everything else is just commentary. 💕🙋🎶
I played in a Dead cover/tribute band from the mid 70's to the mid 80's. This video really brings back memories of actually sitting and learning "the song", and not just copying the individual parts. Actually you really couldn't just learn the parts because each recording was different, as you clearly make the point. That's why they call it a jam band though, right? I always thought that there was nothing more boring than going to other concerts and every night of a tour, every song would sound the same, note for note, show after show. But if you went to a Dead show or Allman Brothers, or Hendrix, etc., etc., etc. {I'm showing my age here), each night the show would be almost an entirely different performance. No click tracks, pre-recorded backing tracks, etc. Every show we played was also a bit different, depending on the audience, the venue, and I am not admitting to anything here, but perhaps on what "performance enhancement" we might have indulged in prior to the show. Anyway, 45 years later I still enjoy listening to and playing along with it just as much as back then (and without the "enhancements, gave those up 25 years ago). I know you get it, and that is what I love about your channel.
I can't play anywhere near most of the players on here, but as a musician in general (sax), I love the in depth analysis. I could always play anything off radio by ear with 2-3 notes needed only and I just knew where I needed to be chord/scale/key wise. But I cannot translate that to guitar. But I watch your reactions all the way thru because I hope to absorb as much as possible. Keep up the great job!
Not to post another Jack Straw video, but when you get a chance, just to compare how the approach towards the same tune can be so different just a week or two later, check out the version from Lakeland, Fl, 5/21/77. The buildup in the solo, and the nice tag Jerry puts on a couple of the closing lines (particularly after the “half a mile from Tuscon” line)… May ‘77 chock full of so many golden nuggets! Thanks for all you do, Mike!
Thanks for introducing me to this recording. You're right about the wonderful soundboard quality. I've been looking for a good segway into live Dead and this perfect. Thanks!
One of the reasons why I love the dead is they listen to each other a lot. And sometimes they have arguments on stage through the instruments if you listen to the end of eyes of the world form 7/8/78 And Dick picks 25 You can hear them argue whether or not to go into the other one or estimated Prophet it is so cool
Michael lyrically they are escaping on horseback so when Jerry starts pushing his solo and flying off the rails I relate it directly to the horses galloping and the whips a flailing.
Why have you not done any Jerry Garcia Band? Throw on 11/27/88 or any of the kickass releases. 3/1/80 (After Midnight > Eleanor Rigby Jam > After Midnight will blow your mind. Jam transitions from major to minor so fine).
Everybody should have a copy of this show. It is a truly superb performance and live recording. And as an aside, if you want to hear a truly muscular Jack Straw, Seattle WA 8-27-83 fills the bill. It is an audience recording and Phil just punches you in the stomach.
I use E major at 4th fret instead of C#Minor. In the step down, I use E/G# and B/F#. Never cared if it was wrong, just did it. D to Bm, to snappy double A (high E once, down to high C#), to E major, go all sixes and seven elevens, just go nuts. Love Bruce Hornsby cover on Deadicated.
whenever I hear the opening notes to this Jack Straw I can always tell it's the Cornell one, because of the dude who yells out "Jack Straw!" at the very beginning.
I forgot how much I like listening to your take on the Dead. I'm a bit of older Deadhead. Im not that great with the guitar. But I like to pick it up now and then and think I'm Jerry . Lol love how you got the Dead bug.
Man, I dig these dead breakdowns but the Mississippi half-step and Jack Straw from the Oakland 87 show are absolutely burning hot and those are the ones that gotta be covered.
totally agree. That 2nd solo in the Jack is out of this world. I love watching the video of it and seeing Bobby try to bring everyone back to the chorus but Jerry and Brent are still like "Nah, we're gonna stay here a while longer"
Eugene ‘93 Jack Straw….Bobby breaks a string and leaves Jerry to go to work while he gets his guitar back together…let’s it RIP for what seems like a week…check THAT out!
Awesome video. I've not been a great fan of the Dead (love American Beauty). Having watched this video my eyes have been opened. Michael, you do this time and time again where you shine a light on the magic of the music. That's a massive gift. Thank you thank you thank you. ❤🙏🙏🙏
The chase section is awesome in that one, they keep looping a couple extra times and really build up the anticipation. The Tennessee Jed in that show is great two, love the way Jerry says drink all day and rock all night.
Michael, I don't know if you'll read this but I found your channel watching the Bahamas Earthtones concert, where a lot of people said the got there because of you. In my case it was all the way around. I don't play guitar (hopefully I'll learn someday) but I did study music (drums). I must say I love your passion for music. With that said I searched if you perhaps had donde "Jack Straw" and I stumbled upon this recently uploaded video. This is my favorite Dead song. So I would like to suggest if would you do Jack Straw from Dick Picks Vol. 10 12/29/77. it's the opener and hands down the best version I've heard, trust me! Then from Dead & Company check out Dodger Stadium 7/7/18, their best version (along with Hollywood Bowl 10/30/21. Anyways, love your channel. Keep up the great work you're doing.
What blows me away about the Dead is their ability to play with the changes on the fly. I often wonder how much was rehearsed out and how much was intuition. I know the early years were spent with loads of rehearsal time, but as they aged, I don’t know that they rehearsed much more than their newer stuff at the time. That psychic connection that let “the music play the band” is simply extraordinary. It makes me wonder how much intuition and listening to one another comes in to it with other bands who toy with their songs like Phish or Twiddle. Phenomenal reaction here, Michael! Thank you SO SO SO much!
Playing the changes and hitting the melody notes just like all the jazz guys from the 50s and 60s! I finally understood what Jerry was doing when I heard him say that improvisation is problem solving in real time.
Really diggin the dead videos man. Would love to see you do The Wheel or Crazy Fingers. Maybe even some Jerry band stuff like Rhapsody in Red, or Cats down under the star
Active listener so important! Thankfully when listening to GD shows I've been actively listening to each and every GD band member, all at the same time, for decades. (well almost, I'm not sure which drummer is making which drum sound all the time.) Need a lot more tricks to my guitar playing and if I can do that I feel like I know when I can lean in and fill the space or back off. I think all that listening makes me much better at listening to the band or person I'm jamming with. Been one of the most fun things about listening to the Dead, imagining how you would play within that space.
after listening to jerry a lot the last year i would have to move him into my top 5 players of all time, his playing like jeff beck is other worldly and has a brain that's wired to depress the other 98 percent of the guitarists out there, also Michael you are one of the finer players yourself and could hold your own with almost anyone, i enjoy your channel very much
The Key vs. Chord centered style change mentioned around the 17 min. mark most likely occurred as a result the damage done from Garcia's 1986 diabetic coma. See > Jerry Garcia - Days Betweem Companions: Merl Saunders, Jambase 8/4/21
Great take. Garcia, I thought had a decent 1987 comeback after the coma, but then settled into a new incarnation that was a shell of his pre-coma years.
22:30 Your face and your vocal reaction says what we Deadheads have known for years - "There Is Nothing Like A Grateful Dead Concert!"
coronal mass ejection
“They aren’t the best at what they do, they are the only ones that do what they do” - Bill Graham
Your comment at 24:15 sums it up perfectly for me. "I can sell this, I can land this, I can get out of this". I've never been in Jerry's head, obviously, but I've been to numerous shows where I really felt like he, and the band, had worked themselves into such foreign territory, so far out in the weeds, that the outcome seemed in question. I think that's what Jerry really lived for in Dead music, and it's how they kept material fresh, even though they played it hundreds of times over the years. Spot on sir!
The Dead in Spring '77 was as good as rock music gets. Phenomenal.
I go back and forth between spring 77 and spring 90 as their peak. Love them both!👍
@@aaronhudlow5649 Also 1972.
I'm here because I always caught shit telling everyone Jerry was a monster player. I just enjoy hearing what I always knew but couldn't articulate. Jerry!!!!!
What is often overlooked is how damn good Jerry’s rhythm playing is, an absolute demon
Especially in the JGB, where he gets to both have more fun and do some heavy lifting
When you hear him in the JGB that amazing rhythm comes shining through clear!
Yes! Particularly on this jack straw you can really hear him going for it, it’s why it’s my favorite version
@@billc2147 said the same thing - I think the last 5 years or so Jerry was around I enjoyed the JGB more than the Dead for a few reasons, but I loved that musically he was either soloing or if Melvin or Kahn were soloing you got that PLUS a great dose of Jerry's rhythm alone against it. He was so damn good
@@steveg6035 Absolutely
Garcia is great here. He's spot on. Brilliant technique.
The noise at 22:32 after hearing Jerry made me laugh. We’ve all been there just bumbling, mumbling and stumbling through while the music catapults you into areas you never knew existed. Great job, keep up the good work.
So true
The thirty seconds starting from 22:05 and culminating in the uncontrollable release cracked me up! Love it man!
Brilliant stuff, by you and of course by the Dead. Love everything about it. Yes, Jerry is a genius and for me will forever be one of the most engaging and innovative guitarists of all time. Let’s also shine some love and light on Bobby. Would LOVE to see Michael spend a video (or more) on Bobby’s style, especially his incredible use of inversions and fascinating rhythms.
He’s having a Bob rhythm course come out on GutarGate soon!
Just picked up Cornell 77 yesterday.....what a show! Nice breakdown....I no longer play out as I'm old and disabled but I still keep my acoustic close by when the mood strikes....thanks a lot....very nice!
Great take on one of the best performances of this song ever. We did this as a three piece and had a blast with it, obviously nothing close to the original but it always brought the house down despite our 20 something naivete back in '99 or so.
I feel like 21:21 through 21:29 is where Jer leaves planet earth. Everything else seems like riding the wave, but that brief snip is magic.
Magic is right brother moments of perfection are attained not planned why this music still resonates with inquisitive souls...love it
I knew the exact line you were talking about before I clicked lol! You’re so right
those 8 seconds birthed my username🤣
Jack Straw is my favorite Dead song... Pure Americana and story-telling.
Same, I can have that chord progression in my mind for hours
Agree. I’ve compiled my favorite top 50 Dead songs this year with my favorite version of each. Jack Straw Cornell came out on top. Pristine.
Cosmic intervention at it's finest! Been working on this one myself the last two weeks and then this shows up? Love it! Thanks, Michael!
One of my favorite versions.... hundred year hall is a strong second. Thanks Michael!
Was the first Dead record I ever owned. Hundred Year Hall is a classic. ✌🏽
Been waiting for this day for my entire life!!!!
Thank you Mikey!!!
And by the way you rock at explaining the planing it out for the d# and D and Gits was so clear and the switching was strategic every chord and the notes the follow. great
Michael, I still would love you to do Row Jimmy from Cornell with a slide! Jerry was really good at slide and that solo is just amazing. I requested row jimmy long ago and you came through but would love if you could show some slide guitar techniques .
hey Michael I'm playing guitar again primarily because of you. Stick that in your not working hard enough pipe and smoke it! 😂 Love ya man!
Exactly, brother!
My favorite version! So so good! 🥰🥰
Somehow this concert has surfaced and resurfaced as one of my favorites. I drove around with a cassette tape for years and then graduated to a CS version. Now I have it on my digital library. So many great memories. Thanks for featuring.
Well worth the wait! Thank you for taking the time to do this one Michael
I have been waiting sooooooo long for a jack straw vid. The wait was well worth it.
Such a great song ..... Thanks for the breakdown .....
and agree with you Mike about the aspect of Betty Boards- Cornell and Buffalo '77 especially, they have their own incredibly unique tone that when you hear them blindfolded, you know what show you're listening to.
Best bit: 'Don't D on my D#'.
That's life, Michael. That is life. That is the best friend/marriage/corporate/educational advice I've heard in a LONG time.
Great video.
That change near the end when Jerry had to come down and hit the rails. 🤯 and the look on your face too! 😎
Yeah I heard that too. A great moment, it’s like running down the street then suddenly leaping onto a bus going the opposite direction.
Thanks a lot. You are very, very, very usefull. God bless you.
Hey Michael, thank you so much for finally getting to this one. It's by far my favorite song and this version in particular has something so special. So happy to have you break it down and give us some insights on it. Respect from Montreal!
You really rock man. Got all of my respect.
As always, this is incredible.
Could not agree more, a great lesson. You need to listen so intently when playing this improvised rock music with structure. It's so much fun when that happens with everyone. Playing this on drums is a challenge. Had no true idea until I learned 50 tunes for a Dead tribute. There's so much going on.
"My gut instinct would be to try" I believe that encapsulates what Jerry and the Dead were always doing and what they'd want you to do. Don't play like we play it, play it the way you think it might work for you.
Michael, as a non musician myself, your videos are of great value in teaching me how to listen and have vastly enhanced my enjoyment of music, especially the Grateful Dead. I'll give an example.
For the first time ever, I realized I was wanting to hear (and most likely always have) a ripping guitar solo after the words "You keep us on the run" Well you get one, eventually, but first Jerry makes you kind of wonder where is that solo? It's there, but he first starts to make you listen for it, for him, because he's down low, and now he's got you hooked into listening for him. Where he is going to go? Not where you thought he would go. And that is the phantasm he and the band produce, as when it happens, even though now you know it's coming it leaves you a bit breathless, like you saw a magic trick and have no idea how it worked as you watched the entire time.
So, Mr Palmisano, thank you for helping me see (hear) the magic in a way that makes it even more so!.
The Crimson, White, and Indigo concert recording always blows my mind with sound quality…the video too for that matter! (Not that 89 was so long ago 😅) Always a nice surprise to get great sound quality from older dead show recordings!
great tune.
so much phun to sing and play...
great lesson.
you get it...
thanks Mike !
Fantastic lesson - so beautiful to highlight the art and craft of listening while conveying the essence of the musical and technical, too.
Great lesson and solid advice on playing risky lead over risky changes. There are no definitive versions of any of the Dead’s songs, that’s how they can keep them alive. Thanks Micheal
Thank you for what you do, Michael! I'm a life member and have learned so much over the past year or so from your videos. Keep it up!
NIce! Top 5 favorite Jerry solos with the Chickn' Pickn'. Nice to see it appreciated
I'm so glad these tapes exist because I can't remember the shows I saw back then. I know I was there but who can remember. Lol. 🎸☮️☮️ I was at the Capitol theater in Passaic NJ and in Hartford CT. in 77'.
Cornell is a great set. Nice video Michael!
Someone just got their ears lowered :) Thanks again for jumping in to another Cornell 77 track!!
Looks like he been working out. Got those guns on defcon 4
micheal I'm so glad I found ur channel a couple months back this is wat every late beginner and intermediate player need. I've given up on guitar years ago and kept coming only to quit again bc I don't know how to put everything together and this just shows how all of this stuff go together. thanks for everything!!!
Your advice is action-oriented and substantive. Referring to ~ 4:15 mark. Thank you!
Thank you Michael! Love this song and show. Keep up the good work!
Just here to say the T-Shirt is outrageously phenomenal! Great video as always!
This composition clearly demonstrates the Dead's incredible musical sophistication. I really don't have a favorite Dead tune. This is one of them but then there Deal. Then there is China Cat & St. Stephen etc. How can you pick just one? For me this has been on going for the last 55 years.
Been waiting ! I’m very Grateful🙏🏼💀⚡️
Thank you for this one teach!
This was an awesome lesson. Thanks Michael
Thank you!
Love you right back, especially when you talk that *technical* talk. I have been here for a year now! While it is a *mini-guitar* a ukulele, I have learned the most crucial lessons from you; *keep it in your hands, play it every day*, and LISTEN. Everything else is just commentary. 💕🙋🎶
You need to hear Unganos night club 1970...my fav. Dead...My first show was Roosevelt Stadium 1972...
Phil is a freight train in this one as well. On fire the whole show, although the whole band was. ✌🏼💀
I played in a Dead cover/tribute band from the mid 70's to the mid 80's. This video really brings back memories of actually sitting and learning "the song", and not just copying the individual parts. Actually you really couldn't just learn the parts because each recording was different, as you clearly make the point. That's why they call it a jam band though, right? I always thought that there was nothing more boring than going to other concerts and every night of a tour, every song would sound the same, note for note, show after show. But if you went to a Dead show or Allman Brothers, or Hendrix, etc., etc., etc. {I'm showing my age here), each night the show would be almost an entirely different performance. No click tracks, pre-recorded backing tracks, etc. Every show we played was also a bit different, depending on the audience, the venue, and I am not admitting to anything here, but perhaps on what "performance enhancement" we might have indulged in prior to the show. Anyway, 45 years later I still enjoy listening to and playing along with it just as much as back then (and without the "enhancements, gave those up 25 years ago). I know you get it, and that is what I love about your channel.
spot on Bruce !!
Hi Michael!! Love your content and Guitar Gate has been life changing on the guitar Thanks!!!
Best Jack Straw ever recorded from the best Dead show ever recorded
I can't play anywhere near most of the players on here, but as a musician in general (sax), I love the in depth analysis. I could always play anything off radio by ear with 2-3 notes needed only and I just knew where I needed to be chord/scale/key wise. But I cannot translate that to guitar. But I watch your reactions all the way thru because I hope to absorb as much as possible. Keep up the great job!
Enjoying this, 2 miles from Barton Hall.
Not to post another Jack Straw video, but when you get a chance, just to compare how the approach towards the same tune can be so different just a week or two later, check out the version from Lakeland, Fl, 5/21/77. The buildup in the solo, and the nice tag Jerry puts on a couple of the closing lines (particularly after the “half a mile from Tuscon” line)… May ‘77 chock full of so many golden nuggets! Thanks for all you do, Mike!
dude this is so much fun!
Was going to accomplish things this evening now I have to play guitar all night
YESSSSS Finally Some Cornell
this guy could be speaking chinese and i would still watch because he is so into it
Keep watching. Eventually you’ll be able to speak Chinese, too
@@marcsullivan7987 True that!
Great video, and nice playing as always🤙🏻
holy SHIT, that quick filling you did around 12 minutes in is fucking phenomenal what the hell
Let's go. This = back on track for your channel.
Thanks for introducing me to this recording. You're right about the wonderful soundboard quality. I've been looking for a good segway into live Dead and this perfect. Thanks!
@April Reed try this beauty......ruclips.net/video/NDqKFPK0_WE/видео.html
This is best video I've seen of this type. Can you please do more Dead tunes in this same instructional start-stop format?
One of the reasons why I love the dead is they listen to each other a lot. And sometimes they have arguments on stage through the instruments if you listen to the end of eyes of the world form 7/8/78 And Dick picks 25 You can hear them argue whether or not to go into the other one or estimated Prophet it is so cool
Michael lyrically they are escaping on horseback so when Jerry starts pushing his solo and flying off the rails I relate it directly to the horses galloping and the whips a flailing.
FRANKLIN’S TOWER 5/22/77. YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST LISTEN TO IT. !!!!!!!!!!!!
This dude has tripped balls before. I see it in him as clear as it is in me.
Why have you not done any Jerry Garcia Band? Throw on 11/27/88 or any of the kickass releases. 3/1/80 (After Midnight > Eleanor Rigby Jam > After Midnight will blow your mind. Jam transitions from major to minor so fine).
Mike will freak out when he deep dives into JGB/LOM. He just might drown! Lol
One of the best stage performances ever imho
Jerry: Ruben and Cherise, Live acoustic in Passaic, 1982
Everybody should have a copy of this show. It is a truly superb performance and live recording. And as an aside, if you want to hear a truly muscular Jack Straw, Seattle WA 8-27-83 fills the bill. It is an audience recording and Phil just punches you in the stomach.
Furthur from Seattle 9/25/12 Jack Straw is OUT OF CONTROL….Jeff Chimenti laying it down like no other!
Dammit Michael. I was just about to run some errands.
I use E major at 4th fret instead of C#Minor. In the step down, I use E/G# and B/F#. Never cared if it was wrong, just did it. D to Bm, to snappy double A (high E once, down to high C#), to E major, go all sixes and seven elevens, just go nuts. Love Bruce Hornsby cover on Deadicated.
you are awesome!!
whenever I hear the opening notes to this Jack Straw I can always tell it's the Cornell one, because of the dude who yells out "Jack Straw!" at the very beginning.
6:10 Another great example is "The Band" live record by Scorsese. They really know how to do it !!
I forgot how much I like listening to your take on the Dead. I'm a bit of older Deadhead. Im not that great with the guitar. But I like to pick it up now and then and think I'm Jerry . Lol love how you got the Dead bug.
Great video, dude.
Ahhh Here We Go!
Man, I dig these dead breakdowns but the Mississippi half-step and Jack Straw from the Oakland 87 show are absolutely burning hot and those are the ones that gotta be covered.
Jack Straw>Sugaree Passaic, NJ '78 was pretty electric too
totally agree. That 2nd solo in the Jack is out of this world. I love watching the video of it and seeing Bobby try to bring everyone back to the chorus but Jerry and Brent are still like "Nah, we're gonna stay here a while longer"
Eugene ‘93 Jack Straw….Bobby breaks a string and leaves Jerry to go to work while he gets his guitar back together…let’s it RIP for what seems like a week…check THAT out!
Love picking up some Phil tips from these videos - Maybe a Just Phil lesson or 10?
Awesome video. I've not been a great fan of the Dead (love American Beauty). Having watched this video my eyes have been opened.
Michael, you do this time and time again where you shine a light on the magic of the music. That's a massive gift. Thank you thank you thank you. ❤🙏🙏🙏
Love the SHIRT! and the lesson ,music, BUT THE SHIRT...LOVE LOVELOVE IT I WANT IT
1.22.78 is my favorite Jack Straw. Hope you can check that one out
The chase section is awesome in that one, they keep looping a couple extra times and really build up the anticipation. The Tennessee Jed in that show is great two, love the way Jerry says drink all day and rock all night.
Michael, I don't know if you'll read this but I found your channel watching the Bahamas Earthtones concert, where a lot of people said the got there because of you. In my case it was all the way around. I don't play guitar (hopefully I'll learn someday) but I did study music (drums). I must say I love your passion for music.
With that said I searched if you perhaps had donde "Jack Straw" and I stumbled upon this recently uploaded video. This is my favorite Dead song. So I would like to suggest if would you do Jack Straw from Dick Picks Vol. 10 12/29/77. it's the opener and hands down the best version I've heard, trust me! Then from Dead & Company check out Dodger Stadium 7/7/18, their best version (along with Hollywood Bowl 10/30/21.
Anyways, love your channel. Keep up the great work you're doing.
Let's get it!!!
Steve Lacy - Dark Red next please. There’s something about his guitar I find mesmerizing and I want to know why.
What blows me away about the Dead is their ability to play with the changes on the fly. I often wonder how much was rehearsed out and how much was intuition. I know the early years were spent with loads of rehearsal time, but as they aged, I don’t know that they rehearsed much more than their newer stuff at the time. That psychic connection that let “the music play the band” is simply extraordinary. It makes me wonder how much intuition and listening to one another comes in to it with other bands who toy with their songs like Phish or Twiddle. Phenomenal reaction here, Michael! Thank you SO SO SO much!
Playing the changes and hitting the melody notes just like all the jazz guys from the 50s and 60s! I finally understood what Jerry was doing when I heard him say that improvisation is problem solving in real time.
Really diggin the dead videos man. Would love to see you do The Wheel or Crazy Fingers. Maybe even some Jerry band stuff like Rhapsody in Red, or Cats down under the star
Active listener so important! Thankfully when listening to GD shows I've been actively listening to each and every GD band member, all at the same time, for decades. (well almost, I'm not sure which drummer is making which drum sound all the time.) Need a lot more tricks to my guitar playing and if I can do that I feel like I know when I can lean in and fill the space or back off. I think all that listening makes me much better at listening to the band or person I'm jamming with. Been one of the most fun things about listening to the Dead, imagining how you would play within that space.
after listening to jerry a lot the last year i would have to move him into my top 5 players of all time, his playing like jeff beck is other worldly and has a brain that's wired to depress the other 98 percent of the guitarists out there, also Michael you are one of the finer players yourself and could hold your own with almost anyone, i enjoy your channel very much
Jack f’ing Straw.
The definitive.
Great point about ignoring the tabs and listening to the band you're playing with. That's what the Dead did so well in their prime.
The Key vs. Chord centered style change mentioned around the 17 min. mark most likely occurred as a result the damage done from Garcia's 1986 diabetic coma. See > Jerry Garcia - Days Betweem Companions: Merl Saunders, Jambase 8/4/21
Great take. Garcia, I thought had a decent 1987 comeback after the coma, but then settled into a new incarnation that was a shell of his pre-coma years.