Yesterday in my post on Teenage
Fanclub, I included a link to a newspaper article in which the band complained
about playing a gig at a radio show in San Francisco in 1991 where everything
went wrong. To my surprise, after I published it, my brother told me we – he
and I – had been at that gig, and he had the notes to prove it:
12/10/93: Concourse Exhibition Center, San Francisco: Porno
for Pyros/The Wonderstuff/General Public/Cracker/Evan Dando/They Might Be
Giants/TeenageFanclub/Tony Bennett/Mazzy Star/Nick Heyward/Redd Kross. KITS
Green Christmas Benefit.
At that time in my life, I went to so many shows I can’t
remember 80 percent of them. Fortunately my brother went to many of them with
me, and he has a hard drive instead of a brain. This isn’t exactly news to me
-- one time I was in his apartment in Jersey City and he showed me an excel
spread sheet of every show we’d been to since 1975 and it weirded me out so bad
I promptly forgot about it. Besides, at the time I couldn’t really think of a use
for that information. But it shows the difference between my brother and I. My
brother writes an incredibly well-researched, fact checked and evidence-based
blog called Lost Live Dead that catalogs every single Grateful Dead show ever
played, including things that happened on beaches and at public libraries in
1965 and stuff. My blog just tells you how I feel about shit.
And therein lies the difference between us. In my day, we
didn’t have diseases like Aspergers, ADD, ADHD, or even autism, we just called
people ‘hyper’ or ‘nerdy.’ And I honestly don’t think my brother has any of those
things; he’s very personable. But he does have an obsession with lists that is
truly phenomenal. When he was really little the lists took the form of baseball
statistics for the Oakland As. (He still keeps those, too.) Then rock came into
our world and it started to be more about the different lineups of Santana,
what tracks Ginger Baker played on, albums produced by Al Kooper, etc. etc. He is the kind of person who's favorite band is Can.
kraut rock |
My brother is older than me, and we have VERY different
taste in music. In the late 1970s, I had to listen to the Grateful Dead
bleeding through the adjoining wall of our bedrooms every night, and it made me
crazy; I probably became a punk rocker just to retaliate. Or maybe not, because
the Grateful Dead’s music made me mad on so many other levels as well. I hated
the instrumentation, for one thing – all that noodling through unbearable
doodah nonsense. And I hated the subject matter of their songs, the ye old
Americana stuff, it seemed to me like it glorified eras that were steeped in
prejudice and machismo. They and their ilk called women ‘old lady’ and ‘mamma,’
and that infuriated me. You couldn’t imagine the Damned, say, or the Buzzcocks,
calling a girl ‘mamma.’ That terminology still makes me want to punch someone.
I grew to have better reasons for hating the Dead, but I
never grew to like them, even a single little bit. On the day Jerry Garcia died
a news crew came to interview at my home two blocks from Haight Street and I
said something so unsympathetic to the community’s loss that they packed up
their equipment and left without taping. (Then, or so my friend Michele tells
me, I went and played ping pong in the basement of the Chatterbox and the
bartender played “Truckin’ by the Pop-o-Pies” as a tribute.)
My brother, however, did learn to like some of what I
listened to. What’s more, his list-obsession worked in my favor, because his
favorite thing in the world was to add to it. That meant that, unlike my
friends, who always claimed they wanted to come with me to the shows that I was
reviewing, only he actually did so. When push came to shove, my friends really
only wanted to come when the assignment was Lou Reed, the Kinks, or REM, but my
brother could be counted on to attend shows by Chicago, Motley Crue, Iron
Maiden, or Rick Derringer, i.e., most of my assignments. Because he views listening
to music as a purely intellectual activity, he’s up for anything. Indeed, a few
years ago when I was visiting him in NYC, I dragged him out to see the AfghanWhigs the Beacon Theater. That band is completely outside of his musical
wheelhouse, but he’s used to going to see stuff with me and then, I suppose,
just spacing out. You can totally picture that scene: I’m headbanging my brains
out to “Matomoros” or “Fountain andFairfax” and he’s staring at that lovely thing on the ceiling, planning out a
blog post on the Allman Brothers annual Beacon Theater stand which is the thing that he considers this venue famous for.
You KNOW we want to know what you said.
ReplyDeleteIn return, I'll tell you that Brian used to want to make a bumper sticker with a Stevie Ray Vaughan sillouette that said "I'm Glad He's Dead" and I had to talk him out of it.
My first Plus One show with you was
ReplyDelete7/12/84 The Stone, San Francisco, CA THE CALL
The Call were a Santa Cruz area band, distantly related to Moby Grape. Somehow they had some sort of "hit," and you got the call from the East Bay Express or the Bay Guardian or something.
The Stone--what a dump.
Oh man, Kathy, Brian is braver than me. All I said about JG was, "Gee I wish Kurt Cobain got to live to be 53." It's especially funny because at the time I thought 53 was OLD. But I think they thought I was making a crack about drug use.
ReplyDeleteAn intriguing interpretation, to say that the magic sad number for rock stars would be 53 instead of 27.
ReplyDeleteElvis Presley: 53 years old on Jan 8 1988
Jimi Hendrix : 53 years old on Nov 27 1995
Janis Joplin: 53 years old on Jan 19 1996
Jim Morrison: 53 years old on Dec 8 1996
Duane Allman: 53 years old on Nov 20 1999
Stevie Ray Vaughan: 53 years old on Oct 3 2007
Kurt Cobain: 53 years old on Feb 20 2020
to invert it
Jerry Garcia: 27 years old on Aug 1 1969
still would have recorded :'Dark Star" (on Feb 27 '69), but not "Uncle John's Band"
the magic of numbers
ReplyDelete