I could hardly get my
head around going to a show like that, it was so vastly portentous of my past,
while simultaneously pointing out the way that all popular music, once spiky
with difference, has lately flattened into this gushy brown sludge. But when
push came to shove, I had to admit the whole project was a pretty impressive, especially
given that it was only thrown together in the last few weeks, since fires devastated a region of the Bay Area. The swiftness and surety of the way it
came together was reminiscent of some equally variety-packed BGP (Bill Graham
Presents) fundraisers, like one right after the Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989
that featured John Fogerty, Bonnie Raitt, Tower of Power, Big Brother, the
Dinosaurs, Pete Escovedo Orchestra, Taj Majal, Bobby McFerrin, Bob Hope (!!!)
and, at separate locations, the Grateful Dead and Los Lobos.
So, whatever one thought about the Band Together lineup, there was no
doubt it was in keeping with the old spirit of San Francisco music scene: putting
on shows like this is what we do best here. And it was historical in another
way, too, in that it was a throwback to the mid-1980s Band Aid type blockbuster
fundraiser, though its goals and proceeds are (one hopes) more targeted and successful. Band
Together was organized, sponsored, or otherwise kickstarted by the ubiquitous
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, by Live Nation, Another Planet Entertainment,
Google, the SF Giants, and by The Tipping Point Emergency Relief Fund, the organization it was
benefiting. According to the website, 100% of ticket sales were going to the
charity; throughout the concert there were constant calls for online/texted
donations, and it had, by concert time, raised seventeen million dollars,
which is no small chunk of change.(You can still donate, by the way, by clicking here.)
the dream state of capitalism |
Band Together’s goals are entirely laudable – that’s why I
threw my money at it -- but even so, I don’t think it’s exactly a coincidence
that we’re seeing a resurgence of this type of thing, since the Band Aid era
was during high Reagan years, when the Republican mantra was also all about
cutting government spending and taxes. Today we live in under a similarly
tightfisted regime, wherein GoFundMe campaigns have become a reasonable
business model, even, alas, a form of healthcare and debt relief, so my
prediction is that we will begin seeing a ton more of this type of concert. And
that is only one of the ways that this whole show seemed symptomatic of the
very different world we live in now that I am not a rock critic. As I said, to
my hidebound mind, set in stone some half century ago, these bands simply don’t
belong together on one bill, especially not alongside the inexplicably popular
Dave Matthews, white rapper G Eazy and Raphael Saadiq, and the fact that the
crowd would welcome all three with equal fervor is just indicative of the
cataclysmic changes wrought in our listening habits since the advent of the
iPod Shuffle.
Those changes didn’t happen in my soul, though, so for a while I didn’t
want to go. It was for a great cause and easy for me to get to, but it was on a
work day, smack dab in the middle of the Dreamforce convention, plus, the
forecast said it was going to rain. But my brother, who is a world renowned expert on the Grateful Dead, said, “Oh, it never rains on the Grateful Dead in
the Bay Area. It’s a known thing.”
And he was right. Despite the forecast, it cleared up that
afternoon. So come 7 o clock, after my class got out, I found myself heading
down there in a Lyft. The intersections near the park were so packed they
looked like Shibuya in Tokyo, and I had to hop out of the car a few blocks
early, shouldering my way down to Willie Mays Plaza. All around me, people were
selling ticket downloads, and saucy street sausages, and edible weed items, and
bootleg Band Together t-shirts. Thick clouds of pot smoke wafted over my head,
and the lights of the Bay Bridge winked out to my left. I felt like I had
stepped into Bladerunner 2049, only
with everyone on the set looking worse, and worsely dressed. The thought made
my heart lift, because I am happiest at shows where I think I’m going
to learn something, and this seemed like it would be educational in some undefined way.
when the lights go down on the bla bla bla |
Sadly, by the time I got to the ballpark, I had to miss
Rancid, the only band I like, as well as the pleasantly poppy G Eazy, who I am
told took a moment to curse out Donald Trump, arriving instead during the
dreadful Dave Matthews Band. God, I forgot how insufferable his music is.
Usually I like to cover concerts by sitting alone and walking around and taking
notes and texting my brother, but Dave Matthews is so unbearable that I went
and bothered my Millenial friend Emily in the club section, who was there on a second
date. I know that’s not very nice of me – especially as Emily and I immediately
started plaguing the poor fellow with pictures of our recent trip to Budapest –
but it was preferable to actually listening.
Meanwhile, Emily and her date were getting the feels because
they listened to DMB in high school, i.e. fourteen years ago. I asked them if
they liked the Grateful Dead. The date said, “Well...I listen to Bill Walton’s podcast, and he told a funny story about them.”
Emily: “I don’t like them, but I like John Mayer.”
Date: “Well, that’s
random.”
Us: “No it’s not.”
Just then, the band comes on stage, led by none other than John
Mayer. Date loses his shit, along with the people behind us, who also were not
expecting it (because, really, nobody expects John Mayer, just like nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition). By contrast, Emily, upon hearing
some of the not-Dead’s music, immediately loses interest in John Mayer. That’s
my girl! Not really, I’m just kidding. What she said was, “this is perfectly
pleasant, but it sounds like background muzac.”
Meanwhile, I tweet, “The Dead are the kind of band who wear
their own t-shirts on stage.” Instantly, a kind follower tweets back nervously:
“Is this going to be like the time you trashed Jimmy Buffett?” Right, I think. That
article reaped death threats, rape threats…and that was before the invention of
twitter. I decide to calm down a little.
Presently, I looked over, and see that Emily is adding a
picture to her Snapchat story. “John plays Jim,” she captions it.
“You mean, John plays Jerry,” I say.
“Oh right,” she says,
correcting it. “Is that with a J or a G?”
Obviously, I am well aware that Dead and Co. are not the
Grateful Dead. At this point, I am just going to let my brother do the honors:
Dead And Company arose after the success of Fare
Thee Well shows. Phil Lesh had had it with the drummers, but Bob Weir, Bill
Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart went on tour in Fall 2015. John Mayer first heard
the Grateful Dead in 2001. Jeff Chimenti (keyboards) and Oteil Burbridge (bass)
are veterans of these sort of bands. Chimenti has played with Weir and various
offshoots since 1996, and he isn't dead (they regularly joke about this in
interviews, since Dead keyboardists have a Spinal Tap like history). Oteil
Burbridge played with the Allman Brothers for 20 years or so (1996-2015)
Most Deadheads think
Dead And Co are alright, but not epic. This show was three days before their
next tour kicks off at Madison Square Garden, and of course they didn't
rehearse, and it showed (keep in mind, Jerry wouldn't have rehearsed either).
The consensus of my serious old Deadhead friends who watched the stream said
they played badly (and these are people who like them). There was some question
of the propriety of playing a song called "Fire On The Mountain" to
people who lived in the mountains and lost their home to a fire.
Bob Weir |
To me, it was just weird hearing the Dead’s music again. I
range it alongside other scourges of my youth, that is, the many all American
things Everyone Else But Me Likes: McDonald’s, Apple stuff, Disneyland, beer.
On the one hand, I can understand what’s enjoyable about the continuous loop of
pingy little guitar notes, the lyrics about almost nothing, the two drummers,
and the aural miasma of, for lack of a better word, Deadishness that descends
on this type of gathering, yet something about it always makes me feel outcast
and uncomfortable.
Meanwhile, behind us, a group of fat men in tye-dye rose up
as one and noodle danced for the duration, possibly for the first time in two
decades. Emily was slightly aghast. I tried to explain what the whole Dead
crowd, the Dead thing, was about to her but it just wasn’t possible. People
today think the Dead are just another band who toured a lot in the 1980s and
90s. Like Rolling Stone magazine, they
know it existed as a historical thing, but it’s difficult to convey the
phenomenon; the masses of hippie-vans parked along the Panhandle, the kids
wandering up Haight street begging for a miracle, the misguided conversations
with people telling one how transcendent the Dead’s music is…it all comes
flooding back as I listen to John Mayer and Co. noodling away at endless songs that I thought
I would never be subjected to again. At the end, Emily said doubtfully, “Well,
I do like it when bands are obviously just playing for themselves,” and I do
too. But the music still makes me yawn.
All benefits must by rights spend some interim time
praying and praising, and this one was no exception. In this case the honorees
were for first responders and fire victims, who had a special section to
themselves and were given on screen shout-outs by celebrities like Huey Lewis
and Tony Bennett and in person, Buster Posey and Barry Bonds. Then, after a
brief break, Metallica come on. As noted above, many years ago I spent part of one
whole summer on the road with them, but this is me at a Metallica gig:
onstage for first song, taking notes, notes, notes; fourth song, I go down
under the risers and run as fast as I can to the bus, get in the bus and cover
my ears, because that’s when the pyro begins, and pyro makes me cry. After an
interval, I come back up until the finale, then, as the set finishes, curl up
in a ball with my head wrapped up in the nearest towel.
I tell Emily this, and she points out that they won’t be
doing any pyro at this show, because it’s a benefit for fire victims and we’ve
just spent the last three hours seeing between set videos of people talking
about the problems of FIRE. She says that even the Warriors didn’t use pyro,
out of respect, in the last few weeks. “Well, seeing Metallica without pyro
isn’t right,” I say piously, even though I hate pyro. This is how wedded I am
to my past.
Emily asks, “Will I like Metallica?”
“Well…they’re very dramatic,” I say doubtfully. But she
might: Emily used to be a classical violinist, and Metallica do have a certain
musicality; it’s hard to deny that Hammett and Hetfield are super musical, even
if the use they put it their talent is making massive speed-runs up and down their guitar
necks, and adding tuneless shouting to a swift, staccato, martial beat. And I don’t
know why, maybe just because the Dead's sound is so spineless, but I am a little excited to hear it again. It takes me back. Certainly everyone else in the crowd is revving up
for it too – the fat guys in the Dead shirts, the tattooed dudes in Misfits shirts,
the men with their sons on their shoulders, the Dave Matthews fan in front of
me wiggling her hips...we’re all kind of making this little Metallica-is-coming roar in our heads.
And Metallica doesn’t disappoint. They come on and fucking POUND it. Sing goddamn, I think; sing off to never-never land. Pound it, brothers, POUND POUND POUND. This is not your background music. This is music for the ages, if the ages had taken place on one chromatic scale, entirely in major chords and only in four-four time.
Down in the field, a pit forms, and Emily looks at it in
dismay. “Why are all those people doing Ring Around the Rosie?”
Me, sighing. “If you don’t know, I can’t explain.”
Yes, words fail. I left on Metallica’s fifth song, because I
didn’t want to miss the train home and because – pyro excepted -- they hadn’t
appreciably changed since I last saw them 21 years ago. I’ve changed though,
and here’s how: now, instead of being infuriated on a Jimmy Buffett level by
the old Dead Heads swirling around above me and the slightly less old pony-boys
hurling each other around in the mosh pit, I sent out waves of love and respect
to them all. I love them for still loving their beloved music, whatever it is,
and for giving money to a good cause, and for braving the crowds of Dreamforce
to come out in the maybe-rain, and, simply, for staying true.
Be honest, stay true – that’s my motto. The new world is very different for sure, but the new me is definitely better than the old one. The new me doesn’t have to stay to the end of the show or stand on stage during Metallica with my head in wrapped in a Rancid sweatshirt, or get the songs right or even tell you what to think. The new me says goodbye to all that. And good riddance, too.
Be honest, stay true – that’s my motto. The new world is very different for sure, but the new me is definitely better than the old one. The new me doesn’t have to stay to the end of the show or stand on stage during Metallica with my head in wrapped in a Rancid sweatshirt, or get the songs right or even tell you what to think. The new me says goodbye to all that. And good riddance, too.
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