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Grateful Dead's Workingman's Dead

by Buzz Poole

An intimate portrait of the 1970 Grateful Dead album, Workingman's Dead, charting its influences and historical importance.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

Released in 1970, Workingman's Dead was the breakthrough album for the Grateful Dead, a cold-water-shock departure from the Acid Test madness of the late '60s. It was the band's most commercially and critically successful release to date. More importantly, these songs established the blueprint for how the Dead would maintain and build upon a community held together by the core motivation of rejecting the status quo – the "straight life" – in order to live and work on their own terms.As a unified whole, the album's eight songs serve as points of entry into a fully-rendered portrait of the Grateful Dead within the context of late twentieth-century American history. These songs speak to the attendant cultural and political anxieties that resulted from the idealism of the '60s giving way to the uncomfortable realities of the '70s, and the band's evolving perspective on these changes. Based on research, interviews, and personal experience, this book probes the paradox at the heart of the band's appeal: the Grateful Dead were about much more than music, though they were really just about the music.

Author Biography

Buzz Poole has written about music, design, and culture for numerous outlets, including The Village Voice, The Believer, Print, and San Francisco Chronicle.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1: Background, Historical and PersonalChapter 2: "Uncle John's Band"Chapter 3: "High Time"Chapter 4: "Dire Wolf"Chapter 5: "New Speedway Boogie"Chapter 6: "Cumberland Blues"Chapter 7: "Black Peter"Chapter 8: "Easy Wind"Chapter 9: "Casey Jones"Notes

Review

In 1969 the Grateful Dead executed an extraordinary pivot. While playing brilliant, deeply improvisational psychedelic music, they simultaneously began to create a series of traditionally-styled new American folk songs that would be collected in Workingman's Dead. It is perhaps the key moment in their storied history, and Buzz Poole explores this evolution with insight and a profound understanding of how these songs fit into American cultural history. * Dennis McNally, author of A Long Strange Trip (2003) and On Highway 61 (2014) *
Buzz Poole nails his take on Workingman's Dead, with the song-by-song conceit proving surprisingly agile for the Dead. Poole unpacks and links the mythos attached to the album's eight songs and their histories in the Dead's songbook. Like the Dead, Poole sweeps through the American territories, from the American folklore of 'Casey Jones' to the Manson murders. Good stuff, fun read. * Jesse Jarnow, author of Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America (2016) *
Poole provides a thoughtful, detailed, and passionate look at this seminal album that frames its achievement and demonstrates why it still rewards close listening. It's great to see the Dead represented in this series! -- Nicholas Meriwether, Grateful Dead Archivist
Buzz Poole brings us back to the time before capitalism consumed the counterculture; the musical and cultural moment when the Grateful Dead reluctantly accepted the mantle as the horse pulling the wagon full of hippies, freaks, outlaws and others through the darkness of the world of power, war, and greed…Poole does an excellent job in pulling together the diverse and multiple musical, folk and literary influences apparent in the songs on Workingman's Dead (and most other Dead albums, too.) * Counterpunch *
[A] little beauty ... [and] the only Dead book I know of devoted to a single album ... No matter how extensive your Dead library, you should make room for this wee addition. * Shindig! *

Promotional

An intimate portrait of the 1970 Grateful Dead album, Workingman's Dead, charting its influences and historical importance.

Long Description

Released in 1970, the Grateful Dead's Workingman's Dead is cold-water-shock departure from the Acid Test feedback madness of the late '60s material, exemplified by songs like St. Stephen and Dark Star. Rather than relying on chemically-fuelled guitar licks and spacey improvisational explorations, this album is the first listen to what would become an extensive songbook informed and inspired by dusty, rough and tumble American history and world mythologies, charting the long, winding path to self-discovery and individual empowerment...The eight songs that comprise Workingman's Dead will serve as points of entry from which forms a fully-rendered portrait of an exceptional musical recording, both in terms of the songs but also, and perhaps more importantly, how these songs speak to late twentieth-century America. Buzz Poole considers the attendant cultural and political anxieties that resulted from the idealism of the '60s giving way to the uncomfortable realities of the '70s, making a case for the relevance of this music nearly forty-five years after it was recorded. Based on research, interviews, and personal experience, the book will probe the paradox at the heart of the band's appeal: the Grateful Dead was about much more than music, though it was really just about the music.

Review Quote

"In 1969 the Grateful Dead executed an extraordinary pivot. While playing brilliant, deeply improvisational psychedelic music, they simultaneously began to create a series of traditionally-styled new American folk songs that would be collected in Workingman's Dead. It is perhaps the key moment in their storied history, and Buzz Poole explores this evolution with insight and a profound understanding of how these songs fit into American cultural history." - Dennis McNally, author of A Long Strange Trip (2003) and On Highway 61 (2014) "Buzz Poole nails his take on Workingman's Dead, with the song-by-song conceit proving surprisingly agile for the Dead. Poole unpacks and links the mythos attached to the album's eight songs and their histories in the Dead's songbook. Like the Dead, Poole sweeps through the American territories, from the American folklore of 'Casey Jones' to the Manson murders. Good stuff, fun read." - Jesse Jarnow, author of Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America (2016) "Buzz Poole brings us back to the time before capitalism consumed the counterculture; the musical and cultural moment when the Grateful Dead reluctantly accepted the mantle as the horse pulling the wagon full of hippies, freaks, outlaws and others through the darkness of the world of power, war, and greed...Poole does an excellent job in pulling together the diverse and multiple musical, folk and literary influences apparent in the songs on Workingman's Dead (and most other Dead albums, too.)" - Counterpunch "Poole provides a thoughtful, detailed, and passionate look at this seminal album that frames its achievement and demonstrates why it still rewards close listening. It's great to see the Dead represented in this series!" - Nicholas Meriwether, Grateful Dead Archivist

Promotional "Headline"

An intimate portrait of the 1970 Grateful Dead album, Workingman's Dead, charting its influences and historical importance.

Feature

2015 is the 50th anniversary of Grateful Dead and the book will benefit from other promotions and concerts

Details

ISBN1628929243
ISBN-10 1628929243
ISBN-13 9781628929249
Author Buzz Poole
Pages 160
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Series 33 1/3
Short Title 33 1/3 GRATEFUL DEADS WORKINGM
Language English
Media Book
Format Paperback
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic USA
Place of Publication New York
Country of Publication United States
Affiliation Independent Scholar, USA
DEWEY 782.421660922
Year 2016
Publication Date 2016-04-21
UK Release Date 2016-04-21
NZ Release Date 2016-04-21
US Release Date 2016-04-21
Audience General
AU Release Date 2016-04-20

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