• https://www.dead.net/features/dead-world-roundup/jackie-greene-new-album-out-touring-p-f-and-solo
    Jackie Greene: New Album is Out; Touring with P&F and Solo

    These are exciting days for Phil Lesh & Friends singer/songwriter/guitarist/keyboardist Jackie Greene. Not only does he have a truckload of dates with that group planned for the spring and summer, but he just released his much-anticipated new album, Giving Up the Ghost (on the 429 label, a subsidiary of Savoy) and will also be playing shows all over with his fine solo band.


    Photo: Jay Blakesberg ©2008

    For anyone who has followed Greene’s remarkable pre-P&F career, the depth and excellence of Giving Up the Ghost will come as no surprise. Over the course of a handful of superb albums through the years—each a revelation in its own way—Greene has shown himself to be a unique and formidable talent with strong connections to a variety of musical styles—blues, rock, soul, folk, country; pretty much the whole American roots cornucopia. His lyric style is similarly eclectic—he moves easily and naturally between straight-forward musings and more abstract poetic rambles; he can be amazingly forthright and self-revelatory or deliciously opaque—sometimes within the same song! He’s written incredibly simple, delicate love songs and complex journeys into the darker parts of the human psyche. Just in the songs of his that he’s performed live with Phil & Friends, you can get a sense of the range of his writing (and singing): The marvelous, folksy “Gone Wanderin’”; the lusty “Tell Me Mama”; the exotic Latin-flavored “Mexican Girl”; the big bounce of “So Hard to Find My Way”; the dark power of the rockin’ “Cold Black Devil”; the infectious soul of “Like A Ball and Chain.”

    That dynamite last tune—certain to be a radio favorite if there’s any justice left in radioland—is one of several tracks from Giving Up the Ghost that Phil & Friends have played live. (The others are “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind,” “Downhearted” and “Prayer for Spanish Harlem.”) No doubt others will find their way into the repertoire this spring and summer. The album was recorded in the fall of 2007, before, during and after P&F’s tour. Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin, who co-produced Jackie’s 2006 masterpiece, American Myth, with Greene, once again was at the helm for Ghost. It was recorded in Sacramento, San Francisco (at the studio Jackie shares with Tim Bluhm of Mother Hips, called Mission Bells), L.A., Chicago, Brooklyn and Portland (where Berlin lives). As was the case on Myth, some of the tracks feature a band made up of L.A. session musician friends of Berlin’s who collectively go by the name Jackshit: guitarist Val McCallum, bassist Davey Farragher and drummer Pete Thomas (of Elvis Costello fame). On half the tunes, though, the basic tracks were laid down by Jackie’s superb band: guitarist Nathan Dale, bassist/guitarist Jeremy Plog and drummer Bruce Spencer. Guests on a track or two each include the incomparable pedal steel guitarist Greg Leisz, Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo, drummer Cougar Estrada and Berlin on various instruments, horn players Mic Gillette and George Brooks, P&F string wizard Larry Campbell (on violin, mandolin and vocals) and Phil Lesh—he recorded a bass track for the song “Animal” backstage at the Nokia Theater in New York during the band’s ten-night run there last year.


    Photo: Jay Blakesberg ©2008

    It’s an album of many moods: There’s the dark, atmospheric love song “Prayer for Spanish Harlem” (“Hot night, Spanish Harlem / full moon creeping low / I was standing at the bottom / your blue window”), and the light, Steve Miller-catchy Cajun romp “Another Love Gone Bad”; the driving and menacing “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” (“Temptation’s like a crooked finger / calling for us all”), and the acoustic guitar-driven anthem “Uphill Mountain,” in which he optimistically sings, “tell John Henry and Cassius Clay / swinging iron for a living is a hell of a way / but whatever you do don’t let your hammer stray / and I believe we’ll be just fine.” Jackie has said that perseverance is one theme that’s running through the album, and that’s something he knows a thing or two about, having had his share of music biz setbacks (like his last label, Verve Forecast, flaking out on him) even as his following has grown each year. It’s never been more hazardous to predict success for someone in the music industry, but Giving Up the Ghost feels like it could be his commercial breakthrough: There are solid hooks galore, a wide variety of unusual guitar and keyboard textures that always keep things interesting, and, typical of Jackie, his chameleon voice is amazing throughout—soft and gentle here, gritty and soulful when needed. All in all it’s a varied and vital work; certainly among the year’s best. And if you’ve enjoyed his tenure in Phil & Friends, by all means come out and catch one of his shows with his band—they put on a great show. (He also tours from time to time with Tim Bluhm as the Skinny Singers, playing other material, and has been known to work as a duo with guitarist Nathan Dale.)

    Although I’d interviewed Jackie a couple of times last year for dead.net (and reviewed American Myth back in 2006), I’d never actually met him until I went to his funky-but-functional Mission Bells studio, located above a Peruvian restaurant, in February. Dressed head-to-toe in black, save for white socks, he was open and engaging as we talked shop about the recording of the new album, Phil & Friends and even a bit about his youth and teenage years.

    I like the new album. I had to adjust to it a little; I’m not sure why. American Myth had a certain intimacy to it in songs like “Love Song 2 a.m.” and “Walking Away” that made it feel very personal, and this seems to be a little less folk-y.

    It’s a little more abstract. It has certain kinds of sounds and a different quality of the sounds. It’s a little more lo-fi, you might say, on purpose. We did things like put vocals through a Tascam 4-track cassette recorder—used the preamps just to fuck ‘em up.

    How Tchad Blake-ian! [Tchad Blake is a sonically adventurous engineer/producer who recorded many of Los Lobos’ classic mid-period albums.]

    Exactly! Just mess with it on purpose to add a sort of glaze to the whole thing that blurs it a little bit; makes it a little ghost-y.

    Tell me a bit about your approach following American Myth. Are these songs all ones that were written since that album, or are there tunes that date farther back?

    They were all completed since that record. And there are some songs that are over a year-and-a-half old. I keep a lot of notebooks and I’ll dig around in them when I’m looking for songs, or I’ll listen to old demos and think, “What about that one—anything I can do with this one? Nah. How ‘bout this one? Well, maybe.” If it seems interesting I’ll probably do a lot of re-writing of it. With this record in particular, though, they’re fairly new.

    But you didn’t write them in the studio.

    Not really, no. Though “Another Love Gone Bad” was kind of written in the studio because all I had was a demo and melody for it and a couple of verses, and I sort of did it on the spot.

    Do you write on guitar always?

    Mostly, because that’s what’s always there. Like, if your on the road in a hotel room, I don’t have a piano in there. [Laughs] I will write on piano occasionally, though, and sometimes on something I don’t play that well, like the banjo or mandolin; something where I don’t really know what I’m doing.

    Well, that pushes you in some interesting directions. Garcia used to say he liked writing on piano because he didn’t play it well.

    Right. It limits you: What can I make out of these three chords I just learned on this instrument? [Laughs]

    How elaborate will your demos be? Steve Berlin told me that “Animal” started out as one of your demos.

    That’s right. In fact we used a lot of stuff from the demo on the finished track. Almost everything you hear is something I played originally on the demo, but later we went back and put a better drummer on there, and added a few other things. For that song I wanted it to be a certain way, with fake strings—mellotron and other things around the sides.

    Where do you find a mellotron in this day and age?

    You find them in some studios—like Sonora down in L.A. has one. Or you can get pretty good samples of mellotrons now. On “Animal” I wanted to have this big fat groove in the middle that’s almost like some lo-fi rap groove.

    Well, that tune and “Ghosts of Promised Lands” have that sung-spoken thing happening.

    They do. It’s a little Lou Reed-ish I guess.

    Are those things you write out as poetry first and then fit to a tune?

    Not “Animal.” That was straight-up a song. I just started singing it and had the mind-set of sort of rambling on with it, and I pretty much wrote it down all at once. And “Promised Lands” was the opposite—it was from various writings and piecing it together with the structure of a song, and it fit, so I got lucky.

    Tell me about the process of making this album. I know you went initially to a studio called The Hangar in Sacramento, where you cut “Look Out Cleveland” for the Band tribute album, and then also did a few tracks for what would become this album.

    Right. We did the basics for two or three songs there. We probably did 2/5 of it here [at Mission Bells], 2/5 in Sonora and 1/5 at The Hangar. Then the overdubs happened in all kinds of studios.

    In this studio, all the basics were done on that one-inch tape machine, which arguably is the noisiest format you can use, but there’s some kind of charm about it that I like; again that kind of mid- lo-fi thing. All of it was done on tape in the beginning stages and then moved onto Pro Tools [digital workstation].

    It was a record that was made in many cities because it was kind of made on the Phil Lesh tour, which was definitely different than anything I’ve done before. You know—waking up in Chicago and Steve [Berlin] calls up and says “We’re in CRC [Chicago Recording Company] today!” “What are we working on?” “Well, we need you sing this and this and do this other overdub.” “OK!” [Laughs] We did that in New York, too. It was like being in touring mode while recording, so when I listen to it there’s a certain sense of restlessness, like you’re not at home.

    Well, that’s kind of a theme running through your work, from Gone Wanderin’ on down.

    That’s true. And I don’t mean it in a negative way at all. Maybe I hear it more, too because I know how it was done. [Laughs]

    Are there things you and Steve wanted to avoid that you’d done on American Myth?

    Not so much avoid, as certain things we wanted to go further with. When we talked about it, we decided it had to be different and darker than the last one.

    When you say darker do you mean sonically or thematically?

    Both.

    Are you in a dark space right now?

    No, I’m not, but the songs are, I guess. [Laughs] But particularly sonically. Like on “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind,” instead of acoustic guitar, we have a clanging Dobro playing chords, instead of slide. It’s a little more sinister; things like that.

    Ultimately it was going to be what it was going to be.

    I was surprised when Steve Berlin told me that originally Verve didn’t want him producing the album after American Myth. I don’t know what their complaints were.

    The former president of Verve doesn’t like Steve, and it all boils down to an argument they had many years ago. I’m like, “C’mon, you guys, act like adults!” It was retarded.

    For better or for worse, I’m glad I’m not still with Verve. It became sort of a sinking ship and I got the chance to jump ship and I did. This record label [429/Savoy] loves Steve, so everybody’s happy.

    How did you pick the songs that ended up on the album? I know you write a lot…

    Steve definitely has more say than I do. There were like 20 songs that he had demos for and he starts saying, “How about these?” and I say, “But this one has to be on there,” and so I’ll get my one song on there. [Laughs]. I’m kidding—for the most part we agreed. It was sort of obvious which songs we should do and which ones didn’t quite fit or couldn’t be done.

    How about in terms of which musicians to use on which tracks. Was that obvious, too?

    No, it wasn’t obvious. It came down partly to time. The guys in my band knew some of the songs, because they’re ones we’d been playing [live], so it was obvious they’d do those.

    Let’s see: “Ball and Chain” is Jackshit, “Shaken” is Jackshit, “Animal” is my band, “I Don’t Live in a Dream” is actually just me…

    I like that tune, with the cool percussion; it’s kind of hypnotic…

    There’s actually two drum kits, with me playing the main kit, and then on the bridge Cougar Estrada of Los Lobos comes in with a completely separate kit that sounds all room-y. Then there’s a phffft! and it sucks back to the main kit. The bass is not actually a bass but the low-end of an organ.

    Doors-style.

    Right. And then the percussion is Cougar played congas and I played cajon.

    “Uphill Mountain” is my band, but also, in the chorus, Pete Thomas plays kick and snare to double it, so it’s a little beefier.

    How would it occur to you or Oz [Fritz, engineer] to do that?

    It occurs to all of us when we listen to the chorus and determine it needs to sound a little fatter. When we recorded it here [at Mission Bells] we taped a tambourine to the snare, we used ride cymbals as hi-hats and fucked up the drum kit to make it not feel like a regular drum kit, but when we got to the chorus I wanted to have a snare sound, and who better to overdub to an existing drum track than Pete Thomas?

    “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” is my band, “Spanish Harlem” is my band. “Downhearted” is Jackshit, “Follow You” is Jackshit, “Love Gone Bad” is Jackshit, “When You Return” is my band, “Promised Land” is Jackshit. So it’s about half and half. And there’s intermingling, too—like Val, the [Jacksit] guitar player, plays on just about everything, and Greg Leisz is on there, too.

    How much do you play on there?

    I play guitar or electric guitar or electric piano on everything. On some tracks I have a couple of guitars on there. On “Uphill Mountian,” I’m doing a couple of guitars and Val is doing baritone guitar and Nathan [Dale]’s doing another kind of guitar. On “Devil” I’m doing the acoustic and electric guitars in the bridges. It’s a little like painting.

    When you have a song that you’ve worked out with the band onstage, is it difficult to then re-imagine it in the studio in a different way?

    No because the guys in my band are really good at de-structuring, too. So if I say, “Oh no, let’s try it way slower or way faster, and on that last turnaround let’s do it twice,” they can do it like that. They’re all pros.

    On a song like “Follow You,” when we started playing it live, even though it was the other band [Jackshit] that did it, it’s a lot different live. When you play something a lot with a band you definitely get into a certain comfort zone: I’m used to playing this guitar in this spot because we know it sounds good and the crowd likes it, but that doesn’t automatically mean it’s the right thing once you get in the studio. You might listen back and think, “God, that guitar is really awful!” [Laughs] So you have to keep an open mind about it.

    What’s the studio in L.A., Sonora, like?

    We did a lot of American Myth there, too. It’s smallish for an L.A. studio and very, very state-of-the-art 1972 sort of place. It’s got a great API console. They have a great Studer 2-inch [multitrack tape recorder] and loads of funky compressors and a bunch of stuff with knobs and lights, and a really great-sounding drum room and a great piano. They also have an apartment piano which is this little thing with something like 76 keys and it only has two strings for each hammer, so it’s very Beatles-sounding and it’s also great when you squash it with a compressor. I want one of those so bad for this place now.

    I know you’re a Tom Waits fan from way back; I was going to ask you which era of Tom Waits—the folkier stuff at the beginning or the more idiosyncratic later stuff?

    All of it! It’s not fair to ask me because I’m like a Tom Waits freak; I like everything he ever does, touches, smells…I pretty much like it. [Laughs] So I’m not objective about it at all. I like the weird shit, I like the normal shit. I like the pre-gravelly voice, I like the super-gravelly voice.

    I haven’t heard much Tom Waits or anything else recently because for the last six months all I’ve been listening to is Grateful Dead music. [Laughs]

    Besides Waits, who are some of the people who have influenced your aesthetic? I’m guessing Tchad Blake…

    Definitely him.

    He likes the weird keyboards and altered vocals and strange drums…

    He does! There’s this record that [Los Lobos’] David Hidalgo made called Hound Dog that sounds almost as if every microphone had a sock over it; everything’s really muted.

    Well, the Latin Playboys were like that, too.

    They were, but this is even more so. It’s fuzz violin and super drugged-out drumming that’s way behind the beat. [Laughs]

    Well, then I’ve gotta ask you how you can square that aesthetic with your professed desire to have a real hit…

    I can’t! [Laughs] I guess that’s the weirdness of me. Certainly I want to have successful records—who doesn’t?—but I’m not willing to make anything other than what I want to make it sound like. If this is not considered commercially viable, so be it. But if there’s a song on this record that for whatever reason ends up catching the public’s attention, I’m totally for it.

    I thought “Ball and Chain” was the obvious radio focus track; I was sort of surprised to hear your record company thinks it’s “Shaken.”

    I chose “Ball and Chain,” too, just because it so jumpin’.

    In the studio, do you tend to do many takes or try to get it down when it’s fresh and not belabor it?

    We do a few takes, but a lot of times we’ll listen back and it’s “Oh, the first take was the best.” I have kind of short attention span for that kind of stuff, so we’ll do maybe five takes, ten tops, before I go “Screw it, you guys can do it without me and I’ll go smoke a cigarette.” But it usually ends up being one of the first three takes because of that sense of freshness and spontaneity.

    Do you always do a scratch vocal with the band?

    Almost always, and sometimes I’ll even do a final vocal with the band. On American Myth there were a couple [of basic tracks] with final vocals. On this one I don’t think there are any.

    I heard the studio in Brooklyn was really nice.

    That’s probably my favorite studio I’ve ever been to. It’s one thing to have great gear, which they definitely have—but the most important thing to me is the space; not only how it sounds, but how it feels. It has this beautiful, skinny long room with all this light coming in from the windows on the outside and it’s great-sounding, and they have lots of great instruments.

    You have no compunction about going into a studio and picking up a guitar you’ve never seen and an amp you’ve never heard before and recording with it?

    No, I love it! It's not like I’m a Fender guy and I have to play a certain guitar and amp combo.

    Hey, it says on your albums you play Gibson guitars!

    Well, yeah, I am, because they hook me up! [Laughs] But if the Les Paul through the Vox doesn’t sound right for the song, I’ll use the Strat through a different amp or whatever…

    And then not tell Gibson!

    Of course not! [Laughs]

    Where did you get your gear knowledge? I gather you’ve been recording forever.

    I’ve been an avid home recordist since around senior year in high school. I started out with a [Teac] Portastudio and then I used to get little quarter-inch reel-to-reel machines and sync them together. I’d record on one, bounce it to the other one and keep bouncing back—to multitrack.

    Hey, it worked on Sgt. Pepper!

    There you go. I’d sit in the garage and do that. I had a crappy little mixing board and I’d learn how to bus things out of the mixing board to get four tracks on one track. Then Pro Tools came along and that was amazing. I was kind of late getting into Pro Tools because I was so used to knobs on a mixing board, but I eventually got an Mbox and I started doing demos on that. Then I realized I wasn’t really satisfied with the process of using that, so to this day I still use the Tascam, too.

    Did you have your own studio?

    No it was just a bunch of stuff piled in my living room. A lot of this stuff here [at Mission Bells].

    How did you know what to buy and how to use it? Osmosis?

    I read a lot. Things like Tape-op [an ultra-dweeby tech mag]. Also, using other people’s stuff. Most studios had certain pieces of equipment, and you learn that way.

    It must be an advantage to be able to articulate what you want to an engineer.

    Definitely it’s helpful if you can speak that language. You don’t have to say, “I want it a little more ‘purple.’” [Laughs] I can say, “Let’s use a 20:1 ratio on the compressor and input gain high; output—squash it.”

    How does your early stuff sound to you now?

    Like shit! [Laughs] No, it is what it is. Rusty Nails was done on a one-inch machine and even some ADAT. Sweet Somewhere Bound was done on ADAT, and Gone Wanderin’ was basically done on an Mbox. It turns out that I prefer tape, and it’s not just the sound of tape—because Pro Tools sounds so good now you can get it to sound any way you want—but the workflow is completely different. I like the fact that on this Otari MX-70 [multitrack tape] machine there’s 16 tracks and track 3 is fucked up; in fact two tracks are broken. So you have 14 tracks to work with, so everything counts. I like to commit things to tape. Committing yourself to a certain thing, like a reverb or effect, is helpful because then you build around that initial color. It’s like building a painting. If you put a giant thing of red in the middle—oh, you’re screwed now! [Laughs]

    “Oh, this is going to be one of the red paintings.”

    Right! You build around it. I like that. Because otherwise it seems ambiguious. I love Pro Tools, because it’s a life saver, but I hate it because you can sit there and wank on the guitar for 40 tracks and never have to make any decision about it. At some point you have to erase them and get one part that’s right. If you’re working with tape it forces you to do that. Tape is definitely more expensive than hard drive space, of course, but it’s still worth it to me.

    When you were going from city to city adding parts to the album, had you plotted out: “Well, this song needs another acoustic guitar and an organ and this one needs a backup vocal?”

    To a certain extent. We had roughs that we listened to and we’d decide what we needed to do, and because our time was so limited, we had to be fairly serious about sticking to what we wanted to do. We had an agenda and decided what we had to do on the road and what we could do once we got back. Like, we knew we wanted Larry Campbell to play violin on “Shaken,” and we knew we’d do that in New York because he lives there and we were going to be there for however many shows with Phil.

    Did playing any of these tunes with Phil affect how they came out at all? You played “Ball and Chain” a few times with Phil…

    That’s true, but we actually did the recording before I started playing it with him. Or the basics at least. Phil had the roughs of some of the songs and that’s how he learned them.

    What’s the experience of playing in Phil & Friends been like for you?

    It’s been great! It’s super-tiring and it’s a lot of work. It’s a really different way of playing music and it’s really interesting.

    I would imagine it’s done things for your guitar playing.

    Are you kidding? [Laughs] You have to step it up! Larry Campbell’s out there and all these guys are such great players, I can’t fuck around now. I’ve gotta really try and do something. I’m a glutton for punishment. I don’t mind getting my ass kicked by Larry every night because I’m learning so much from him; I’m stealing all his licks! [Laughs] It’s humbling.

    Is it still fun to do even though you’re on the eve of the release of your own thing? You’ll probably be going back and forth working with him and your own band and whatever.

    It’s definitely fun because the two projects are intertwined at this point. We’ll do some of these songs with Phil & Friends and they’ll have that vibe, and then I’ll do them with my band and it’ll be different. But the song is still the song; just a different cast of cretins. [Laughs]

    I love playing in Phil & Friends. Playing those Jerry songs… I kind of feel like I love a lot of those songs like they’re my own songs, and I want to treat them as if they were mine.

    You’ve certainly connected with “Sugaree.”

    Yeah, that’s a big one for me. I love “Sugaree”!

    What is it you love about it so much?

    It’s a perfect soul song. I see it as a very bluesy and soulful tune.

    What do you think when you have to perform some of the more lyrically abstract songs, Like “China Cat” or even “St. Stephen”?

    I love “China Cat”! And “St. Stephen” to me just fuckin’ rocks; I love playing that song. It’s only abstract in certain parts—in the sort of B-section part, like “lady finger…”—and Phil sings that. But that’s part of what makes it a great song. If it was just the rock part it would still be a great song, but then all of a sudden there’s this weird part that adds so much to the overall song. “China Cat I love because the groove is so infectious and the way the parts go together is really cool.

    So you’re committed to working with Phil & Friends though the rest of the year?

    I am. We don’t have the final dates for the year, but there will be summer stuff around and after Bonnaroo and then some fall dates as well. And by the end of the year I’ll pretty much be dead, because my band is also doing a lot of stuff in both the spring and the summer. [Laughs]

    I noticed quite a few Dead Heads at your band’s Great American Music Hall gig [in December], so it seems like you’re attracting some of that crowd to the base you already were building.

    It’s great. I love it. I really want to make the right move and still play some Dead songs in the shows with my band, because there are a bunch of songs I feel really close to. “Sugaree” is definitely one of them, of course. In fact, at this point in time it’s probably my favorite song. I also really like “Bertha”; I’m not sure why.

    What I figured out about that song a number of years ago is that it’s basically a bluegrass tune.

    It is! But with a straight beat, and then it’s got that half-time feel at the chorus; it’s great.

    So do a lot of your friends think you're a freak for playing with Phil: “What are you doing with that old hippie?”

    No, everyone’s been really supportive. Some of them don’t really know what it is before they hear it. And I guess I was in that category, too. [Laughs] But most people are really stoked.

    Was playing ten shows in one place[the Nokia Theatre in NY last fall] an interesting experience?

    It was. It was really cool. It sounds great in there. You’d think it would be easier because you don’t have to leave and go anywhere, but what happens is Phil just makes the shows longer! You leave the show, you get back to the hotel and you get up at noon…

    And then there are the famously long soundchecks.

    Right, like a two-hour soundcheck! You wake up, “Shit, I gotta go to soundcheck!” You end up being there for like eight hours—it’s like working a 9 to 5 job except it’s even more stressful and tiring! [Laughs]

    Well, that’s what you get for playing in a band with a medical marvel.

    I don’t know how he does it, lugging those big basses around. I’m choosing the lightest guitars I can. It’s been really cool, though.

    Are New York fans crazier?

    They definitely wait outside longer and through more weather before and after the show. But they’re really nice and they seemed to take a liking to me, which made me feel calmer. With a lot of these Phil shows I feel like I’m trying out for the Lakers every night, because I don’t know these people and I’m going to sing a lot of these songs they love so much and I don’t want to let ’em down. So it’s a lot of anxiety for me.

    It doesn’t show.

    Well, then I’m a good actor. But I think I got through to them.

    What’s the story with the Skinny Singers?

    Well, it’s me and Tim [Bluhm], my partner in the studio and it’s all songs we’ve written together. Tim is one of my favorite songwriters of all time, and a great musician. I was a fan of the Mother Hips and we were both in New York—he was playing a solo show and we were there and had the night off, so I went to see him at this little coffee shop called Jack Stirbrew and they had him sitting in this little window. We had never met but we’d talked on email, and afterwards we went out for pizza and beer and we’ve been friends ever since. It turned out we were both into home recording, and it turned out we both had Tascam one-inch machines, and at the time I lived in Sacramento and we started recording at my house there and at his house in Sacramento and we decided we’d get a space together.

    Did you feel like you’d gone as far as you could go in Sacramento?

    I have nothing against Sacramento. I just wanted a change of… More than a change of scenery, I wanted a change of attitude and that’s a big reason I moved to San Francisco. It seems like I run into a lot of creative people down here, a lot of musicians; there’s so much going on.

    I’ve been to every great restaurant in Sacramento, but I haven’t even been to a quarter of the great restaurants in San Francisco. That’s something I like to do. [Laughs] But most of all it was this studio, which was called Wide Hive Recorders, which did hip-hop records, I think. Before that I think it was a bank. It’s been really great for us. For a low-end studio we get a lot of people working here.

    I have a couple of questions about your deep, dark past. I know your mother is Japanese-American. Is Asian culture anything you identified with growing up?

    Not really. My grandparents on my mother’s side basically came over from Japan and worked in the sugar cane fields in Hawaii before ending up in California, and they were fairly traditional.

    Were they in the internment camps?

    Yes, they were. But my mother married a white guy and culturally she was always more tuned into American culture. I mean, she grew up in San Francisco and used to go see the Grateful Dead, so she was pretty Americanized. But I like Japanese things, sure. I really like Japanese stationary. [Laughs]

    When you were growing up in the foothills of the Sierra [in Eastern California], did any of that Western vibe seep into your life? I mean Placerville [where he went to high school] was a Gold Rush town.

    Right, it was called Hangtown. Oh yeah, you can’t escape it up there. It was kind of neat to grow up in an Old West kind of town.

    But it didn’t make you predisposed to like country music or anything…

    No, because most kids didn’t. Honestly, most of the suburban and rural white kids seemed to like rap.

    You were born in 1980, so when you were about 12, which is a formative time usually, is that like Nirvana and Pearl Jam and all that?

    Nirvana and Pearl Jam and rap. I was really into Pearl Jam growing up. Then, later, when I got out of high school, I discovered ’60s music and then moved backwards from The Beatles, Zeppelin and Stones, and then when you get into that and you’re sitting around reading liner notes, you say “Who’s Willie Dixon?” and then you find Muddy Waters and wow—I became this guy really into the blues. Then I got into old-time folk stuff like Doc Watson, and also bluegrass.

    Who are some of the people who influenced your guitar style?

    I’d say definitely for a lot of the fake flat-picking that I do—because I’m not that good at it—Doc Watson. For the bluesier stuff, Buddy Guy. I used to go see him play in high school. I couldn’t drive and so I’d drag my friends with me and make them drive so I could see him play. I’d be saying “This guy rips!” with all the 50 year-old drunk guys. [Laughs]

    There was a moment at a recent Phil & Friends show when you and Larry were playing some blues tune that I thought you guys sounded little like Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop in the Butterfield Blues Band.

    I can see that. I had a couple of Butterfield albums.

    I think it’s time for you to do “East West.”

    That’s a great song, for sure!

    You could have the harmonica goin’…

    With the harmonica mike! I had one of those with Phil & Friends but the sound guys thought it was too hard to control. I’d love to use it on “Caution.”

    Your keyboard playing is an underrated part of your game. Who were your influences there?

    I was really into Tumbleweed Connection-era Elton John, but in terms of playing, every blues lick I know I learned from Ray Charles. I found these vinyl records in my basement, and the first one I put on was The Genius of Ray Charles and I was like, “What the fuck is this?” [Laughs] I was totally thrilled that there was this kind of music. This is before I’d heard Buddy Guy. Before that I was sort of playing pretty piano stuff.

    Did you have formal piano lessons?

    Only for about three months. I always played by ear, sort of figured stuff out, so I put on this record and it was a revelation: “Oh, I see—you have to slur that key; it’s like bending a guitar note, but on piano. That’s rad, man!” So I just sort of copied Ray Charles. Later I got into Herbie Hancock jazz, some of the funkier stuff, but I’m not really good enough technically to pull that off. I understand it from the ear perspective but those guys are just so damn good.

    What sort of cache did playing in bands give you in high school and a little beyond? I remember thinking that my high school friends who played in bands were very cool.

    Well, for a long time most people didn’t really know that I played because I kind of kept it to myself. People thought I was a decent guitar player, but I wasn’t trying to play Green Day or whatever was popular at the moment. Instead I was trying to like Doc Watson: “That’s stupid, man.” “No, it’s not stupid it’s actually really, really hard!”

    I had a Spanish teacher who had mandolins in his class, and banjos, and I’d sit there during breaks and try to figure out stuff on them. He’s the guy who got me into bluegrass and gave me all these tapes, and I’d sit there and try to learn these licks: dit-dit-di-di-dit-a; rewind play it again, over and over. So to answer your question, being into that kind of music didn’t get you laid in my high school. [Laughs] It wasn’t cool. But it was what I liked and it’s what moved me. I wasn’t moved by most of what was on the radio.

    What’s the earliest song that you wrote that you still play?

    Gee, I don’t know. Probably “Rusty Nails.” There were a few songs from before that that we used to play; but I can’t even remember what they are now.

    When you perform a song, do you tend to get in the space in which it was written, or do they evolve with you?

    They totally evolve.

    Does it sometimes seem like a different guy wrote them?

    Absolutely. I don’t even remember writing “Gone Wanderin’” any more. It seems like I’ve known that song forever. Songs always take on different flavors when you play them a lot over many years. And sometimes we’ll purposely change things so that they sound completely different than how they were originally written. That’s fun, too. “Tell me Mama” is one. That used to be like this fast jump tune, and now it’s become like a Ray Charles blues.

    Has your life gotten crazier as you’ve become more successful?

    I wouldn’t say “crazier.” But between doing interviews and being on the road and recording and helping out on other people’s projects and any sort of promotional activity, like a radio visits, it’s much busier and its harder to find time for yourself—not just to write but just to be by yourself.

    I’ve been painting a lot lately. I was into painting a number of years ago. I just recently learned that Jerry Garcia painted; I didn’t even know that. So I was looking at some of his stuff online and it’s good. So that partly inspired me to get back into it.

    I dated a girl who was a really good painter and I liked watercolors and she was an oil snob and she told me that watercolors were for wimps—“You just don’t get the right colors.” And I was like, “Oh, OK.” I couldn't really argue with her because she was really good. She turned me off to it. So I’m into watercolors now. [Laughs] Now that I don’t see her, I’m like, “Fuck you, I happen to like that they’re messy and you can see through them!”

    How often do girls come up to you and say, “I know you wrote that song about me.”

    Never, because I hide it really well, so they’ll never know. They can assume whatever they want but if they ask me I can say, “God, aren’t you egotistical?!” [Laughs]

    * * *

    For tour dates and news about Phil & Friends, go to www.phillesh.net. For news about Jackie’s concerts (plus lyrics, merchandise—musical and otherwise—and a whole bunch of other cool stuff) go to www.jackie-greene.com.

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  • Default Avatar
    kyleroospharmd
    15 years 10 months ago
    phil and friends in ny
    He definately added something special at nokia theatre with phil and friends. Amazing voice!
  • marye
    15 years 11 months ago
    on the other hand
    I have to say that Jackie's little interlude with Ramblin' Jack Elliott at the Rex hoopla the other night was pretty darn sweet and kind of a nice tradition-passing icon.
  • raindep
    15 years 11 months ago
    eh...what's the big deal...
    "..one good thing, one good thing, when it hits you feel no pain..." Jackie Greene can sing a bit, play some guitar, play some harp, play some keys, write some songs, play some slide...none of it hits me as particularly original, groundbreaking, or beyond solidly predictable and professional. But I don't remember the concepts of "predictability and professionalism" as being the solid foundation upon which open and free improvisational music is based! I don't find his guitar playing to be suited for free music, and I truly don't understand why he is even involved in a 'jam band' scene. He seems as competent as the next young guy at writing accessible pop music for radio airplay...but to be part of the grateful dead family, you have to show me more than just a casual friendship with Phil's kid, and a descent Bay Area gigging schedule for a 20-something! I wish Jackie all the luck in the world, but as long as he remains on Phil's stage, I will be a bit bored...just honesty here, no disrespect intended.
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17 years 8 months

These are exciting days for Phil Lesh & Friends singer/songwriter/guitarist/keyboardist Jackie Greene. Not only does he have a truckload of dates with that group planned for the spring and summer, but he just released his much-anticipated new album, Giving Up the Ghost (on the 429 label, a subsidiary of Savoy) and will also be playing shows all over with his fine solo band.


Photo: Jay Blakesberg ©2008

For anyone who has followed Greene’s remarkable pre-P&F career, the depth and excellence of Giving Up the Ghost will come as no surprise. Over the course of a handful of superb albums through the years—each a revelation in its own way—Greene has shown himself to be a unique and formidable talent with strong connections to a variety of musical styles—blues, rock, soul, folk, country; pretty much the whole American roots cornucopia. His lyric style is similarly eclectic—he moves easily and naturally between straight-forward musings and more abstract poetic rambles; he can be amazingly forthright and self-revelatory or deliciously opaque—sometimes within the same song! He’s written incredibly simple, delicate love songs and complex journeys into the darker parts of the human psyche. Just in the songs of his that he’s performed live with Phil & Friends, you can get a sense of the range of his writing (and singing): The marvelous, folksy “Gone Wanderin’”; the lusty “Tell Me Mama”; the exotic Latin-flavored “Mexican Girl”; the big bounce of “So Hard to Find My Way”; the dark power of the rockin’ “Cold Black Devil”; the infectious soul of “Like A Ball and Chain.”

That dynamite last tune—certain to be a radio favorite if there’s any justice left in radioland—is one of several tracks from Giving Up the Ghost that Phil & Friends have played live. (The others are “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind,” “Downhearted” and “Prayer for Spanish Harlem.”) No doubt others will find their way into the repertoire this spring and summer. The album was recorded in the fall of 2007, before, during and after P&F’s tour. Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin, who co-produced Jackie’s 2006 masterpiece, American Myth, with Greene, once again was at the helm for Ghost. It was recorded in Sacramento, San Francisco (at the studio Jackie shares with Tim Bluhm of Mother Hips, called Mission Bells), L.A., Chicago, Brooklyn and Portland (where Berlin lives). As was the case on Myth, some of the tracks feature a band made up of L.A. session musician friends of Berlin’s who collectively go by the name Jackshit: guitarist Val McCallum, bassist Davey Farragher and drummer Pete Thomas (of Elvis Costello fame). On half the tunes, though, the basic tracks were laid down by Jackie’s superb band: guitarist Nathan Dale, bassist/guitarist Jeremy Plog and drummer Bruce Spencer. Guests on a track or two each include the incomparable pedal steel guitarist Greg Leisz, Los Lobos’ David Hidalgo, drummer Cougar Estrada and Berlin on various instruments, horn players Mic Gillette and George Brooks, P&F string wizard Larry Campbell (on violin, mandolin and vocals) and Phil Lesh—he recorded a bass track for the song “Animal” backstage at the Nokia Theater in New York during the band’s ten-night run there last year.


Photo: Jay Blakesberg ©2008

It’s an album of many moods: There’s the dark, atmospheric love song “Prayer for Spanish Harlem” (“Hot night, Spanish Harlem / full moon creeping low / I was standing at the bottom / your blue window”), and the light, Steve Miller-catchy Cajun romp “Another Love Gone Bad”; the driving and menacing “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” (“Temptation’s like a crooked finger / calling for us all”), and the acoustic guitar-driven anthem “Uphill Mountain,” in which he optimistically sings, “tell John Henry and Cassius Clay / swinging iron for a living is a hell of a way / but whatever you do don’t let your hammer stray / and I believe we’ll be just fine.” Jackie has said that perseverance is one theme that’s running through the album, and that’s something he knows a thing or two about, having had his share of music biz setbacks (like his last label, Verve Forecast, flaking out on him) even as his following has grown each year. It’s never been more hazardous to predict success for someone in the music industry, but Giving Up the Ghost feels like it could be his commercial breakthrough: There are solid hooks galore, a wide variety of unusual guitar and keyboard textures that always keep things interesting, and, typical of Jackie, his chameleon voice is amazing throughout—soft and gentle here, gritty and soulful when needed. All in all it’s a varied and vital work; certainly among the year’s best. And if you’ve enjoyed his tenure in Phil & Friends, by all means come out and catch one of his shows with his band—they put on a great show. (He also tours from time to time with Tim Bluhm as the Skinny Singers, playing other material, and has been known to work as a duo with guitarist Nathan Dale.)

Although I’d interviewed Jackie a couple of times last year for dead.net (and reviewed American Myth back in 2006), I’d never actually met him until I went to his funky-but-functional Mission Bells studio, located above a Peruvian restaurant, in February. Dressed head-to-toe in black, save for white socks, he was open and engaging as we talked shop about the recording of the new album, Phil & Friends and even a bit about his youth and teenage years.

I like the new album. I had to adjust to it a little; I’m not sure why. American Myth had a certain intimacy to it in songs like “Love Song 2 a.m.” and “Walking Away” that made it feel very personal, and this seems to be a little less folk-y.

It’s a little more abstract. It has certain kinds of sounds and a different quality of the sounds. It’s a little more lo-fi, you might say, on purpose. We did things like put vocals through a Tascam 4-track cassette recorder—used the preamps just to fuck ‘em up.

How Tchad Blake-ian! [Tchad Blake is a sonically adventurous engineer/producer who recorded many of Los Lobos’ classic mid-period albums.]

Exactly! Just mess with it on purpose to add a sort of glaze to the whole thing that blurs it a little bit; makes it a little ghost-y.

Tell me a bit about your approach following American Myth. Are these songs all ones that were written since that album, or are there tunes that date farther back?

They were all completed since that record. And there are some songs that are over a year-and-a-half old. I keep a lot of notebooks and I’ll dig around in them when I’m looking for songs, or I’ll listen to old demos and think, “What about that one—anything I can do with this one? Nah. How ‘bout this one? Well, maybe.” If it seems interesting I’ll probably do a lot of re-writing of it. With this record in particular, though, they’re fairly new.

But you didn’t write them in the studio.

Not really, no. Though “Another Love Gone Bad” was kind of written in the studio because all I had was a demo and melody for it and a couple of verses, and I sort of did it on the spot.

Do you write on guitar always?

Mostly, because that’s what’s always there. Like, if your on the road in a hotel room, I don’t have a piano in there. [Laughs] I will write on piano occasionally, though, and sometimes on something I don’t play that well, like the banjo or mandolin; something where I don’t really know what I’m doing.

Well, that pushes you in some interesting directions. Garcia used to say he liked writing on piano because he didn’t play it well.

Right. It limits you: What can I make out of these three chords I just learned on this instrument? [Laughs]

How elaborate will your demos be? Steve Berlin told me that “Animal” started out as one of your demos.

That’s right. In fact we used a lot of stuff from the demo on the finished track. Almost everything you hear is something I played originally on the demo, but later we went back and put a better drummer on there, and added a few other things. For that song I wanted it to be a certain way, with fake strings—mellotron and other things around the sides.

Where do you find a mellotron in this day and age?

You find them in some studios—like Sonora down in L.A. has one. Or you can get pretty good samples of mellotrons now. On “Animal” I wanted to have this big fat groove in the middle that’s almost like some lo-fi rap groove.

Well, that tune and “Ghosts of Promised Lands” have that sung-spoken thing happening.

They do. It’s a little Lou Reed-ish I guess.

Are those things you write out as poetry first and then fit to a tune?

Not “Animal.” That was straight-up a song. I just started singing it and had the mind-set of sort of rambling on with it, and I pretty much wrote it down all at once. And “Promised Lands” was the opposite—it was from various writings and piecing it together with the structure of a song, and it fit, so I got lucky.

Tell me about the process of making this album. I know you went initially to a studio called The Hangar in Sacramento, where you cut “Look Out Cleveland” for the Band tribute album, and then also did a few tracks for what would become this album.

Right. We did the basics for two or three songs there. We probably did 2/5 of it here [at Mission Bells], 2/5 in Sonora and 1/5 at The Hangar. Then the overdubs happened in all kinds of studios.

In this studio, all the basics were done on that one-inch tape machine, which arguably is the noisiest format you can use, but there’s some kind of charm about it that I like; again that kind of mid- lo-fi thing. All of it was done on tape in the beginning stages and then moved onto Pro Tools [digital workstation].

It was a record that was made in many cities because it was kind of made on the Phil Lesh tour, which was definitely different than anything I’ve done before. You know—waking up in Chicago and Steve [Berlin] calls up and says “We’re in CRC [Chicago Recording Company] today!” “What are we working on?” “Well, we need you sing this and this and do this other overdub.” “OK!” [Laughs] We did that in New York, too. It was like being in touring mode while recording, so when I listen to it there’s a certain sense of restlessness, like you’re not at home.

Well, that’s kind of a theme running through your work, from Gone Wanderin’ on down.

That’s true. And I don’t mean it in a negative way at all. Maybe I hear it more, too because I know how it was done. [Laughs]

Are there things you and Steve wanted to avoid that you’d done on American Myth?

Not so much avoid, as certain things we wanted to go further with. When we talked about it, we decided it had to be different and darker than the last one.

When you say darker do you mean sonically or thematically?

Both.

Are you in a dark space right now?

No, I’m not, but the songs are, I guess. [Laughs] But particularly sonically. Like on “Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind,” instead of acoustic guitar, we have a clanging Dobro playing chords, instead of slide. It’s a little more sinister; things like that.

Ultimately it was going to be what it was going to be.

I was surprised when Steve Berlin told me that originally Verve didn’t want him producing the album after American Myth. I don’t know what their complaints were.

The former president of Verve doesn’t like Steve, and it all boils down to an argument they had many years ago. I’m like, “C’mon, you guys, act like adults!” It was retarded.

For better or for worse, I’m glad I’m not still with Verve. It became sort of a sinking ship and I got the chance to jump ship and I did. This record label [429/Savoy] loves Steve, so everybody’s happy.

How did you pick the songs that ended up on the album? I know you write a lot…

Steve definitely has more say than I do. There were like 20 songs that he had demos for and he starts saying, “How about these?” and I say, “But this one has to be on there,” and so I’ll get my one song on there. [Laughs]. I’m kidding—for the most part we agreed. It was sort of obvious which songs we should do and which ones didn’t quite fit or couldn’t be done.

How about in terms of which musicians to use on which tracks. Was that obvious, too?

No, it wasn’t obvious. It came down partly to time. The guys in my band knew some of the songs, because they’re ones we’d been playing [live], so it was obvious they’d do those.

Let’s see: “Ball and Chain” is Jackshit, “Shaken” is Jackshit, “Animal” is my band, “I Don’t Live in a Dream” is actually just me…

I like that tune, with the cool percussion; it’s kind of hypnotic…

There’s actually two drum kits, with me playing the main kit, and then on the bridge Cougar Estrada of Los Lobos comes in with a completely separate kit that sounds all room-y. Then there’s a phffft! and it sucks back to the main kit. The bass is not actually a bass but the low-end of an organ.

Doors-style.

Right. And then the percussion is Cougar played congas and I played cajon.

“Uphill Mountain” is my band, but also, in the chorus, Pete Thomas plays kick and snare to double it, so it’s a little beefier.

How would it occur to you or Oz [Fritz, engineer] to do that?

It occurs to all of us when we listen to the chorus and determine it needs to sound a little fatter. When we recorded it here [at Mission Bells] we taped a tambourine to the snare, we used ride cymbals as hi-hats and fucked up the drum kit to make it not feel like a regular drum kit, but when we got to the chorus I wanted to have a snare sound, and who better to overdub to an existing drum track than Pete Thomas?

“Don’t Let the Devil Take Your Mind” is my band, “Spanish Harlem” is my band. “Downhearted” is Jackshit, “Follow You” is Jackshit, “Love Gone Bad” is Jackshit, “When You Return” is my band, “Promised Land” is Jackshit. So it’s about half and half. And there’s intermingling, too—like Val, the [Jacksit] guitar player, plays on just about everything, and Greg Leisz is on there, too.

How much do you play on there?

I play guitar or electric guitar or electric piano on everything. On some tracks I have a couple of guitars on there. On “Uphill Mountian,” I’m doing a couple of guitars and Val is doing baritone guitar and Nathan [Dale]’s doing another kind of guitar. On “Devil” I’m doing the acoustic and electric guitars in the bridges. It’s a little like painting.

When you have a song that you’ve worked out with the band onstage, is it difficult to then re-imagine it in the studio in a different way?

No because the guys in my band are really good at de-structuring, too. So if I say, “Oh no, let’s try it way slower or way faster, and on that last turnaround let’s do it twice,” they can do it like that. They’re all pros.

On a song like “Follow You,” when we started playing it live, even though it was the other band [Jackshit] that did it, it’s a lot different live. When you play something a lot with a band you definitely get into a certain comfort zone: I’m used to playing this guitar in this spot because we know it sounds good and the crowd likes it, but that doesn’t automatically mean it’s the right thing once you get in the studio. You might listen back and think, “God, that guitar is really awful!” [Laughs] So you have to keep an open mind about it.

What’s the studio in L.A., Sonora, like?

We did a lot of American Myth there, too. It’s smallish for an L.A. studio and very, very state-of-the-art 1972 sort of place. It’s got a great API console. They have a great Studer 2-inch [multitrack tape recorder] and loads of funky compressors and a bunch of stuff with knobs and lights, and a really great-sounding drum room and a great piano. They also have an apartment piano which is this little thing with something like 76 keys and it only has two strings for each hammer, so it’s very Beatles-sounding and it’s also great when you squash it with a compressor. I want one of those so bad for this place now.

I know you’re a Tom Waits fan from way back; I was going to ask you which era of Tom Waits—the folkier stuff at the beginning or the more idiosyncratic later stuff?

All of it! It’s not fair to ask me because I’m like a Tom Waits freak; I like everything he ever does, touches, smells…I pretty much like it. [Laughs] So I’m not objective about it at all. I like the weird shit, I like the normal shit. I like the pre-gravelly voice, I like the super-gravelly voice.

I haven’t heard much Tom Waits or anything else recently because for the last six months all I’ve been listening to is Grateful Dead music. [Laughs]

Besides Waits, who are some of the people who have influenced your aesthetic? I’m guessing Tchad Blake…

Definitely him.

He likes the weird keyboards and altered vocals and strange drums…

He does! There’s this record that [Los Lobos’] David Hidalgo made called Hound Dog that sounds almost as if every microphone had a sock over it; everything’s really muted.

Well, the Latin Playboys were like that, too.

They were, but this is even more so. It’s fuzz violin and super drugged-out drumming that’s way behind the beat. [Laughs]

Well, then I’ve gotta ask you how you can square that aesthetic with your professed desire to have a real hit…

I can’t! [Laughs] I guess that’s the weirdness of me. Certainly I want to have successful records—who doesn’t?—but I’m not willing to make anything other than what I want to make it sound like. If this is not considered commercially viable, so be it. But if there’s a song on this record that for whatever reason ends up catching the public’s attention, I’m totally for it.

I thought “Ball and Chain” was the obvious radio focus track; I was sort of surprised to hear your record company thinks it’s “Shaken.”

I chose “Ball and Chain,” too, just because it so jumpin’.

In the studio, do you tend to do many takes or try to get it down when it’s fresh and not belabor it?

We do a few takes, but a lot of times we’ll listen back and it’s “Oh, the first take was the best.” I have kind of short attention span for that kind of stuff, so we’ll do maybe five takes, ten tops, before I go “Screw it, you guys can do it without me and I’ll go smoke a cigarette.” But it usually ends up being one of the first three takes because of that sense of freshness and spontaneity.

Do you always do a scratch vocal with the band?

Almost always, and sometimes I’ll even do a final vocal with the band. On American Myth there were a couple [of basic tracks] with final vocals. On this one I don’t think there are any.

I heard the studio in Brooklyn was really nice.

That’s probably my favorite studio I’ve ever been to. It’s one thing to have great gear, which they definitely have—but the most important thing to me is the space; not only how it sounds, but how it feels. It has this beautiful, skinny long room with all this light coming in from the windows on the outside and it’s great-sounding, and they have lots of great instruments.

You have no compunction about going into a studio and picking up a guitar you’ve never seen and an amp you’ve never heard before and recording with it?

No, I love it! It's not like I’m a Fender guy and I have to play a certain guitar and amp combo.

Hey, it says on your albums you play Gibson guitars!

Well, yeah, I am, because they hook me up! [Laughs] But if the Les Paul through the Vox doesn’t sound right for the song, I’ll use the Strat through a different amp or whatever…

And then not tell Gibson!

Of course not! [Laughs]

Where did you get your gear knowledge? I gather you’ve been recording forever.

I’ve been an avid home recordist since around senior year in high school. I started out with a [Teac] Portastudio and then I used to get little quarter-inch reel-to-reel machines and sync them together. I’d record on one, bounce it to the other one and keep bouncing back—to multitrack.

Hey, it worked on Sgt. Pepper!

There you go. I’d sit in the garage and do that. I had a crappy little mixing board and I’d learn how to bus things out of the mixing board to get four tracks on one track. Then Pro Tools came along and that was amazing. I was kind of late getting into Pro Tools because I was so used to knobs on a mixing board, but I eventually got an Mbox and I started doing demos on that. Then I realized I wasn’t really satisfied with the process of using that, so to this day I still use the Tascam, too.

Did you have your own studio?

No it was just a bunch of stuff piled in my living room. A lot of this stuff here [at Mission Bells].

How did you know what to buy and how to use it? Osmosis?

I read a lot. Things like Tape-op [an ultra-dweeby tech mag]. Also, using other people’s stuff. Most studios had certain pieces of equipment, and you learn that way.

It must be an advantage to be able to articulate what you want to an engineer.

Definitely it’s helpful if you can speak that language. You don’t have to say, “I want it a little more ‘purple.’” [Laughs] I can say, “Let’s use a 20:1 ratio on the compressor and input gain high; output—squash it.”

How does your early stuff sound to you now?

Like shit! [Laughs] No, it is what it is. Rusty Nails was done on a one-inch machine and even some ADAT. Sweet Somewhere Bound was done on ADAT, and Gone Wanderin’ was basically done on an Mbox. It turns out that I prefer tape, and it’s not just the sound of tape—because Pro Tools sounds so good now you can get it to sound any way you want—but the workflow is completely different. I like the fact that on this Otari MX-70 [multitrack tape] machine there’s 16 tracks and track 3 is fucked up; in fact two tracks are broken. So you have 14 tracks to work with, so everything counts. I like to commit things to tape. Committing yourself to a certain thing, like a reverb or effect, is helpful because then you build around that initial color. It’s like building a painting. If you put a giant thing of red in the middle—oh, you’re screwed now! [Laughs]

“Oh, this is going to be one of the red paintings.”

Right! You build around it. I like that. Because otherwise it seems ambiguious. I love Pro Tools, because it’s a life saver, but I hate it because you can sit there and wank on the guitar for 40 tracks and never have to make any decision about it. At some point you have to erase them and get one part that’s right. If you’re working with tape it forces you to do that. Tape is definitely more expensive than hard drive space, of course, but it’s still worth it to me.

When you were going from city to city adding parts to the album, had you plotted out: “Well, this song needs another acoustic guitar and an organ and this one needs a backup vocal?”

To a certain extent. We had roughs that we listened to and we’d decide what we needed to do, and because our time was so limited, we had to be fairly serious about sticking to what we wanted to do. We had an agenda and decided what we had to do on the road and what we could do once we got back. Like, we knew we wanted Larry Campbell to play violin on “Shaken,” and we knew we’d do that in New York because he lives there and we were going to be there for however many shows with Phil.

Did playing any of these tunes with Phil affect how they came out at all? You played “Ball and Chain” a few times with Phil…

That’s true, but we actually did the recording before I started playing it with him. Or the basics at least. Phil had the roughs of some of the songs and that’s how he learned them.

What’s the experience of playing in Phil & Friends been like for you?

It’s been great! It’s super-tiring and it’s a lot of work. It’s a really different way of playing music and it’s really interesting.

I would imagine it’s done things for your guitar playing.

Are you kidding? [Laughs] You have to step it up! Larry Campbell’s out there and all these guys are such great players, I can’t fuck around now. I’ve gotta really try and do something. I’m a glutton for punishment. I don’t mind getting my ass kicked by Larry every night because I’m learning so much from him; I’m stealing all his licks! [Laughs] It’s humbling.

Is it still fun to do even though you’re on the eve of the release of your own thing? You’ll probably be going back and forth working with him and your own band and whatever.

It’s definitely fun because the two projects are intertwined at this point. We’ll do some of these songs with Phil & Friends and they’ll have that vibe, and then I’ll do them with my band and it’ll be different. But the song is still the song; just a different cast of cretins. [Laughs]

I love playing in Phil & Friends. Playing those Jerry songs… I kind of feel like I love a lot of those songs like they’re my own songs, and I want to treat them as if they were mine.

You’ve certainly connected with “Sugaree.”

Yeah, that’s a big one for me. I love “Sugaree”!

What is it you love about it so much?

It’s a perfect soul song. I see it as a very bluesy and soulful tune.

What do you think when you have to perform some of the more lyrically abstract songs, Like “China Cat” or even “St. Stephen”?

I love “China Cat”! And “St. Stephen” to me just fuckin’ rocks; I love playing that song. It’s only abstract in certain parts—in the sort of B-section part, like “lady finger…”—and Phil sings that. But that’s part of what makes it a great song. If it was just the rock part it would still be a great song, but then all of a sudden there’s this weird part that adds so much to the overall song. “China Cat I love because the groove is so infectious and the way the parts go together is really cool.

So you’re committed to working with Phil & Friends though the rest of the year?

I am. We don’t have the final dates for the year, but there will be summer stuff around and after Bonnaroo and then some fall dates as well. And by the end of the year I’ll pretty much be dead, because my band is also doing a lot of stuff in both the spring and the summer. [Laughs]

I noticed quite a few Dead Heads at your band’s Great American Music Hall gig [in December], so it seems like you’re attracting some of that crowd to the base you already were building.

It’s great. I love it. I really want to make the right move and still play some Dead songs in the shows with my band, because there are a bunch of songs I feel really close to. “Sugaree” is definitely one of them, of course. In fact, at this point in time it’s probably my favorite song. I also really like “Bertha”; I’m not sure why.

What I figured out about that song a number of years ago is that it’s basically a bluegrass tune.

It is! But with a straight beat, and then it’s got that half-time feel at the chorus; it’s great.

So do a lot of your friends think you're a freak for playing with Phil: “What are you doing with that old hippie?”

No, everyone’s been really supportive. Some of them don’t really know what it is before they hear it. And I guess I was in that category, too. [Laughs] But most people are really stoked.

Was playing ten shows in one place[the Nokia Theatre in NY last fall] an interesting experience?

It was. It was really cool. It sounds great in there. You’d think it would be easier because you don’t have to leave and go anywhere, but what happens is Phil just makes the shows longer! You leave the show, you get back to the hotel and you get up at noon…

And then there are the famously long soundchecks.

Right, like a two-hour soundcheck! You wake up, “Shit, I gotta go to soundcheck!” You end up being there for like eight hours—it’s like working a 9 to 5 job except it’s even more stressful and tiring! [Laughs]

Well, that’s what you get for playing in a band with a medical marvel.

I don’t know how he does it, lugging those big basses around. I’m choosing the lightest guitars I can. It’s been really cool, though.

Are New York fans crazier?

They definitely wait outside longer and through more weather before and after the show. But they’re really nice and they seemed to take a liking to me, which made me feel calmer. With a lot of these Phil shows I feel like I’m trying out for the Lakers every night, because I don’t know these people and I’m going to sing a lot of these songs they love so much and I don’t want to let ’em down. So it’s a lot of anxiety for me.

It doesn’t show.

Well, then I’m a good actor. But I think I got through to them.

What’s the story with the Skinny Singers?

Well, it’s me and Tim [Bluhm], my partner in the studio and it’s all songs we’ve written together. Tim is one of my favorite songwriters of all time, and a great musician. I was a fan of the Mother Hips and we were both in New York—he was playing a solo show and we were there and had the night off, so I went to see him at this little coffee shop called Jack Stirbrew and they had him sitting in this little window. We had never met but we’d talked on email, and afterwards we went out for pizza and beer and we’ve been friends ever since. It turned out we were both into home recording, and it turned out we both had Tascam one-inch machines, and at the time I lived in Sacramento and we started recording at my house there and at his house in Sacramento and we decided we’d get a space together.

Did you feel like you’d gone as far as you could go in Sacramento?

I have nothing against Sacramento. I just wanted a change of… More than a change of scenery, I wanted a change of attitude and that’s a big reason I moved to San Francisco. It seems like I run into a lot of creative people down here, a lot of musicians; there’s so much going on.

I’ve been to every great restaurant in Sacramento, but I haven’t even been to a quarter of the great restaurants in San Francisco. That’s something I like to do. [Laughs] But most of all it was this studio, which was called Wide Hive Recorders, which did hip-hop records, I think. Before that I think it was a bank. It’s been really great for us. For a low-end studio we get a lot of people working here.

I have a couple of questions about your deep, dark past. I know your mother is Japanese-American. Is Asian culture anything you identified with growing up?

Not really. My grandparents on my mother’s side basically came over from Japan and worked in the sugar cane fields in Hawaii before ending up in California, and they were fairly traditional.

Were they in the internment camps?

Yes, they were. But my mother married a white guy and culturally she was always more tuned into American culture. I mean, she grew up in San Francisco and used to go see the Grateful Dead, so she was pretty Americanized. But I like Japanese things, sure. I really like Japanese stationary. [Laughs]

When you were growing up in the foothills of the Sierra [in Eastern California], did any of that Western vibe seep into your life? I mean Placerville [where he went to high school] was a Gold Rush town.

Right, it was called Hangtown. Oh yeah, you can’t escape it up there. It was kind of neat to grow up in an Old West kind of town.

But it didn’t make you predisposed to like country music or anything…

No, because most kids didn’t. Honestly, most of the suburban and rural white kids seemed to like rap.

You were born in 1980, so when you were about 12, which is a formative time usually, is that like Nirvana and Pearl Jam and all that?

Nirvana and Pearl Jam and rap. I was really into Pearl Jam growing up. Then, later, when I got out of high school, I discovered ’60s music and then moved backwards from The Beatles, Zeppelin and Stones, and then when you get into that and you’re sitting around reading liner notes, you say “Who’s Willie Dixon?” and then you find Muddy Waters and wow—I became this guy really into the blues. Then I got into old-time folk stuff like Doc Watson, and also bluegrass.

Who are some of the people who influenced your guitar style?

I’d say definitely for a lot of the fake flat-picking that I do—because I’m not that good at it—Doc Watson. For the bluesier stuff, Buddy Guy. I used to go see him play in high school. I couldn’t drive and so I’d drag my friends with me and make them drive so I could see him play. I’d be saying “This guy rips!” with all the 50 year-old drunk guys. [Laughs]

There was a moment at a recent Phil & Friends show when you and Larry were playing some blues tune that I thought you guys sounded little like Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop in the Butterfield Blues Band.

I can see that. I had a couple of Butterfield albums.

I think it’s time for you to do “East West.”

That’s a great song, for sure!

You could have the harmonica goin’…

With the harmonica mike! I had one of those with Phil & Friends but the sound guys thought it was too hard to control. I’d love to use it on “Caution.”

Your keyboard playing is an underrated part of your game. Who were your influences there?

I was really into Tumbleweed Connection-era Elton John, but in terms of playing, every blues lick I know I learned from Ray Charles. I found these vinyl records in my basement, and the first one I put on was The Genius of Ray Charles and I was like, “What the fuck is this?” [Laughs] I was totally thrilled that there was this kind of music. This is before I’d heard Buddy Guy. Before that I was sort of playing pretty piano stuff.

Did you have formal piano lessons?

Only for about three months. I always played by ear, sort of figured stuff out, so I put on this record and it was a revelation: “Oh, I see—you have to slur that key; it’s like bending a guitar note, but on piano. That’s rad, man!” So I just sort of copied Ray Charles. Later I got into Herbie Hancock jazz, some of the funkier stuff, but I’m not really good enough technically to pull that off. I understand it from the ear perspective but those guys are just so damn good.

What sort of cache did playing in bands give you in high school and a little beyond? I remember thinking that my high school friends who played in bands were very cool.

Well, for a long time most people didn’t really know that I played because I kind of kept it to myself. People thought I was a decent guitar player, but I wasn’t trying to play Green Day or whatever was popular at the moment. Instead I was trying to like Doc Watson: “That’s stupid, man.” “No, it’s not stupid it’s actually really, really hard!”

I had a Spanish teacher who had mandolins in his class, and banjos, and I’d sit there during breaks and try to figure out stuff on them. He’s the guy who got me into bluegrass and gave me all these tapes, and I’d sit there and try to learn these licks: dit-dit-di-di-dit-a; rewind play it again, over and over. So to answer your question, being into that kind of music didn’t get you laid in my high school. [Laughs] It wasn’t cool. But it was what I liked and it’s what moved me. I wasn’t moved by most of what was on the radio.

What’s the earliest song that you wrote that you still play?

Gee, I don’t know. Probably “Rusty Nails.” There were a few songs from before that that we used to play; but I can’t even remember what they are now.

When you perform a song, do you tend to get in the space in which it was written, or do they evolve with you?

They totally evolve.

Does it sometimes seem like a different guy wrote them?

Absolutely. I don’t even remember writing “Gone Wanderin’” any more. It seems like I’ve known that song forever. Songs always take on different flavors when you play them a lot over many years. And sometimes we’ll purposely change things so that they sound completely different than how they were originally written. That’s fun, too. “Tell me Mama” is one. That used to be like this fast jump tune, and now it’s become like a Ray Charles blues.

Has your life gotten crazier as you’ve become more successful?

I wouldn’t say “crazier.” But between doing interviews and being on the road and recording and helping out on other people’s projects and any sort of promotional activity, like a radio visits, it’s much busier and its harder to find time for yourself—not just to write but just to be by yourself.

I’ve been painting a lot lately. I was into painting a number of years ago. I just recently learned that Jerry Garcia painted; I didn’t even know that. So I was looking at some of his stuff online and it’s good. So that partly inspired me to get back into it.

I dated a girl who was a really good painter and I liked watercolors and she was an oil snob and she told me that watercolors were for wimps—“You just don’t get the right colors.” And I was like, “Oh, OK.” I couldn't really argue with her because she was really good. She turned me off to it. So I’m into watercolors now. [Laughs] Now that I don’t see her, I’m like, “Fuck you, I happen to like that they’re messy and you can see through them!”

How often do girls come up to you and say, “I know you wrote that song about me.”

Never, because I hide it really well, so they’ll never know. They can assume whatever they want but if they ask me I can say, “God, aren’t you egotistical?!” [Laughs]

* * *

For tour dates and news about Phil & Friends, go to www.phillesh.net. For news about Jackie’s concerts (plus lyrics, merchandise—musical and otherwise—and a whole bunch of other cool stuff) go to www.jackie-greene.com.

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These are exciting days for Phil Lesh & Friends singer/songwriter/guitarist/keyboardist Jackie Greene. Not only does he have a truckload of dates with that group planned for the spring and summer, but he just released his much-anticipated new album, Giving Up the Ghost (on the 429 label, a subsidiary of Savoy) and will also be playing shows all over with his fine solo band.
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Jackie Greene: New Album is Out; Touring with P&F and Solo


By Blair Jackson

These are exciting days for Phil Lesh & Friends singer/songwriter/guitarist/keyboardist Jackie Greene. Not only does he have a truckload of dates with that group planned for the spring and summer, but he just released his much-anticipated new album, Giving Up the Ghost (on the 429 label, a subsidiary of Savoy) and will also be playing shows all over with his fine solo band. More »

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Jackie's Sugaree from the Deadheads from Obama show was fantastic. I can't stop listening to it.
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17 years 5 months
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Jackie is for real. Phil has done himself & his band as well as Jackie's carreer a beneficial benefit by having him join forces. He will be around for ages to come. I was a slight bit miffed by Bobby's apparent unencouraging behavior towards him, during the special show they all did for that political thing for that politician dude...BUT, twat do I know?
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Went with my wife and a couple friends to see Jackie at the Aladdin Theater in Portland last Sunday and enjoyed the show immensely. My first Jackie Greene solo show, saw him first with Phil earlier this year at the Crystal, and am glad I got the chance to see him do his solo stuff. Of course, one of the highlights was Sugaree, cool to see him connect so well with that song. You could feel the energy in the place go up as he was rocking that song out. Can't wait to see him next time he's in town...
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...more about Jackie Greene and his growing talent - great interview! I especially like reading about the influence of Doc Watson. Also "fake flat picking" - I sure know how that feels - when talking about the wizardry of Watson. Watch for his band to come to your town. And you owe it to yourself to listen to Phil and Friends - this is one hot music makin' bunch imho - Shalom
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SHONINSFJ.C smok's point blank. If anyone can say thay saw eveeen a half-way smokin show.I'lltellyou to stay off the booze.
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17 years 5 months
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And your point is what, shoninsf? Fourth time could be the charm....
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17 years 5 months
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Awesome article, Blair and kudos for being on this "bus" from day one. Greene is one of the best guitar players I've seen (and I've seen a few over the years). I've been absolutely thrilled by his addition to Phil & Friends, although I knew absolutely nothing about him until he played with the band, I'm embarrassed to say. I can't wait to see him again this summer! "Since you've all been such good boys and girls, I would like to take everybody in this entire audience out for milk and cookies. There are buses outside. Everybody follow me."
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Thanks blairj, really nice interview. Like GRTUD I'd never heard of the talented Mr.Greene until the DHFO show & was blown away. Thank you & Leave it ON!
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17 years 5 months
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I have seen Jackie twice now without Phil, (6 times with Phil, so far) in Santa Cruz, and just a couple weeks ago in Carmel, and I gotta say I have continued to be impressed. His new album really good too. I knew nothing about Jackie Greene till the min I saw him onstage with Phil in SB (and he was born in my hometown lol) after a few songs my friends and I looked at eachother "Who is this kid?" must hear more.... Can't wait to hear even more, happy to be seeing more shows this year, Warfield shows, Rothbury etc.... so glad Phil has these friends all year. Jackie... he's got "it" ~Sunny "The bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began.."
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Great interview. I, too, knew nothing about Jackie Greene until P and F and did the "who is this kid?" thing... OK, So the song labeled "Spots of Time" that Jackie sings with Phil: Is that his? Is that the right name? Is it on an album? Please help.
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The disc is fantastic from start to finish. We just got back from seeing Jackie at The Mountain Jam in Hunter, NY and he provided one of THE best sets of the entire weekend. I'm looking forward to seeing him with Phil and Friends in a few weeks. Keep up the great work Jackie and keep carrying that torch.
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Dead Freaks Unite... Saw Phil and Phriends last night in Chicago (6-13-08)... Not bad being there second time playing live together... Great second set with a wonderful 'Ripple'... to end the night... Jackie was great... I will have to check out his album... He sure does have a lot of energy... My wife now and years ago we wrote to 'Dead Freaks Unite'... I can't believe that its been 38 years ... and we're still writing and they're still playing...who would have thought... Peace... kcazzie
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Saw Jackie here in Missoula a month or so ago - Great bar show. Sugaree and New Speedway Boogie were the two Dead covers, and both were awesome. Merle Haggard medley, too: BIg City>Working Man's Blues. I sorta figured he just did Big City because it mentions Montana, and of course he got the big rise out of the audience that he hoped for with it... Animal was the highlight for me - totally rocked up and VERY heavy, unlike the album version. Much better live!!! Just puttin' in my 2 cents. "TIme is a stripper, doin' it just for you..."
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"..one good thing, one good thing, when it hits you feel no pain..." Jackie Greene can sing a bit, play some guitar, play some harp, play some keys, write some songs, play some slide...none of it hits me as particularly original, groundbreaking, or beyond solidly predictable and professional. But I don't remember the concepts of "predictability and professionalism" as being the solid foundation upon which open and free improvisational music is based! I don't find his guitar playing to be suited for free music, and I truly don't understand why he is even involved in a 'jam band' scene. He seems as competent as the next young guy at writing accessible pop music for radio airplay...but to be part of the grateful dead family, you have to show me more than just a casual friendship with Phil's kid, and a descent Bay Area gigging schedule for a 20-something! I wish Jackie all the luck in the world, but as long as he remains on Phil's stage, I will be a bit bored...just honesty here, no disrespect intended.
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I have to say that Jackie's little interlude with Ramblin' Jack Elliott at the Rex hoopla the other night was pretty darn sweet and kind of a nice tradition-passing icon.
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He definately added something special at nokia theatre with phil and friends. Amazing voice!