By David Dodd
Here’s the plan—each week, I will blog about a different song, focusing, usually, on the lyrics, but also on some other aspects of the song, including its overall impact—a truly subjective thing. Therefore, the best part, I would hope, would not be anything in particular that I might have to say, but rather, the conversation that may happen via the comments over the course of time—and since all the posts will stay up, you can feel free to weigh in any time on any of the songs! With Grateful Dead lyrics, there’s always a new and different take on what they bring up for each listener, it seems. (I’ll consider requests for particular songs—just private message me!)
Coming around again on that time in the Deadhead year, the Days Between, so I will continue with another Jerry tune or two as we think about the life he led and the music he brought to all of us. It feels just slightly liturgical somehow. There’s a topic on the WELL—the online conferencing community—in the Grateful Dead conference, called “This Day in Deadhead History,” and it’s an ongoing circular conversation about the shows and events on any given date. The topic in and of itself is an acknowledgment of the cycles inherent in the life of a Deadhead, and the Days Between is a major period of a week and two days marking Garcia’s birthday and the anniversary of his death.
So, it seems like a good time to look at “High Time.”
Truthfully, I am starting to lose track of what I have blogged about! So stop me if you’ve heard this one…but actually, it’s pretty likely I would write something completely different each time around, in the same way that I hear different aspects of the songs over the years.
“High Time” is an example of the kind of lyric that evoked a mirroring in Garcia’s music. It has a plaintive quality, both in words and music, and Garcia’s singing on the Workingman’s Dead track is ambitious, with its extended high notes.
Interestingly, this song generated not a single annotation for The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics. Nor has there been any discussion on the WELL’s “deadsongs” conference. But the bridge, at least, probably merits an annotation.
I was losing time
I had nothing to do
No one to fight
I came to you
Wheels broke down
The leader won’t draw.
The line is busted
the last one I saw.
The Workingman’s Dead set of songs, it seems to me, contains quite a number of archaic lines, or, at least, lines and verses that are set in some non-specific past of America. That’s what holds the songs together as an album. So in this bridge, we are given a picture of a team of horses who cannot pull a wagon. The wheels are actually broken, and the line itself is busted. The lead horse has refused to try to pull the cart. (“If the horse won’t pull you got to carry the load,” right?)
The character singing the song is lamenting the loss of his lover, and is trying to cope with his own flaws. He misunderstood the object of his affection when she told him goodbye. He has overloaded the wagon with too much hay. His efforts to convince both the lost lover and, more likely, himself, seem like they might well fail. His arguments are none too convincing—there is a resignation in his cheerleading efforts: “Nothing’s for certain / It could always go wrong.” And “”Tomorrow come trouble / Tomorrow come pain / Now don’t think too hard baby / ‘cause you know what I’m saying.”
I mean, is he or is he not trying to convince this woman to return to him? It doesn’t sound like it, really. The character singing the song may have a “ton of hay,” but what good will that do him? It just makes it harder to enjoy life, when one has to deal with too much success (“hay” being a synonym for bounty—“Make hay while the sun shines”). So he is having a hard time. (Another line from “New Speedway Boogie” comes to mind: “It’s hard to run with the weight of gold.”)
The “High Time” of the title is, at best, ironic. Look at the various “times” mentioned in the song: “High time,” in verse one. “Hard time” in verse two. “Losing time” in the bridge. “High time” again in verses three and four.
The essay about the songs on Workingman’s Dead on the excellent “Grateful Dead Guide” blog contains this information about the song:
Hunter & Garcia then tried their hands at an old-style country ballad, High Time. Hunter said, “For High Time, I wanted a song like the kind of stuff I heard rolling out of the jukeboxes of bars my father frequented when I was a kid. Probably a subliminal Hank Williams influence…a late-‘40s sad feel.” But later Garcia said that High Time was “the song that I think failed on that record… It’s a beautiful song, but I was just not able to sing it worth a shit.” (McNally suggests that Hunter wrote it so Garcia could play pedal steel on it. Live, that wasn’t possible; but Garcia does add some pedal licks to the album cut.) At any rate, High Time also went through some changes – live in ’69, it was very quiet, skeletal & wispy with a long instrumental intro, but was condensed to a more straightforward, poppy version for the album.
I have to disagree with Garcia there. I don’t think the song failed, and I don’t think Garcia failed in his vocal interpretation, although I understand what he means. I think the “failure” in the vocal perfectly mirrors the failure of the character singing the song.
Recently, two of my band-mates sang me a version of “High Time” at a party someone threw to surprise me. I was touched, and surprised at the bravery of the song choice. It is not an easy song to sing. That “Come in when it’s raining” line, alone, would challenge any singer. So the song has been on my mind for a few months now, and it’s sitting there as a possible song for my band to add to our repertoire. (We don’t do very many Dead tunes. Just “Wharf Rat” and “Friend of the Devil.”)
Who would be the perfect artist to cover this song? There must be someone with the kind of voice Garcia was hearing in his head. Maybe Hunter was hearing someone like Patsy Cline in that 1940s or 1950s jukebox from the bars of his childhood.
dead comment
Country song for the ages
Comes a Time
Low and Mournful
Who should cover it?
kazoo?
Kory Quinn and the Comrades
kinda suprised...
Holly, Liz, and Jim
The Jayhawks
Two voices
Good Bye
Ripple
Nice ideas all around
How about Lyle?
cover
The Possum
I'd love to hear every
William Elliot Whitmore
Maybe the relationship is in question due to his "high time"...
High Time
High time and who to cover it
1981
High Time - very OLD imagery
TO LAY ME DOWN & HIGH TIME?!
HERE'S PORTAL ENTRY #1 from my FB PAGE:
' MY G.D. FRIENDS PORTAL '
~WOW....where & how to begin?
~I find it very ironic that out of the 184 original GD songs, there's only TWO written entirely in a 3/4 timing,,,,that's musical jargon for those, like me, who know very little about this stuff,,,,,,but i know just enuff to stay in trouble!
~sorry kids, but this does require some audience participation!
Now get out your boombox & put on 'To Lay Me Down'. After Jerry finishes singing the intro 'To lay me down, once more, to lay me down', and he starts in with 'With my head....', you begin singing 'You told me goodbye, how was i to know'.....', & keep singing (along) that entire verse, observing your timing, all way to the end of the verse. Some very interesting, mysterious, melodic & lyrical interplay begins to take shape....
~'Let the world go bye......'
'You didn't mean good-bye, baby...'
~'To lay me down, 'one last time....'
'Living the good life, one last time'
~´To lay me down'.
~'Well I know'.
Two similarly themed tunes, I ponder, & musically woven together~
With this one, i put on a live tape one day, & during some non-vocal, musical passage, & both being in 3/4, i wasn't quite sure which song it was, TLMD or HT~ And so the task began. TRY IT!!
🕉
kenny at kslewitt@gmail.com
I just log in today
Great post. Nice to share with us. and happy to be here.
Great post. Nice to share with us. and happy to be here.
HERE'S PORTAL ENTRY #1 from my FB PAGE:
' MY G.D. FRIENDS PORTAL '
~WOW....where & how to begin?
~I find it very ironic that out of the 184 original GD songs, there's only TWO written entirely in a 3/4 timing,,,,that's musical jargon for those, like me, who know very little about this stuff,,,,,,but i know just enuff to stay in trouble!
~sorry kids, but this does require some audience participation!
Now get out your boombox & put on 'To Lay Me Down'. After Jerry finishes singing the intro 'To lay me down, once more, to lay me down', and he starts in with 'With my head....', you begin singing 'You told me goodbye, how was i to know'.....', & keep singing (along) that entire verse, observing your timing, all way to the end of the verse. Some very interesting, mysterious, melodic & lyrical interplay begins to take shape....
~'Let the world go bye......'
'You didn't mean good-bye, baby...'
~'To lay me down, 'one last time....'
'Living the good life, one last time'
~´To lay me down'.
~'Well I know'.
Two similarly themed tunes, I ponder, & musically woven together~
With this one, i put on a live tape one day, & during some non-vocal, musical passage, & both being in 3/4, i wasn't quite sure which song it was, TLMD or HT~ And so the task began. TRY IT!!
🕉
kenny at kslewitt@gmail.com