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!)
Hmmmm. I can’t locate a link for “Pride of Cucamonga” on the Dead.net website.
However, it is Phil Lesh’s birthday week, and therefore time to talk about a Phil song. “Pride of Cucamonga” is one of the several songs Lesh wrote with lyricist Bobby Petersen, and its road-oriented words fit in with the outlines of Petersen’s life spent out on the edge of an empty highway.
This song contains a number of biographical clues to Petersen’s life. The summary of his life included in The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics was written by Alan Trist:
Robert M. Petersen
Born in 1936, of a solid middle-class background in Klamath Falls, Oregon. In the fifties, he hopped freights, played jazz saxophone, and attended San Mateo College, in California, where he met Phil Lesh, with whom he later wrote several songs for the Dead. Sometimes, he lived on the mountain. He served time. He knew the lore of the West, its local and natural history. He practiced freedom. He bridged the Beat scene of San Francisco to the rock era, like his sometime companion, Neal Cassady. He was a constant presence in the Grateful Dead’s world, from its earliest days in Palo Alto. He published one volume of poetry during his lifetime, Far Away Radios. A posthumous edition of his collection poems, Alleys of the Heart, was published by Hologosi. Petersen died in 1987. He has one son, Didrik.
“Pride of Cucamonga” was never played live by the Grateful Dead. Since Garcia’s death, it has become a feature of post-GD versions of the band, introduced by The Dead into the live repertoire on June 15, 2004, at Red Rocks Amphitheater in Morrison, Colorado.
It appeared on side two of From the Mars Hotel, released June 27, 1974—which means the Dead debuted it on very close to its 30th birthday.
The lyric vividly portrays a life on the road, and seems to convey a sense of escaping one thing (“the northern sky, it stinks with greed”—a reference to the lumber mills of southern Oregon, perhaps) to fall prey to another (“and I done some time...”). There’s a sense that something better must be available—(“I think I’ll drift for old where-it’s-at...”), but that this might be a chimera.
The title was long a source of some speculation. I found references to it in Annie Lamott’s Rosie — but as a reference back to the song. I chased down the locale of Rancho Cucamonga itself. But eventually, I received a note via email, as I often do, letting me know that “Pride of Cucamonga” was indeed the name of a brand of cheap wine produced in the 1960s. Here’s the annotation:
Pride of Cucamonga: The label of a jug wine produced in the late 1960's by the Joseph Filippi Winery in Rancho Cucamonga. An article on the winery's website confirms that the label is being revived for a fine wine in its new incarnation. The article includes this paragraph:
“A Venetian immigrant named Giovanni Filippi founded his vineyards in 1922, and in 1934 with his son Joseph, made a name in table and altar wine. Joseph and his son Joey boosted production, creating a jug brand offering nine different varietals and a name so distinctive - Pride of Cucamonga - that the Grateful Dead used it in a 1974 song.”
That article is no longer available on their website, but they do seem to be producing a wine under the Pride of Cucamonga label.
I would love to find a vintage label from the 1960s, but no luck so far....
The song is a very catchy country tune, with tasty pedal steel by Garcia laid in, that takes a side trip into the blues on one of the “done some time” refrains. Lesh sings it with humor and grace on Mars Hotel, where his major composition “Unbroken Chain” overshadows “Pride of Cucamonga.” But I’ve always thought it a perfect example of what it is—a catchy County road song.
In some ways, this song fits in with the album title better than any other song on the album. You can easily imagine the song’s character taking a room in the old SRO hotel, on his way to somewhere else. Better, anyway, than the Graystone Hotel, a reference to a jailhouse.
The “bluoz” website has a photo from the San Francisco Public Library’s photo collection, and this statement:
The San Francisco public library historical photo collection has one single photo of the Mars hotel at 192 4th street at the corner of 4th and Howard, where the Moscone Center is today. 3rd and 4th streets near Mission and Howard was a low income area in the 60′s and 70′s similar to 6th street today and was demolished to make way for the Moscone Center in the 80′s
This photo is dated November 14, 1963, at the corner of 4th and Howard – S. F. News-Call Bulletin photo by Eddie Murphy.
I would include it here, but I try to respect copyright and only use photos that are clearly in the public domain, so you’ll have to go seek it out yourself.
There is a hotel in San Francisco’s Tenderloin called The Graystone Hotel. I can’t tell for sure if it was in existence when Petersen wrote the song—indeed, I can’t really tell when Petersen wrote the lyrics. It’s located at 66 Geary Street. So maybe that’s the place Petersen was referring to.
dead comment
Mars Hotel
then and now
Howlin' At the Blood On the Moon
Curly's cucamonga
Original lyrics
Out take recordings and pedal steel
Pride of Cucamonga
Phil me up
Red Mountain
"Think I'll sit down where it's at...
his tribal name is "stands too close to magnets"
A fine label
Great song
Thanks for the comments!
Serve Chilled
Drifting for Where its At
Pride of Cucamonga wine label from the 1960s
Search
Pride of Cucamonga Claret
Pride of Cucamonga wine
Pride of Cucamonga
Saw Dead&Co at Talking Stick Resort Amphitheater, Tuesday, May23, 2023. They performed Pride of Cucamonga and it was VERY WELL received by those of us in the audience.
Same was true for Unbroken chain and Scarlet Begonias. A youngster who was dancing in a group of like-aged folk directly in front of me stopped to shake my hand at the right moment in Scarlet Begonias while we both sang "strangers stopping strangers, just the shake their hand . . ."
Sorry, Nope
Got a bad dose from the lot? They didn't play Pride of Cucamonga or Unbroken Chain in Phoenix on 5/23/23. Check the setlist from setlist.fm. Or you can see an image of the band's setlist on twitter or facebook.
Saw Dead&Co at Talking Stick Resort Amphitheater, Tuesday, May23, 2023. They performed Pride of Cucamonga and it was VERY WELL received by those of us in the audience.
Same was true for Unbroken chain and Scarlet Begonias. A youngster who was dancing in a group of like-aged folk directly in front of me stopped to shake my hand at the right moment in Scarlet Begonias while we both sang "strangers stopping strangers, just the shake their hand . . ."
Got a bad dose from the lot? They didn't play Pride of Cucamonga or Unbroken Chain in Phoenix on 5/23/23. Check the setlist from setlist.fm. Or you can see an image of the band's setlist on twitter or facebook.