Archive for the 'Road Stories' Category

Dec 30 2009

So who is Rex?

Published by Buddy Cage under Road Cage, Road Stories

When Rex arrived in Marin mid to late 60’s, he was led over to Mickey Hart’s ranch in Novato. Mickey had this one horse with an attitude, most saw it as very dangerous, virtually un-ridable, loco…When one made the sightest attempt to approach this horse, it just went ballistic. Jackson heard about it and said, “Show me the horse.” Not well known outside of Pendleton was the fact that Rex possessed the rare quality of being a true horse whisperer. They don’t advertise.

Within minutes, he had that pony nuzzling up to him. Strange, mysterious to us but true.

THEN, we went overseas for the GD’s Europe 72 tour to open for them. The culmination was 4 days at the Lyceum theater in London. Everybody was having a ball, a celebration of our time together, sort of a milestone at that - conquering a foreign crowd and all. Backstage, there were some problems: seems like some irate Brit kids, four or five tough guys were creating a ruckus in the alley behind the stage. At certain loading docks, there are these sliding doors, they were hung on thick wire cables, steel rollers on these immense, steel doors. There were fashioned to slide sideways. Balanced, sort of… These doors were about 4 feet wide, impregnable but when banged on, they made a helluva noise! These street fucks were protesting their banishment by beating on them while the Dead were in the middle of their performance.

I was sitting on a stairway just to the left of the stage and was privy to the disturbance. Jackson jumped right into the problem, yelling through the door that if they didn’t ‘quit it’, there would be trouble. Well - so what, they must have thought - one crew guy, four of them and these HUGE fucking doors!!

Jackson stretched out his arms as if to measure the possibility of accessing these punks. His wingspan was just about the right size. He bent slightly at the knees, gripped the edges of the door and heaved! Up, and off the tracks, came that monster door. He carried the piece of steel sideways about two feet!!

The punks outside were frozen, watching this superhuman display from the other side of the door - they were speechless. Apoplexy? It might have occurred to one or two of them that given this incredible thing had just happened and now, there was nothing separating (protecting) them from the Beast who lifted this massive piece of metal! Duh…

Rex took stock of their hopeless position, stepped out into the alley and beat the living shit out of 3 of ‘em. The rest of the Lyceum security jumped into the slaughter and finished off these peckerwoods. Jackson just turned back around to the stage, sort of brushing his hands together as one would when a chore has been completed. Unforgettable…

I think I remember him almost cracking a smile.

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Nov 10 2009

Jamming at Festival Express on CC Rider Blues

Mr. Cage…

Correct me if I’m wrong, but having just seen the “the festival express”, that was u in one of the final jams onstage with… everybody.  I might have been 13 at the time, but we all heard about it (underground radio) and thought we could hitchhike,easily enough and catch that train from Minnesota. We were wrong. Yeah, there was no way anyone could have hitched a ride on that train - it was a private coach.


Uh, Todd - you seem to be referring to the Ian & Sylvia segment - CC Rider Blues, it’s called. Sylvia singing the lead. Tyson’s wearing the cowboy hat.

That was done at the Calgary, Alberta show. You perceived it as a ‘jam’ - okay, I guess there’s some validity to that. The personel in that shot (r. to l.) included myself, Garcia, Ian, Sylvia downstage singing lead, Delaney Bramlett, Jim Colgrove our bass player, and Amos Garrett our genius guitarist with the Strat. Onstage as well, were Danko, Bonnie Bramlett, Kreutzmann also…

As we took our stage positions, Jerry asked Ian if he could sit in  - Ian knew full-well Jerry’s relevance and warmly made room. Gar wanted to stand next to me cause he was crazy about pedal steel (obviously!) and wanted to see what I was doing. He had asked me to replace him on steel w/NRPS (relatively, newly formed at the time) back a few days at the Toronto show of the train tour and was still sizing me up. Plus he was FULLY a fan of Ian & Sylvia, knew all about the recent album we had recorded in Nashville and just wanted to be in on what we were cooking up at the time.

Btw, there’s really some neat attachments to that stage moment - you’re a writer, you should get a kick out of some of this…

Look at Gar, he starts chuckling - reason? Well, he just was hearing Amos playing the kickoff to our CC Rider (a stunning intro!) over stage-left and was looking at me like, “W-h-h-a-a-a-t the fuck???” You’ll notice me shrugging my shoulders indicating, “How the hell should I know how he does it??!”

Right after, GD played then Janis closed. I had to stay around to grok this whole production whilst Tyson was urging me to ‘get the fuck moving’ - he and Sylvia were sitting in the rent-a-short down on the tarmac beside the stage. I waived him off and said I’d take a cab back but brought my steel down and placed it in the trunk. Amazingly, he stayed! Wouldn’t leave me behind.

On the drive back, we had a formiddable crew in that car: I & S up front, me, our drummer (martial arts student) and one of the larger, meaner GD roadies Sonny Heard from Pendleton, OR. We were being dogged by a car containing 4 drunk, young Canadian cowboys making catcalls to Sylvia all the way back to the hotel (Calgary Inn). Every stoplight, these pricks pulled up besdie us and got in Tyson’s face, to which he calmly invited them to a street fight, conveniently just outside the hotel (where the cops were being summoned as we got out of the car).

As in a Hollywood script, I called to Ian as we came to a full stop, “The KEYS!” He, in SloMo tossed them over his shoulder while he was getting out, they magically sailed right into my left hand, I beat it out to get into the trunk, open my steel case and got a purchase on one of my guitar legs! One of those babies can pack more of a whallop than a skinny, 120 lb. hippie can. And when I spun over to the fight, fuck - it was over! Mere seconds. The 4 young cowpokes were unconscious, spread over the street!

Here I was, armed, full of adrenalin, blood-in-my-eyes and no place to go!! Janis had just arrived, saw my sorry state and invited me up to her room for a drink, ostensibly to settle me down and tell her what happened. It was the last I would see of her - she was gone, three months later.

Ian called me up in her room and asked me to come by his, for a moment. Seems like he had broken his hand in the fistfight - Sylvia and I had to call the house physician and get him to a hospital. The concern was that we had to shoot a pilot for an TV show in Toronto the next day! Ian’s a tough cookie…

Then they sent me back to Janis’ room…

Buddy

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Aug 31 2009

Village Gate, Gibson Maestro and the BossTone

Incidentally - I was doing my first NYC dates at the venerable, old Village Gate (Thompson & Bleecker Sts.)with Ian & Sylvia in 1969. I was tagging along behind our guitar player, the great Amos Garrett standing at those ancient cross-streets when he pointed out that we were located in what could be said to be the Epi-Center of Greenwich Village! Amos is and was infinitely more World-Wise than myself and I grooved on that remark. He said that we were a mere few steps from Dan Armstrong’s store & would I like to see it.

Sure. If Amos G. told me to walk on my hands with my pants down around my ankles, I would have tried it.

Around that time Dan was pushing the transparent, lucite/clear plastic body guitars and of course, other things, strings and so forth. I never used anything by Dan - wasn’t into anything but my trusty Jordan Boss Tone, didn’t have the inclination that many six-stringers have to get into stomp boxes. I never really experimented with such, till I inherited Jerry Garcia’s steel FX rig in 71. See, my Emmons steel was SO fucking cool sounding, so PURE (beat anything around for decades, still does!), my Twin was the best in the business - what the hell did I need FX for? It was and is a matter of pride for pro steelers to rely completely on their right and left hand techniques and pedal skills to ‘make the sound’. Kinda like a Tele player - no gimmicks, if you suck you will sound like YOU SUCK. A Gibson will make up for a lot of sloppiness - a Strat, somewhat. But only pick up a Tele when you don’t seek excuses - it’ll call you out and display your character defects VIVIDLY.
Garcia’s FX rig was set up by Healy to give him all sorts of psychedelic options: Leslie cab simulator (ho-hum), wah pedal, couple-a stomp mothers and the Granddaddy of ALL FX gizmos - a Gibson Maestro unit. This guy was set on a knee-high rack with about 12-14 different toggles much the same as the ones on a Lowrey organ.

There were the Rhythm/percussive punches, the fuzz tone buttons, some horn effects, a phase unit and VOILA an auto-wah that was JUST INCREDIBLE!!!! I used it for about a year till my technique got a tad shabby and I put it and all (including tank reverb on my Twins) away for a while so I could get my chops back. We were playing halls mostly so there was always an abundance of room ambience. There were so many 1/4 inchers going in and out that finding the ONE THAT WAS BAD became a nightmare. Add to that, we had a roadie who was a victim of too many LSD beatings when he was a kid, I guess and was prone to violent rages - a short fuse? The roadie would get all flustered, I could see the back of his neck getting red the more confused he became over which phone plug was the culprit! Benched him AND the offensive cables for awhile, put them on the Pleasure Crew till things cooled out.

We returned to the studio and I told the crew to bring out the Maestro. No such luck - it was GONE! Somebody made off with it. I asked Jerry & Healy but just got a negative.

Then, Gibson came out with the units Gar would use later on, and forever for his flange and such - the Bi-Phases?? Never got into those either. The only things I used for a long, LONG time were the Jordan and the MXR Phase 100, preferring it over the 90. That’s what got the sound on Meet Me In The Morning (BOTT/Dylan)

Hope you enjoyed Memory Lane.

I should get more of a chance to tinker with the unit you just sent me in Sept. We’re not working a hell of a lot this year due to the economy but when I get set up next week for a bunch of Master Class steel lessons I’m giving, I’ll let you know, Chris!! Thanks man…

PS/Our new cd Where I Come From has your remade BossTone ALL over it! www.thenewriders.com

bc

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Jul 23 2009

RIP John Dawson, Miss you Jerry

marmaduke

Dave Torbert, left, David Nelson, Mickey Hart, Jerry Garcia and John Dawson, circa 1970. Hart and Garcia, members of the Grateful Dead, played with the New Riders of the Purple Sage for a time.

The things I won’t get a chance to say anymore to some old pals – Wish that I could. Oh – the Things…

John Dawson died 2 weeks ago, Jerry Garcia passed through the Gate 14 yrs. ago, this week. I’ll never see them again. Guess my time’s comin’ too.

But the things I wish I could say to them right now would only SERVE ME! They’re dead. One of the items that drives me crazy! I’m fairly well balanced, for a human. I dealt with their imminent passing rather well. I got sober 20 years ago, no regrets – I’ve been able to live a reasonably happy life. I knew they were going away, it seemed only a matter of time. It’s not like they were snatched away through some tragic accident, or such. They seemed to be hell–bent for croakin’ the way they were trying to exist.

In the magical universe, I would like to tell McDuke that I loved him and Jerry, just one more time. To tell them how much their music has done for me, made a lifelong career for me. From the time Garcia asked me to BE a New Rider in 1970 on the Train, backed up by Nelson and Dawson, I’ve worked.

I’m sitting in a dorm palace at Virginia Tech w/NRPS, languishing with time off (no gigs!), backround music is Garcia – from early Dead to JGB. No use in waxing cynical, it’s Jerry Week and all the GD devotees are listening to old cuts with Jerry and pondering the moment. The Moment, and all the other moments since he left the earthly plane in 95. Too bad, so sad, really…Everyone misses him, the music he played and the way he played it, including me!

I never got to tell him how much his playing meant to me – it just kinda got lost in the business-of-Buddy-being-Buddy. Fuck. But he knew. He saw me, lots – standing behind his amp stack in the early seventies. He would finish a number, mosey on back to grab the cigarette he left burning on his Twin and see me standing there shaking my head, in utter astonishment. He’d smirk. “Smoke THAT, Nimrod!” Yeah, he knew…

Those memories count for somethin’…

He came up to me in the band office after they’d received copies of their album GD From The Mars Hotel. Excited as hell, he urged me to listen and give him some feedback. I didn’t. I let the moment pass. I did this with most of their albums after that – let it slip. I frankly wasn’t ready for what they were doing on the Cutting Edge – I didn’t deserve the ride. I caught up later on but ‘later on’ would prove to be too late.

Two guys who were of paramount importance in achieving great musician’s dreams! “I know you Rider, gonna miss me when I’m gone…”

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Jun 03 2009

The New Riders of the Purple Sage

Here are a few highlights of a recent in studio interview on Q104.3 FM New York’s Jonathon Clarke Show- “Out of the Box

The New Riders are supporting their first new Album release in 20 years - “Where I Come From” with radio interviews and special engagements such as the show at BB Kings room- Lucille’s hosted byDennis Elsas, the legendary New York disc jockey from WNEW FM. The New Riders are also appearing at BB Kings Blues Club (212) 997-4144 Thursday June 4, and the famed Stone Pony in Asbury Park, NJ (732) 502-0600 on June 6th. Call in advance for tickets as shows were close to being sold out as of today, 6/3. Tickets may also be available through Live Nation.

You can purchase the new album Where I Come From from itunes or at a show. After 20 years, its hard not to like the fresh but classic sounds of the New Riders of the Purple Sage aka Murdering Punks.

 
icon for podpress  Joining the New Riders, a long and strange trip: Play Now | Play in Popup

 
icon for podpress  Opportunity knocks, how I got introduced to the pedal steel guitar: Play Now | Play in Popup

 
icon for podpress  Where the NRPS come from : Play Now | Play in Popup

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Mar 23 2009

International Steel Guitar Convention

In the early 1960s a music store owner and a dyed in the wool steel guitar fan from St. Louis traveled to Nashville for the yearly Disk Jockey convention. He heard some amazing playing while there, but realized that none of that playing was to be heard on the records where, he said, “I heard only what the producers wanted me to hear. The players got to play only what the producers wanted them to play.” He told friends about the amazing music he had heard in some of the Nashville places, but many of the places were “dives” and most “tourists” didn’t feel like wandering in.

DeWitt Scott (”Scotty” to his friends) decided that the only way he could share what he heard in Nashville was to bring it to where he was. In late 1968 he brought Maurice Anderson, a steel guitar swing and jazz whiz, to St. Louis. 65 people showed up to listen. A few months later he brought the grand steel stylist Curly Chalker to St. Louis and 100 people showed up.

Over the next three years he did three more shows, with increasing attendance at each show. In 1971 he put on the “First Annual Steel Guitar Show” which played to 400 people.

When I became interested in pedal steel, I found out about the show. I was negotiating the writing of a steel guitar instruction book with Oak Publications, and I realized that one thing I must have in the book was photos of all the players. Where could I see them all in one place? At St. Louis, of course. I grabbed my Nikon and flew out for the 1974 show. It was like going to heaven.

Heaven

St. Louis is an hour behind the east coast. I left Philly at about 5 p.m. and got to the Hotel by 7 p.m. local time. I heard some music in a nearby room and walked in. I was stunned. Sitting in the room playing duets were Red Rhodes and Zane Beck. Watching them was the grand old man himself, Speedy West. And there I was, one of the six people in the room– just two hours away from my regular life. It was an amazing time. Starting on Friday night, there was a different steel player on stage every half hour. And when the show stopped at about midnight, it continued in the rooms. 550 people were treated to the best in steel guitar playing. The top Nashville players were there and playing what THEY wanted– not what they were asked to play.

I also met a number of the manufacturers there. Although there have been attempts at mass production, this instrument does not lend itself to such efforts. There are not many players, and the market for pedal steels is not large. Making pedal steels in certainly a low-volume business.

Most who make the instrument are themselves players who happen to be machinists or have good friends who are. At this time (1974), the market had been cornered by the Sho-Bud, Emmons, and ZB (Zane Beck) companies, but a number of other “low production” people were starting to show their wares.

With my background in industrial design, and my access to a machine shop at the school at which I was working, I had already had built my own pedal steel. The time at St. Louis was doubly rewarding– not only was I hearing great music and meeting great players, but I was meeting a number of makers and innovators. It was grand!

I had, in my previous musical incarnations, been to large folk festivals where the audience was, essentially, kept apart from the performers. If you had a favorite performer you wanted to talk to, it was next to impossible to get through the back-stage security.

Fun at St. Louis! Jeff Newman (right) and John Hughey in their “Cream of Crap” uniforms.
Jeff Newman and John Hughey

The bluegrass festivals I went to were a bit better, but most of the “big acts” retired to their air-conditioned bus when they weren’t playing, and there was little interaction between the performers and the audience.

That was not the case in St. Louis. Everyone was accessible to everyone else. We all ate in the same restaurant. I managed to discuss my book idea with both Jeff Newman (whose instruction records I had learned from) and Lloyd Green (”Mr. Nashville Sound”) whose friendship I gained over the next few years. Want to know how Buddy Emmons did that lick on that record? Just ask him!

I came home on a cloud.

The Chase on the right, the Park Plaza on the left.
The Chase-Park Plaza

I went back the next year. It was more of the same. This time it was held at a small hotel in St. Charles where the entire hotel was, essentially, booked by the convention. At about 4 a.m. on Saturday night the police showed up. They had a complaint about noise. Scotty said, “Who can complain? I have all the rooms!” Turns out one of the guests said, “I love music, but this is too much! I need sleep!” and called the authorities.

By 1976 the convention moved to the Chase Park Plaza Hotel and had 1500 people in attendance. The Chase Park Plaza was an amazing hotel. Actually, it was two hotels, the Chase and the Park Plaza. The Chase, “one of the most expensive hotels of the time,” was opened in 1922. The story is told that shortly after its opening a businessman tried checking in to the Chase. He was turned away because he was Jewish. In 1929 he returned, built a grand 29 story hotel right next door to the 11 story Chase, drove it out of business, and bought it out. The two hotels were joined by a series of internal passages. The Chase was showing its age. The Park Plaza was also getting old, but the opulence of it could still be seen.

It was here, and later at the Clarion hotel, to which it moved in 1984, that the International Steel Guitar Convention really came into its own. Now at the same location (with a new name: “The Millennium & Four Points Sheraton Hotel”) the Convention attracts 4,000 people every Labor Day Weekend.

A panorama around the hall, with vendor’s tables along the outside wall.
Convention hall panorama

The Star Wars Bar

Since I moved to New Zealand, I haven’t been to St. Louis since 1996, but I can’t imagine that it has changed very much. I’ve often described it as akin to the “bar scene” in the first Star Wars movie– where all species congregate in a place of “neutral ground.” I’m sure some of these folks would have little in common were they to meet on the street or worse, might even see the other as “enemy” because of their dress, habits, political affiliations and/or religious convictions. But here for one weekend in St. Louis, all is calm. You can find the very clean tie-and-jacket folks who believe that the steel is an instrument of the Bible because of the Biblical reference to “an instrument of ten strings,” deep in conversation about knee lever arrangements with someone who looks like a biker and is wearing a t-shirt that says, “I fuck Armadillos.”

Only at St. Louis.

It is, generally, not a young crowd, and gets older every year as few younger players are drawn to the instrument. It is much like the crowd seen at the Grand ol’ Opry in Nashville. As a performer said one year:

“What is the difference between Jurassic Park and the Grand ol’ Opry? Well, one is like an amusement park filled with extinct species and dinosaurs, and the other is a pretty neat movie!” It did not go down well.

Buddy Cage holding forth at St. Louis. Stoney Stonecipher looking on.
Buddy Cage

Sometimes, you just can’t tell… The last time I was there I was standing in the lobby having some dealing with the hotel staff. My wife saw a guy come in and she said to herself, “This person does not look like he belongs here”– waist length hair in a pulled back pony-tail, tie-died sleeveless t-shirt, several earrings, and lots of tattoos– certainly a biker and someone to avoid. Before she could even say anything to me, he headed directly across the lobby and grabbed me in a big hug. “Great to see you, Winnie,” he said. It was Buddy Cage– who I hadn’t seen in years. Buddy started his career with Ian and Sylvia in Canada and is best known for his work with The New Riders of the Purple Sage– the country rock band that was an offshoot of the Grateful Dead. That year he began playing at about 11 p.m. with a rock and roll band bordering on heavy metal. The older audience was not appreciative and the hall emptied quickly. Those who remained were treated to over an hour of magnificent steel playing.

Buddy Charleton playing for the crowd.
Buddy Charleton

St. Louis is certainly “big hair” time. Unabashed patriotism and Christian fundamentalism shine through. Over the years several players have announced their being “born again” from the stage, and a few years ago one player played a few patriotic songs like “America the Beautiful” and urged the veterans in the audience to stand and asked the audience to pay thanks to those who have defended their country in time of need.

My wife, a born and bred New Zealander, found the patriotic and religious display amazing and a bit “over the top.” Only in America.

On another level, you have the varying likes and dislikes of the audience. “Too much country,” say those jazz aficionados. “Too much jazz,” say the died in the wool country fans. “Not enough western swing,” say others.

The guests

Lloyd Green, me, Ralph Mooney, Herb Remington. 1994.
Lloyd Green, me, Ralph Mooney, Herb Remington

Over the years a number of “guests” have appeared, and Scotty had made no effort to give them any publicity. “This is a treat for those who are here,” he told me. “I am not in business to promote them to their fans.”

One year Ray Price showed up and had Buddy Emmons (who played with him years ago) back him up. Another year Porter Wagoner came with his band and did a guest set. Once, Waylon Jennings and Jessie Coulter played an hour long set on a Sunday morning, with steel great Ralph Mooney in the band. They were on their way to an afternoon “Labor Day” show and came by to let Ralph shine.

Vince Gill and John Hughey at the Award Ceremony.
Scotty on right.
Vince Gill, John Hughey, Scotty

The year that John Hughey was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame, country super star Vince Gill (who used Hughey on his records and many of his in-person shows) came to present the award, and stayed around for the afternoon, sitting on the stage playing back-up guitar for all comers.

To me, the best guest was way back at the Chase Park Plaza. I was there with my record producer, Ken Bloom, who had started off as a sax player in high school in Hollywood, and then branched into other musical idioms. He had always talked about his “idols” and one was Tex Beneke– the sax player who had taken over the Glenn Miller Band during W.W.II when Miller was killed in a plane crash. As much as Ken loved the playing of Tex Beneke, he had never seen him live, and was content to admire him via the few recordings he made.

On the Saturday evening, the old Bob Wills Western Swing Band came on, fronted by steel player Leon McAuliffe. McAuliffe announced that “a friend” was going to be playing sax with them for the set. It was Tex Beneke. Bloom was in seventh heaven!

It turns out that McAuliffe was walking though the hotel lobby when he spotted his old friend. They used to play with each other when they were in the service during the early part of the war. Beneke was visiting his in-laws and was staying at the hotel. “Have your axe?” asked McAuliffe. “Sure do,” was the reply. “Well, I’m playing tonight. Want to sit in?” And what a show it was!

The same year saw steel great Curly Chalker as the last player on Saturday night. Starting at about 11:30, Curly was well along the road of inebriation. Drinking a constant supply of “7 and 7″ he held forth for well over two hours. Some of those in the audience were upset that someone that drunk was allowed to be on stage in public. Those who were less concerned about his demeanor were treated to the most amazing music I have ever heard. All internal censoring-barriers were dropped, and whatever came into his head came out of the amp. I have never seen or heard such masterful playing of the instrument.

Jimmy Day
Jimmy Day
The “Big E”
Buddy Emmons

There was the time that Bobby Koefer played. Koeffer was a steeler who played with Bob Wills. Both Buddy Emmons and Jimmie Day were listening to Koefer in their formative years. As Koefer played both Emmons and Day were watching from the foot of the stage, grinning from ear to ear, poking each other and laughing when Koefer did something completely outrageous, and occasionally slapping their foreheads in awe. Where else can you have the “best in the business” be so thoroughly open in their admiration of another player?

And there was the time that Joaquin Murphy was lured away from his retirement in California to play a half hour to folks, many of whom had only heard of him. He was unreal. I was standing in the back of the hall listening when Lloyd Green sidled up. “Good, huh?” he said. I replied that he certainly had “that tone.” “Yes,” replied Lloyd, “you had to be there at that time to get it. It was something that happened at that time– just before the War. I learned all those tunes, and know all the notes, but could never get “that” tone. It was part of the gestalt of the pre-war times. I was a bit too late.” A most interesting observation.

The fun

Along the way, there has been a few funny moments: Jeff Newman putting a paper bag over Buddy Emmons’ head while he was playing (and Buddy just kept on… as good as ever!), Speedy West coming out and playing with a bar that was about a foot in diameter, and a number of other pranks and jokes. But there are two which do “take the cake.”

One year Jeff Newman was bragging about how “hot” he was, and he and Bobby Caldwell (the guitar player) got into a “jam” that ended in getting faster and faster. Then Jeff set off the smoke bomb under his steel, and smoke began to rise off his hand. At which point, Scotty ran out and doused it with a fire-extinguisher. But it was the wrong type of extinguisher. It wasn’t a CO2 one, but one that put out a blanket of fine powder. It got into all the speakers and into all the instruments on stage. In the end it was a real mess– little of which the audience saw.

The next year I was visiting Joe Kline on the drive out, and he said, “Look at this.” It was a beautiful Kline guitar that was made from pine and stained. It had strings, but no mechanism. The pedal rods all hooked into screw-eyes on the front apron. The fingerboard was painted on. It looked just fine– from a distance. I had an inkling that a major event was to take place.

At the convention that year Jeff played his set. He was playing a Kline. Jeff finished, carried off his steel and went back to get his pack-a-seat. At which point he was accosted by Bobby Caldwell. Bobby told him how much damage the stunt with the fire extinguisher did the year before. It got into all the controls of his guitar, as well as into the body. It was not fun. And then Bobby says, “I’m still hotter than you. I can cut you at any time. I can even do it on your own guitar.” The audience, knowing that Bobby is a closet steel player, went wild. So Jeff goes and bring his guitar out again– the pine Kline, of course. Bobby sits at it, Jeff takes up Bobby’s guitar, and the band launches into a fast number. Of course, Bobby can’t keep up. He says to Jeff, “I can still cut you,” and pulls out a snip and cuts all the strings off the guitar. Jeff is undisturbed. Bobby, exasperated, says, “I can still cut you” and goes off stage and returns with a bolt-cutter and proceeds to cut through all the pedal rods. Jeff is still undisturbed. Bobby says, “I can still cut you,” and goes off-stage– returning with a running chain saw– and proceeds to cut the Kline in half. ”

The funny part, to me was that half the audience laughed and the other half sat stunned… “He cut Jeff’s guitar in half!” It was a great little play!

So that’s St. Louis. And it all came about because of Scotty’s vision. Bless the Scott family for organizing it all.

For more information about the Convention, check Scotty’s web-site.

One response so far

Jan 15 2009

Good to see the classic stuff

Published by G Man under Golden Road, Road Cage, Road Stories

The key to the whole thing was the guy playing the Strat, stage left, wearing a brown vest over a short-sleeved, yellow/white striped polo shirt! THAT - is Amos Garrett.

When Tyson asked me to come to an I&S concert in Feb. 69, he wanted me to hear this new thing he had going - new way of writing, new music. Turned out to be one of the seminal folk/rock cum country/rock bands of that period. Great Speckled Bird, he called it.

He already had a steel player, Bill Keith (yeah, Bill of the Banjo!) but they hated each other. He had heard me playing with Ronnie Hawkins, wanted me and told The Hawk (and I quote) “When you’re done with him. I want him!”

Tyson’s a cowboy - a real one. He doesn’t fuck around.

I went to the concert, took my hippie girlfriend (the very epitome of what a hippie chick should look like!), I was loaded for bear. But what I wasn’t prepared for was this guitar player. Holy fuck!!!!! Up to today, I’ve never heard anything like this guy. Now, moving up the ladder to I&S was something but man…I would have done this gig just to carry this guy’s suitcase.

Jerry knew!

bc

PS/I was 24
PPS/Pix from the GSB album, recorded in the Fall of 69

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May 26 2008

from Bob Matthews – recordist for the Grateful Dead/Working Man’s Dead

Published by Buddy Cage under Road Cage, Road Stories

I think you have the right of it!

Friday May 23rd, (two days ago)  Jane and I flew from Oakland to LAX to see our son Carey’s standup comedy routine at the Comedy Store in LA (the Old Whiskey A Go Go on Sunset)  As I went through the metal detector in Oakland, the TSA security guy looked at the little NRPS logo on my long sleeve black merch shirt and said “Long Live Buddy Cage!”

Looking forward to seeing you in July. I hope I still get to play a tune with you guys

Love you, and a kiss to the wife

BassicBob

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