mr.arrison wrote:Justin from Queens wrote:
Why Neil Young?
I think Neil's worthy. He may be the real flip-flopper (backing Reagan, the invasion of Iraq) but when he's on my page, he's made me think about the world in a progressive way.
examples:
Rockin' In the Free World
Cortez the Killer
That last record
Southern Man
etc...
Compare and contrast with other artists from those eras:
Lynryd Skynrd: fucking hee haw redneck, insidiously racist bullshit
Eagles: fucking retarded, non-thinking music.
Jimmy Buffett: what-the-fuck-ever.
Led Zeppelin: Great band, but Immigrant Song wasn't really Pro-immigration. I can't call them lyrically challenging from a social justice standpoint.
Grateful Dead: Created generations of pointless hippies, drug addicts and noodly, nastacious music. Did they ever even play a fucking benefit? Probably not, unless it was for LSD, or junk food.
Actually, The Grateful Dead played more benefit concerts over their 30 years than perhaps any other band at a similar or higher level of success and have almost certainly raised more money for social causes than any other individual band. Your vitriol towards them clearly shows your own ignorance. Pointless hippies? To who? Certainly not to the hundreds of thousands who saw them over the years; many of whom were affected to such a degree that they radically changed their lives for the better in various ways. Did you ever actually go to a Dead show? Probably not because if you had then you would have found it filled with some of the nicest people you have ever met. My, what a high fucking horse you're on. Drug addicts? I hardly think they were singularly unique in that regard, and though hard drugs did follow and affect them the vast majority of their fans indulged in nothing but pot and psychedelics. You sound like the DEA for fucks sake... As for junk food, Garcia's well known weakness for it has nothing to do with anyone but himself. You need to get your head out of your ass mr.arrison.
Hyperbole you may think it is, but the Grateful Dead changed the world perhaps more than any other group of musicians in the last 40 years. Though you may not like their musical style, or the so-called Jam-band genre that spawned from them, singularly create it they did - a feat few other musicians or groups can claim. Not only that, but they also created, or at least allowed to coalesce around them, the entire alternative sub-culture of people known as Deadheads who would go on the road with them due to their almost non-stop touring and refusal to ever play the same set list twice (not even writing one usually, but making it up while on stage) or even their songs in the same way. Whether you liked this or not is beside the point: it was unique, original and though it got out of hand towards the end, the spirit itself was an echo of the restless, ever exploring spirit of their music. Then there is their eschewal of standard music industry conventions: quitting Warner Bros. in 1973 to go completely independent becoming perhaps the original DIY rock band; and for years unofficially, and then in 1984 officially allowing audience members to record their live shows for private use something that was considered commercial suicide by many, but has since been adoped by hundreds of musical groups.
The Dead indeed live on.