One of the greatest psychedelic albums
As the
second long-player by the Grateful Dead, Anthem of the Sun (1968) pushed
the limits of both the music as well as the medium. General dissatisfaction
with their self-titled debut necessitated the search for a methodology to
seamlessly juxtapose the more inspired segments of their live performances with
the necessary conventions of a single LP.
Since issuing their first album, the
Dead welcomed lyricist Robert Hunter into the fold — freeing the performing members to focus on the execution and
taking the music to the next level. Another addition was second percussionist Mickey Hart,
whose methodical timekeeping would become a staple in the Dead's ability to stop
on the proverbial rhythmic dime. Likewise, Tom Constanten (keyboards) added an avant-garde twist to the proceedings with various sonic
enhancements. Their extended family also began to incorporate folks like Dan Healy — whose non-musical contributions and innovations ranged from concert PA
amplification to meeting the technical challenges that the band presented off
the road as well. On this record Healy's
involvement cannot be overstated, as the band were essentially given carte
blanche and simultaneous on-the-job training with regards to the ins and
outs of the still unfamiliar recording process.
The idea to create an aural
pastiche from numerous sources — often running simultaneously — was a radical
concept that allowed consumers worldwide to experience a simulated Dead
performance firsthand. One significant pattern which began developing saw the
band continuing to refine the same material that they were concurrently playing
live night after night prior to entering the studio.
The extended "That's
It for the Other One" suite is nothing short of a psychedelic roller
coaster. The wild ride weaves what begins as a typical song into several
divergent performances — taken from tapes of live shows — ultimately returning
to the home base upon occasion, presumably as a built-in reality check.
Lyrically, Bob Weir (guitar/vocals) includes references to their 1967 pot bust ("...the heat
came 'round and busted me for smiling on a cloudy day") as well as the
band's spiritual figurehead Neal Cassidy ("...there was Cowboy Neal at the
wheel on a bus to never ever land"). Although this version smokes from tip
to smouldering tail, the piece truly developed a persona all its own and became
a rip-roaring monster in concert.
The tracks "New Potato Caboose" and Weir's
admittedly autobiographically titled "Born Cross-Eyed" are
fascinatingly intricate side trips that had developed organically during the
extended work's on-stage performance life. "Alligator" is a
no-nonsense Ron McKernan workout that motors the second extended
sonic collage on Anthem of the Sun. His straight-ahead driving blues
ethos careens headlong into the Dead's innate improvisational psychedelia. The
results are uniformly brilliant as the band thrash and churn behind his
rock-solid lead vocals. Musically, the Dead's instrumental excursions wind in
and out of the primary theme, ultimately ending up in the equally frenetic
"Caution (Do Not Stop on Tracks)." Although the uninitiated might
find the album unnervingly difficult to follow, it obliterated the pretension
of the post-Sgt.Pepper's "concept album" while reinventing the musical parameters of the
12" LP medium.

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