Neal Casal was a fan of the Grateful Dead back in the
day, and a couple of years ago he put out a special Record Store Day seven-inch
of “Mountains Of The Moon” (which I was very excited to get, and am still
excited to have). And he recently has had the good fortune of playing occasionally
with Phil And Friends. It was from working with Phil And Friends that the title
for the first track came about. As Neal tells us in the liner notes to this
two-disc set, Phil told him, in answer to a question about a difficult musical
transition, that they would just hallucinate a solution. And so we have “Hallucinate
A Solution,” which becomes a very good jam with a sort of hypnotic groove that
becomes soothing, like the ocean. This track is approximately twenty minutes.
It’s followed by “Gilbert’s Groove,” a kind of slow groove with a bit of a
darker tone to start. But it becomes fun as it goes on. The guitar several
minutes in reminds me of the sound from something like “Estimated Prophet,” and
then much more strongly resembles “Shakedown Street” around eight minutes in
and again right at the end. The song’s title is a nod to Gilbert Shelton, who
did the artwork for the cover of Shakedown
Street, so there you have it.
“Kasey’s Bones” has a fun groove, with a kind of bluesy
rock base. It also has definite hints of “Casey Jones,” as you might guess from
the title. There is a bit of funk to it, particularly in the bass approximately
halfway through, and then the jam builds in energy, with the guitar especially
going wild. Toward the end it goes into spacey territory. And then “Space Wheel”
begins in spacey territory, before definitely dipping into a gorgeous, slow “The
Wheel,” sounding like those great versions from the 1970s. This track grooves
on that opening section of the song, not doing the full song, of course. It stays
in that sort of spacey realm, teasing and dancing at the edges, which is kind
of wonderful.
The second disc opens with “Ginger Says,” a song whose
title makes me think of the Velvet Underground (“Candy Says,” “Lisa Says,” “Stephanie
Says”). This tune features a slow, hypnotic groove, and has a bit of a “West
L.A. Fadeaway” feel at moments. That is followed by this set’s longest jam, “Farewell
Franklin,” which is twenty-five minutes. Based on its title, I expected it to
be basically a play on “Franklin’s Tower,” but it actually has something of an “Eyes
Of The World” vibe. And then it takes an interesting turn like fourteen minutes
in, led by Adam MacDougall on keys, going in a heavier direction. And the title
“Saturday’s Children” makes me think that track will be some bizarre
combination of “One More Saturday Night” and “Mason’s Children,” but it really
has more of an “Althea” feel.
The title “Scarlotta’s Magnolia” is a fun, playful
combination of “Scarlet Begonias” and “Sugar Magnolia.” At my first Grateful
Dead show, the band kicked off the second set with “Sugar Magnolia” into “Scarlet
Begonias,” and “Scarlet Begonias” was one I always appreciated hearing (though
it was many shows before I finally saw a “Scarlet”/“Fire” combination). This
track starts off with a play on that tune, and should get you smiling and
dancing, for it has a very positive vibe. And I love the bass. Then “Hat And
Cane” goes in a very different direction, toward songs like “Dark Star” and “Wharf
Rat.” The second disc concludes with “Mountains Of The Moon,” the only direct cover in this collection, and the one Neal Casal covered on that Record Store Day seven-inch. Here it is presented as an instrumental, and it sounds absolutely wonderful.
CD Track List
Disc 1
- Hallucinate A Solution
- Gilbert’s Groove
- Kasey’s Bones
- Space Wheel
Disc 2
- Ginger Says
- Farewell Franklins
- Saturday’s Children
- Scarlotta’s Magnolias
- Hat And Cane
- Mountains Of The Moon
Interludes For The Dead was released on November 27, 2015.
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