Along with contributing as a background singer, Donna Godchaux emerged as a co-vocalist on "The Music Never Stopped" and the vocal sections of the title suite ("Blues for Allah" and the two-pieced "Unusual Occurrences in the Desert"). Following the release of the album, he was officially reinstated as a band member shortly before the group resumed touring in 1976. He contributed to the songwriting of "King Solomon's Marbles" and played occasional percussion parts (including the recording of crickets heard on the three-part title suite). Percussionist Mickey Hart, who had sat in at the band's "farewell" concert on October 20, 1974, was invited to the sessions by Garcia and Lesh. We managed to finish the recording of Allah to our satisfaction, and took the tapes into for the final mix." Band soundman Dan Healy engineered the project, assisted by Robbie Taylor. ĭescribing the atmosphere, Lesh said "Bob's home studio was just large enough to hold all of us … with various guests, notably Mickey, David Crosby, and John Cipollina, coming and going. The first section was so-named by Lesh because, like the end of the Doors' " Touch Me", a four-note cadence was reminiscent of a contemporary advertisement jingle (unlike the Doors track, the Dead did not vocalize the slogan). However, later credits list "Stronger than Dirt" and "Milkin' the Turkey" as composed in two parts and combined to make "King Solomon's Marbles". Original credits list "King Solomon's Marbles" and "Stronger than Dirt or Milkin' the Turkey" as individual songs. Weir later used lyrics composed by his main writing partner, John Barlow. "The Music Never Stopped" began life as "Hollywood Cantata", a Weir-Hunter composition. "Crazy Fingers" sets music to Hunter's series of haiku. Bob had a beautiful guitar instrumental, 'Sage and Spirit', and one of his stompin-est self-congratulatory rockers, 'Music Never Stopped', to round out the album." Besides 'Crazy Fingers,' his marvelous essay in smoky ambiguity, Jerry also contributed a triptych of already written tunes ("Help on the Way", "Slipknot", and "Franklin's Tower") that would become, in live performance, one of our finest exploratory vehicles. Garcia said he was "creating scales that generated their own harmony in ways that weren't symmetrical in regular, classical major-minor relationships." īassist Phil Lesh recalled "Jerry brought in a strange, almost atonal melodic entity that would evolve into the title song and sequence for the album, and I had sketched out a little Latin-flavored, seven-beat instrumental number inspired by Shelley's poem ' Ozymandias' called ' King Solomon's Marbles'. Non-Western time signatures on some of the material added to the concept, as well as experiments with instrumentation, such as flute on the Bach-inspired "Sage & Spirit" (named for Scully's daughters). Thus, it's a little bit more difficult, and considerably more experimental." The main riff of "Franklin's Tower" was partly inspired by the chorus of Lou Reed's 1973 hit " Walk on the Wild Side." Ī discernable Middle Eastern theme emerged, supported by Robert Hunter's lyrics. Garcia explained "We're working on creating styles, rather than just being eclectic or synthesizing other styles. In creating material from scratch, the band were able to progress beyond the previous genres in which they had played. According to manager Rock Scully, this was in part an attempt by lead guitarist Jerry Garcia to ensure more involvement in the writing process from other band members. Rather than their usual approach of recording studio versions of songs that had matured on stage, the tracks were developed in the studio setting. In contrast to the commercial studios employed for their previous studio albums, the band used the studio that rhythm guitarist Bob Weir had built at his new home in Mill Valley, California. Conscious of needing a new album release for their independent label, the band initiated the project in January 1975. Recording īlues for Allah was recorded after the Dead began a band hiatus in October 1974. Blues for Allah was the group's highest-charting album until 1987's In the Dark, reaching No. 12 during a thirteen-week stay on the Billboard Album Chart. It was the band's third album on their own Grateful Dead Records label and their third studio album in a row. It was recorded February 27 – May 7, 1975, and released September 1, 1975. Blues for Allah is the eighth studio album (twelfth overall) by the Grateful Dead.
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