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Last
year, Aiyana Elliott made a documentary called The
Ballad of Ramblin' Jack about her father, folk music
legend Jack Elliott. Jack was interesting for two reasons – it told the story of
an important, influential figure most people had never of, but
it was also about Aiyana's dysfunctional relationship with her
dad. Without the former, the latter wouldn't have been as
remarkable, and without the latter, the former would have seemed
like a daughter's desperate attempt to win her daddy's affection
by portraying him as an unjustly overlooked icon.
And
that's just what Grateful Dawg is.
Directed by Gillian Grisman, the film is about her
father, David, a world-renowned mandolin player who had an
occasional side project with the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia.
The two made some great bluegrass music over four
decades, from nerdy jug-band standards in the '60s to a wildly
eclectic batch of tunes in the '90s, when Jerry bought the farm.
Yes, that's right - bluegrass music.
Deadheads beware: This isn't that crappy acid jam music
you need to be baked to enjoy.
It's crisp, toe-tapping stuff with banjos and upright
bass and lightning-quick finger-picking that resembles the tunes
from O Brother, Where Art Thou? more than what you may
ordinarily associate with the Dead.
Dawg,
which was Jerry's nickname for David, chronicles the careers of
both musicians, beginning with their meeting in the parking lot
of a 1964 Bill Monroe concert in Sunset Park, Pennsylvania.
A fast friendship based on mutual admiration was
established, giving birth to a band called Old and In the Way.
They were a hit at bluegrass festivals around the country
and their first and only record went on to become one of the
best-selling in its genre.
But by the time it was released, Jerry and David had
parted ways after a falling out that is never adequately
explained in the film.
David
and Jerry reunited in the late '80s (right around the time the
Dead had their big hit single on the charts) and began to record
their sessions together. By
this time, the two could have passed for twins, with each
sporting helmet heads full of crazy gray hair, t-shirts,
sweatpants and bushy white beards (David's wife called them
"beards of a feather"). Grisman, along with Dead
drummer Jerry Kreutzmann's son Justin, filmed as many of the
sittings as they could, presumably out of boredom (wait until
you hear the mind-numbing banter), and peppers the clips with
concert footage, stills and interviews with current and ex-bandmates,
family, and contemporaries, as well as the two subjects.
There
are some things that work in Dawg, like the portrayal of
Jerry and David as The Odd Couple of Bluegrass (one too
tight and the other too loose).
Grisman also lets each song play in its entirety, which
is a very refreshing change considering we're used to learning
about music history via five-second song snippets on VH-1's
Behind the Music. It's
a potentially detrimental move (and was David's only stipulation
to his daughter), especially when faced with songs like
"Arabia," which approaches 20 minutes, but is handled
remarkably well. She
also makes sure to offer a decent sample of the duo's diverse
music, which includes sea shanties ("Off to Sea Once
More"), reggae ("Sitting Here in Limbo"),
children's songs ("Jenny Jenkins"), blues ("The
Thrill is Gone") and Dead standards ("Friend of the
Devil").
But
there is plenty that doesn't work, too.
There isn't any mention of drug use, and Grisman only
hints around the fact that Jerry's non-stop commitment to the
Dead probably shaved several years off his life.
It's obvious that he saw his collaboration with David as
the ultimate escape from that awful music adored by passionate
yet smelly fans.
Dawg
is only 81 minutes long and includes every second of the only
Garcia-Grisman music video ever made (Jerry, dressed as a
gangster, looks just like Francis Ford Coppola).
In other words, there isn't much movie here.
Mostly it's just Grisman's daughter saying, "Look,
everyone. This is
the music my dad made with Papa Bear. Everyone loves Papa Bear, right? Well, you need to love my
dad, too." One
wonders if a film would have even been made if Grisman had
partnered up with a less famous sidekick whose die-hard fans
wouldn't scoop up as many movie tickets.
Even the film's press kit seems like more of a tribute to
Grisman (the fact that he was hailed as the "the Paganini
of the Mandolin" by the New York Times is mentioned
three times, and seven pages of his discography are included,
too). As a result, Dawg tries too hard to accomplish
something the music could have done on its own.
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