17 sats \ 7 replies \ @siggy47 2 Mar \ on: What's the best concert you ever saw? How about the last one you saw? Music
Wow. tough question. Lynard Skynard in 1976 is up there. The US festival. Pink Floyd Animals Tour. Led Zeppelin 1977. Rolling Stones a few times. Grateful Dead many times. Most recent was Dead & Co.
Envy. I prefer more complex music than the Dead. But 70's Zeppelin and Pink Floyd would be just...
reply
A friend of mine said you either have the Grateful Dead gene or you don't. I understand many people don't like them. I wouldn't say they weren't complex, though. Phil Lesh's bass lines are about as complex as you can get, and Jerry Garcia's lead guitar goes way beyond the basic blues scales of the other bands I mentioned. They even made this list:
https://www.ultimate-guitar.com/articles/features/friday_top_25_most_complex_songs_of_all_time-85527
Sorry if I got carried away. I'm just an old deadhead.
reply
I mean, yea, I can appreciate the Jethro Tull and ELO(?) and James Bond soundtrack allusions ... but mostly it just sounds like trying not to ever have any identifiable rhythm for as long as possible. Like many others in that list, complexity at the expense of melody. That said I bet a live show would be amazing.
reply
reply
8:30 Jethro Tull
10:20 ELO
12:15 James Bond
allusions aren't derivative in a negative way
As you might have suspected, the Grateful Dead songs I've heard are folky knee slappers such as Uncle John's Band. That is what I think of when I say not complex. Like, fall asleep in the elevator not complex. Your example is so complex it has allusions to way more than the 3 styles I mentioned, while not having a cohesive thread throughout, which is much like the conversations I've had at hippie festivals :D So I stand corrected, I see the Dead can get complex.
try
Snarky Puppy
Elephant Revival
TAUK
King Canyon
FORQ
Lettuce
Explosions in the Sky