Showing posts with label cream puff war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cream puff war. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Cream Puff War - Grateful Dead Song Review

This song is a fun old school song that sounds like the very early Grateful Dead trying to emulate the British Invasion. I kind of can't take it seriously for some reason. It was released on the eponymous debut album which I think the Grateful Dead were still trying to find their identity in the studio (they were already a powerhouse live of course). The fact that Cream Puff War ends with a fade out gives you an idea that it is a bit of a filler song.

Don't get me wrong though, Cream Puff War is a pretty good tune. It comes complete with a time signature change to 3/4 (pretty nicely integrated actually) and a ripping bluesy Jerry solo.
It is notable because music and lyrics written by Garcia (one of only a couple Dead songs that I know of that Garcia wrote both music and lyrics*)

Those lyrics are ... interesting. Here is the first and most memorable line:

No, no, she can't take your mind and leave
I know it's just another trick she's got up her sleeve

It sounds like Jerry is singing to a friend who's gotten himself involved with a bad woman. Here are the final lines:

Well, can't you see that you're killing each other's soul
You're both out in the streets and you got no place to go
Your constant battles are getting to be a bore
So go somewhere else and continue your cream puff war

You know I'm a Jerry fanatic but since this review comes on the heels of Crazy Fingers, I just have to kind of smile as I listen to this one.

Cream Puff War
Song Rating on a Scale of 1-10: 7.5

*what are the other songs (if any) with lyrics and music by Garcia alone? Did someone once tell me Cryptical Envelopment falls in this category?

Disclaimer
: This is part of my review of every Grateful Dead song from A-Z. Music is a beautiful thing because it is so personal and subjective, so keep in mind that this is one man's opinion (and be sure to read my blog manifesto to understand a little more about where I'm coming from).

Friday, March 13, 2009

Grateful Dead Debut Album - Grateful Dead Album Review


This album holds up the test of time. The main thing I would say about it is that it doesn't really have the character of the Grateful Dead we have come to know. Rather it sounds like a typical rock band from this time period.

The album is almost... cute in this regard. If you listen to Sitting on Top of the World with it's funny little punches and immediate fadeout when the guitar solo begins, it sounds like music that would be in the background of an old dated commercial.

In my opinion, the bona fide highlights are:

1. The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion) - a summer of love classic. I've loved this song since the first time I heard it (on the Skeletons from the Closet compilation cassette of course). This song does sound a little "un-Dead like" in it's rushed delivery and cumbersome overdubs but I've always really loved this tune

2. Cold Rain and Snow - on Wikipedia it says this song is a Grateful Dead composition but I've always assumed it was a traditional tune the Dead appropriated. Cold Rain and Snow is a real favorite Dead song for me and I always crank it up and I also enjoy every incarnation of it through the years (getting slower and slower).

3. (Walk Me Out in the) Morning Dew - considering the rest of the tracks on this debut LP and how pop/commercial they sounded, this one had the musical swell at the beginning and a decent length guitar solo and therefore sounds like the Grateful Dead were sounding like themselves rather than just making "Top 40" A.M. radio music.

4. Viola Lee Blues - the highlight really of the whole record in my opinion. It has a nice fat jam in the middle, plenty of soloing - now this sounds like early Grateful Dead - the psychedelic acid rock jam band from SF. Viola Lee Blues is a really cool and catchy song and I wish that it would've been played throughout more of the Grateful Dead's career but I know that Phil brought the song back sometime after Jerry's death so that's cool to know.

The rest of the songs are pretty good too. It kind of sounds like Jerry is trying to hard to "sing" and he is over enunciating everything and who knows maybe he wasn't very comfortable being in the studio and singing with headphones on etc. His voice sounds unnatural but still I like this.

One time I think someone told me that Cream Puff War was the only Grateful Dead song that Jerry wrote all music and lyrics by himself. It is a pretty cool song but not a favorite of mine per se. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl also deserves a mention for being such a great Pigpen song.

I don't consider this to be a great Grateful Dead studio album, but then again I've never considered the Grateful Dead to be that great in the studio.

Grateful Dead Debut Album
Rating on a Scale of 1-10: 8.8

Disclaimer
: This is part of my blog that reviews all things Grateful Dead for fun. Music is a beautiful thing because it is so personal and subjective, so keep in mind that this is one man's opinion (and be sure to read my blog manifesto to understand a little more about where I'm coming from).