- - RIP Phil Lesh
(https://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=355593)
JohnnyHammersticks
10-25-2024 02:39 PM
RIP Phil Lesh
"May the four winds blow you safely home"
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-theme="dark"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Phil Lesh, the Grateful Dead's co-founder and bassist, has died at age 84.<br><br>"Phil brought immense joy to everyone around him and leaves behind a legacy of music and love."<br><br>More on his life and music legacy: <a href="https://t.co/1hDBlXJc7x">https://t.co/1hDBlXJc7x</a> <a href="https://t.co/fAx2cMoz4d">pic.twitter.com/fAx2cMoz4d</a></p>— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) <a href="https://twitter.com/RollingStone/status/1849902751561494902?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 25, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
SD15
10-25-2024 03:11 PM
R.I.P.
A great musician! Very sad.
Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 03:26 PM
Just a box of rain. So long Phil. See you on the other side.
Such a long time to be gone and a short time to be there.
DrunkBassGuitar
10-25-2024 03:31 PM
Damn RIP to a real one
Smed1065
10-25-2024 03:34 PM
RIP
FlaChief58
10-25-2024 03:34 PM
RIP
PHOG
10-25-2024 03:37 PM
RIP
stumppy
10-25-2024 03:50 PM
Damn, damn, damn, I'm gettin old. RIP
Brody Wa
10-25-2024 03:53 PM
Rest in peace Phil. You’re up there with Geddy Lee, Dusty Hill and John Paul Jones as my favorite Bass players.
scho63
10-25-2024 03:55 PM
My brother, a huge fan, has the sads today.
threebag
10-25-2024 04:06 PM
RIP
Why Not?
10-25-2024 04:19 PM
Legend. RIP. I wonder how many more years before all the musicians of my youth/early adult years are gone?
Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 04:43 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Why Not?
(Post 17763905)
Legend. RIP. I wonder how many more years before all the musicians of my youth/early adult years are gone?
Not long.
srvy
10-25-2024 04:56 PM
RIP to a great one I wasn't a huge Dead fan but Phil was a great Bass player with some incredible runs that I always took note of and listened to. Today Heaven gained a great bass player.
American Beauty is a masterpiece.
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Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 05:06 PM
Phil sang lead on a handful of songs. The only ones I can think of off the top of my head is:
Box of Rain, which is the most common.
Unbroken Chain
Wild Horses
R Clark
10-25-2024 05:17 PM
RIP
siberian khatru
10-25-2024 05:36 PM
I’ve told this story before but my dad’s co-worker/friend and his wife were huge Deadheads and for my 13th birthday they picked me up after school and took me to a Dead concert, then let me spend the night at their townhome and then took me to school the next day. It’s one of the signature moments in my life.
WilliamTheIrish
10-25-2024 06:52 PM
Saw them at Red Rocks in 1978. So young at the time, I wasn’t really aware of what I was seeing.
I had read the Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test as a freshman in HS so I was aware of all the acid and shrooms going on around me. Still the greatest venue I’ve ever had the pleasure to hear a show.
And it was The Dead. Travel quickly to the next studio.
phisherman
10-25-2024 07:19 PM
May the four winds blow you safely home, Phil. RIP. Huge loss, the dude was one of the greats.
JohnnyHammersticks
10-25-2024 07:50 PM
Phish just opened tonight's show with Box of Rain. Figured they'd pay homage at some point, but nice to see it was the opener.
Holladay
10-25-2024 08:07 PM
Quote:
RIP to a great one I wasn't a huge Dead fan but Phil was a great Bass player with some incredible runs that I always took note of and listened to. Today Heaven gained a great bass player.
Not a Dead Head, so my opinion means nil. But in that vid, dude can't sing. I know nothing but listening to that track listed.
Still RIP. No ill will....
phisherman
10-25-2024 08:26 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Holladay
(Post 17764119)
Not a Dead Head, so my opinion means nil. But in that vid, dude can't sing. I know nothing but listening to that track listed.
Still RIP. No ill will....
His lead vocal tunes were a novelty and loved by fans but they all knew he wasn't even a decent vocalist. They just loved to hear Phil sing once in a while. He was a virtuoso on bass, listen to any Dark Star from 1968 to 1978 and tell me he doesn't make the instrument sing.
Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 09:09 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Holladay
(Post 17764119)
Not a Dead Head, so my opinion means nil. But in that vid, dude can't sing. I know nothing but listening to that track listed.
Still RIP. No ill will....
I totally get what you're saying and I felt that way when I started getting into the dead and heard the one or two songs that he does. But because it was as stated, a novelty, we would ****in go nuts whenever they played box of rain....cuz you know.... Phil
Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 09:10 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by phisherman
(Post 17764131)
His lead vocal tunes were a novelty and loved by fans but they all knew he wasn't even a decent vocalist. They just loved to hear Phil sing once in a while. He was a virtuoso on bass, listen to any Dark Star from 1968 to 1978 and tell me he doesn't make the instrument sing.
I'd say any dark star any tour. Or bird song, The music never stopped.....
Garcia Bronco
10-25-2024 09:11 PM
They're playing shakedown street on the outro music of the bottom of the ninth in the world series right now.
Strongside
10-25-2024 09:27 PM
One of my earliest concrete memories is sitting on my dad’s shoulders watching Jerry & the Dead at Soldier Field in the early 90’s. My parents followed the Dead around for years, and they were a massive part of my life, and to some extent, still are. There have been several major successful and influential American bands, but I think the Grateful Dead might be the most American band in history. Phil’s improvisational / jazz background was a massive part of the band’s identity.
What a legacy.
RIP.
phisherman
10-25-2024 09:28 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Strongside
(Post 17764216)
One of my earliest concrete memories is sitting on my dad’s shoulders watching Jerry & the Dead at Soldier Field in the early 90’s. My parents followed the Dead around for years, and they were a massive part of my life, and to some extent, still are. There have been several major successful and influential American bands, but I think the Grateful Dead might be the most American band in history. Phil’s improvisational / jazz background was a massive part of the band’s identity.
What a legacy.
RIP.
Well said.
JohnnyHammersticks
10-25-2024 11:18 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Garcia Bronco
(Post 17764189)
They're playing shakedown street on the outro music of the bottom of the ninth in the world series right now.
Jacob Ullman and Jake Jolivette with Fox Sports always have the Dead, Phish, Panic, etc dialed up for those commercial bumps. Love watching events they do. Cool story about the origins of it.
How FOX Sports’ Resident Deadheads Brought Jam Bands To Big Games
Your ears aren't deceiving you: Thanks to the fans working at the network, you might've just heard the Grateful Dead (or Goose, or moe.!) in a FOX Sports NFL broadcast.
By Eric Renner Brown
02/9/2024
For Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles fans — and any football lover, really — last year’s Super Bowl LVII was a thrilling, down-to-the-wire classic. But as the game, airing on FOX Sports and tied at 35, cut to commercial break at the two-minute warning, tense viewers might’ve felt an unexpected wave of calm. The buttery-smooth lick from “Hungersite,” one of the most popular tracks by the exploding jam band Goose, played as the stressed visages of head coaches Andy Reid and Nick Sirianni gave way to ads.
“It was so surreal to hear our song during the Super Bowl,” Goose singer-guitarist Rick Mitarotonda tells Billboard. “We are very thankful to FOX Sports for supporting what we do and exposing so many bands in the genre to the masses.”
Goose posted the snippet to Instagram and reached out to FOX Sports to express its gratitude — all in a day’s work for Jacob Ullman, FOX Sports senior vp of production and talent development, and Jake Jolivette, a producer at the network. Through their production roles on NFL games, Ullman and Jolivette have caught the attention of astute listeners with secondslong jam band synchs — from titans like the Grateful Dead and Phish to cultier acts like Umphrey’s McGee and moe. — for the past several years.
Ullman, 50, saw his first Dead show at age 12 when his father took him to see the band at Southern California’s Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre in 1985. Jolivette, 49, got into the band as a Midwestern college student, attending his first show in 1992 (three years before Jerry Garcia died); his college years also coincided with Phish’s rise, and the Vermont band’s “communal” shows hooked him. “It’s almost like going to a live sporting event,” he observes.
Ullman began working at FOX Sports when the network launched in 1994, and Jolivette landed there a decade later. The former recalls the thrill of synching a jam-adjacent artist early on: When he integrated Dave Matthews Band’s “Tripping Billies” into a hockey broadcast in 1996, he was amazed “that you can collide your work life, your passion for sports and your passion for music in one place.” But FOX Sports wouldn’t become known for its sly jam band integrations until years later, after Ullman and Jolivette had both risen through the ranks and found themselves working together on NFL and NASCAR broadcasts.
For many viewers, the first clue that the FOX Sports edit bay might be tie-dye-friendly came during 2017’s Super Bowl LI, in a produced pregame video narrated by actor Ving Rhames introducing the competing New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons. Jolivette used Audioslave’s “Cochise” for the Patriots — and Phish’s exuberant “Tweezer Reprise” for the Falcons. Phish frontman Trey Anastasio and the band’s former longtime road manager, Brad Sands, watched the show, and a screenshotted text thread between them circulated on jam-loving corners of the internet. (Sands said, “Falcons have to win now right?” and Anastasio agreed.) “I love ‘Tweezer.’ I love how it builds,” says Jolivette before adding with a chuckle, “Mind you, my editor hated the song — but I still got it in.”
In 2018, FOX Sports inked a five-year deal with the NFL to air Thursday Night Football, and Ullman and Jolivette became heavily involved in the broadcasts. That’s when their jam band synchs really took off. “We’d sneak a couple of [songs] in there — all of a sudden, you’re getting texts,” says Jolivette with still-palpable amazement. “That’s when I figured out that this was something that was brewing that people could hear.”
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-theme="dark"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">We are everywhere...<br><br>Thanks for the “inspiration” during the 2020 World Series, <a href="https://twitter.com/GratefulDead?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@GratefulDead</a>! <a href="https://t.co/GvSP8m2wBC">pic.twitter.com/GvSP8m2wBC</a></p>— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) <a href="https://twitter.com/MLBONFOX/status/1321927221821526023?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 29, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
rest of the article is below
Spoiler!
When the pandemic hit, Ullman, who had hung out with the Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir at NASCAR events over the years, convinced the musician through his manager to record a solo performance of the national anthem for the late-March 2020 broadcast of an iRacing Pro Invitational simulated race. Later that year, Ullman and Jolivette’s colleagues Joe Carpenter (senior audio engineer) and Bryan Biederman (director) — fellow FOX Sports Deadheads who work on the network’s MLB broadcasts — integrated a slew of Dead songs into the 2020 World Series. Sensing the public’s interest, FOX uploaded a supercut of the synchs — among them “Shakedown Street,” “Sugar Magnolia” and “Althea” — to its social media, with corresponding game footage nested within the band’s iconic “Steal Your Face” logo.
“Between that and what we were doing on Thursday Night Football, that year was probably where a lot of this exploded,” Ullman says. It was a feedback loop of sorts: The more FOX Sports integrated jam bands, the more positive reinforcement it received.
Still, in the tricky world of TV licensing, the network’s ’heads need supportive — or at least tolerant — colleagues to facilitate clearances. For that, they work with a team that includes vp of music Nicole de la Torriente-Nelson, who leads negotiations with publishers and labels, and associate director Yvonne Wagoner, who prepares approved playlists for broadcast teams. Wagoner collaborates with crews to construct eclectic playlists — an amalgam of current hits, old classics, songs for specific situations like scoring and situational matches for game location and weather — and solicits requests. While some core songs remain throughout a season, there’s also turnover, and Wagoner refers potential new songs to de la Torriente-Nelson and her colleagues, who secure the applicable rights. Licensing terms vary, but songs are often cleared for a season’s entirety, with fees paid out on a per-use basis (the higher-profile the game, the higher the synch rate).
Take FOX Sports’ week 15 Buffalo Bills-Dallas Cowboys broadcast. Jolivette wanted to use a song by Buffalo jam band moe. for the Bills home game, so he asked Wagoner to clear the group’s “Happy Hour Hero.” She passed along the request to de la Torriente-Nelson, whose team secured the rights, and Jolivette and senior audio mixer Jamie McCombs — not a jam fan per se, though he admits Jolivette has “turned me on to some really good stuff” — prepped the few seconds that would ultimately air. Late in the first quarter of the Dec. 17 game, with the Bills up 7-0, “Hero” led into a commercial break. Watching was moe. guitarist Al Schnier, who posted a video of his TV screen to Instagram with the caption “Bills + moe. + winning = Happy Hour Hero.”
Integrations like that really are by jam band fans, for jam band fans. Ullman’s team doesn’t feel bound to the Dead or Phish, or even to the most popular tracks in their respective discographies; in the Jan. 14 Dallas Cowboys-Green Bay Packers playoff game, FOX Sports used the Dead’s “Saint of Circumstance” and Phish’s “Axilla,” hardly the best-known songs by either group. Jolivette and his colleagues seek out the best secondslong snippets, wherever they may come from. As he explains of “Saint of Circumstance,” “The part we use, it hits. If you’ve seen that in concert, you know that’s one of the great transitions. That, to me, is what makes that a great song to use.”
And in the ultimate validation of their work, one of their heroes is returning the fandom. “When you think about it, the music we make isn’t unlike a sporting event,” Weir, who was spotted with the FOX Sports team on the sideline at January’s NFC Championship game, tells Billboard. “On a good night, you don’t really know where it’s going to go — and getting wherever it’s going is going to be different every time to boot.”