The bassist who laid the Dead’s grooves
Phil Lesh had never played the bass when a fellow Bay Area musician, Jerry Garcia, asked him to join his new rock band, the Warlocks, in 1964. Nor was Lesh a rock fan. He was a classically trained trumpeter and violinist drawn to works by Bach and jazz greats John Coltrane and Charles Mingus. As the Warlocks morphed into the Grateful Dead, Lesh drew on those influences to create a freewheeling style that helped define the group’s trippy sound. Eschewing the traditional bassist role of unobtrusive timekeeper, he spun buoyant, shifting melodic lines that intertwined with Garcia’s ethereal lead guitar and propelled the Dead’s trademark marathon jams. The Dead’s only bassist through their 30-year history, he also contributed vocal harmonies and enduring songs, including the plaintive “Box of Rain.” The band “was born at a time when magic and change were in the air,” he said in 2005. “It felt as if we were an integral part of a cosmic plan to transform human consciousness.”
Raised in Berkeley, Calif., where his parents owned a repair business, Lesh “began his long musical odyssey” with violin lessons in the third grade, said the Associated Press. Taking up trumpet at 14, he joined the Oakland Symphony Orchestra in his teens and briefly studied jazz in college. But he was driving a mail truck when he was recruited by Garcia, then a bluegrass banjo player. The nascent Grateful Dead “became the house band for Ken Kesey’s infamous acid tests,” said Rolling Stone. Lesh, a “staunch advocate of psychedelics,” was “profoundly affected by these evenings that erased the line between band and audience,” and the drugs helped shape the Dead’s improvisational, genre-bending sound.
The group toured unceasingly for decades—performing more than 2,000 shows for a devoted and nomadic fan base—and only disbanded after Garcia died in a rehab clinic in 1995, said the Los Angeles Times. In subsequent years, Lesh “kept the group’s adventurous spirit alive through a series of musical offshoots,” alternating between solo projects and assemblages that reunited some of his former bandmates. Retiring from touring in 2014, he would still perform at Terrapin Crossroads, a club he owned in San Rafael, Calif., with a shifting lineup that often included his two sons. He didn’t record, though, saying the stage was where he could realize his vision. “The longer I’m in music, the less I like the idea of freezing music in amber,” he said. “I want it to be different every time.” |