Showing posts with label Bobby And The Midnites (Featuring Bob Weir). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bobby And The Midnites (Featuring Bob Weir). Show all posts

Thursday, December 14, 2023

The 1981 Listening Post - Bobby And The Midnites (Featuring Bob Weir) - Bobby & the Midnites

 Reviewed by Allen Lulu

Released: October 21 1981 Bobby And The Midnites (Featuring Bob Weir) Bobby & The Midnites Genre: Rock Rating: 4 out of 5 Highlights: Too Many Losers Book Of Rules My experience with The Grateful is twofold and in neither case do I come out as anything but a tourist. First, everybody and I mean EVERYBODY (translation: a couple kids on my French class with Ms. Didomenico) had The Grateful Dead’s Greatest Hits so, of course, self imposed peer pressure forced me to get it myself. And I liked it! Not enough to ever listen to another Dead album, but, still. I call that a win. Secondly, my writing partner when I decided I wanted to start a band (in my mid 30s, with about 2 years of self taught shitty campfire guitar behind me) I did so with a buddy who, to my awe and shock, had produced a record of his own, on his own and it was great. A concept album about marijuana growers and growing and, fuck, it was eXACTly the kind of album that a deadhead would and should produce. And I think Seth Rogan should use it for his soundtrack to his new Weed venture. What was I saying? Oh yeah, Jon was a Deadhead and I wanted to see what it would be like if you took at Dead aesthetic and merged it with a Queen/Dead Kennedys/Springsteen one. What would we come up with? Throttle Back Sparky. So, my band would not have existed had I not hooked up with someone who loved The Grateful Dead. (Also, I love Cosmic Wimpout and that game gets played at a lot of Dead concerts before the show (and during, perhaps?) So, there’s no chance I would have heard this record. (That was a long winded way of telling you guys something you probably already knew) But, is this anything like The Grateful Dead? I don’t think so. “Too Many Losers” has a lot in common with latter day Roger Daltrey solo stuff, as does “Festival”, and better than most of that, at that. And sure, there’s some reggae and a really long, like way tooooooo long, swingy/jazzy tune (“Josephine” but it’s easy to forget it’s on and just let it flow. This album rocks. Is it better than the creator’s main project? I don’t know. But, in the same way that I prefer Mudcrutch to most Tom Petty latter day works, I like this. These tunes are good, Bob. You should be in a band.