A Typical Situation

As 2020 unfolds with each moment more and even less alarming the previous, it begins to truly feel like a Typical Situation. Rewind a year before an epic 14 minute jam like this was possible to witness with twenty five thousand of your fellow tribe, and it’s difficult to image today’s landscape -- pandemic, social unrest, climate change, political firescape, literal firescape here in California, John Lewis, RBG, okay enough with this list 2020.

When the typical situations overwhelm, I turn to universal truth. Nature. Music. Love. The ultimate embodiment of truth in music is improvisation, the letting go of structure, the contrived, the constraints. What flows from the universal soul and out through performers, synchronized and reflected with the energy of every single person in the space is the ultimate truth. The moment, the now, the present, has never been like this previously, will never be like this again, yet is all happening concurrently in timespace.

Like so many improv-centric artists, Dave Matthew Band reflects truth and love to their participants, and receives truth and love back cyclicly on a nightly basis. Wether it’s witnessing Jeff Coffin’s explosive sax lines, him trading bars with Rashawn Ross’ captivating trumpet, hearing Tim Reynold’s & Stefand Lessard’s acoustic stringed stories unfolding, or feeling Carter Beaford’s rhythmic syncopation driving this loveful truth, it’s as if during this entire 14 minutes the pandemic wasn’t preventing more of these magical moments in 2020. Release. Six senses feeding five.

Too many choices leads to one choice. Truth and Love. Make your choice wisely… it all comes down to nothing.

Ten fingers counting we have each
Nine planets around the Sun repeat
Eight ball will last if you triumphant be
Seven oceans pummel the shores of the sea

It’s a typical situation
In these typical times
Too many choices, yeah
It’s a typical situation
In these typical times
Too many choices, yeah

Everybody’s happy
Everybody’s free
We’ll keep the big door open
And everyone’ll come around
Why are you different?
Why are you that way?
If you don’t get in line
We’ll lock you away

It all comes down to nothing

Six senses feeding five
Around a sense of self
Four seasons turn on and turn off
I can see three corners from this corner
Two’s a perfect number
But one is not enough
— Dave Matthews

My 2020 Song

This is my song for 2020. Pandemic, social unrest, unchecked racism, climate change, forest fires, pivotal election, fake news, gaslighting narcissist, economic decline, sick-care over healthcare, decaying education, personal losses. How easy to get down and dark for so many of us. But PERSPECTIVE and LOVE are the secret ingredients found in this song.

Trey Anastasio's live release today of "Burn It Down" includes this passionate version of "Rise Up/Come Together." (LISTEN BELOW)

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Thank you Trey Anastasio Band for performing this vehement version that lives on beyond the magic moment.

LYRICS
The ocean is only a lot of drops of water
And the land is only a lot of grains of sand
And the people of the world all love the way
We going to break down the walls one day
And come together, come together, come together

From high above we're all the same down here
Without a map the lines all disappear
We're so tired of our senseless fight
The one thing we can all do right
Is come together, come together, come together, come together
Come together

We're all looking for a little more love
To shine a light and lift us up
When you hold me heartbeat to heartbeat
I'm a part of you and you're a part of me

And we rise up
And come together, come together, come together
We got to rise up
And come together, come together, come together

Songs for Sanity

I’m a part of a private Phish community on Facebook called Sanity. One of the administrators of the page asked me to contribute to the groups’ ongoing music series “Songs for Sanity.” Each morning for 7 days, I selected a song and shared why it’s meaningful for me. Enjoy!


A huge shout out of gratitude to JOSH FINK for warmly inviting me into his tribe at live shows (first was Circles Around the Sun at the Belly Up in Solana Beach, CA), then this Sanity FB group, and now as a trusted contributor for this “Sanity Song of the Day” series. 

A bit of context about me…  Since 2001 I’ve been the co-founder and CEO of creative branding, marketing and technology agency located in Santa Barbara, CA called Oniracom (literally means ‘communicating dreams’). For the first decade of running Oniracom we served the music industry, working with all the major labels, management groups and even some artists directly.  During this time, I had the privilege of touring for many years with Jack Johnson as his merchandise manager (among other road jobs).  It was through international touring that our company learned about the music industry and how music truly inspires fanbases in every corner of the globe in the same way, despite cultural or language differences.  Our mantra was “super serve the super fan,” and as a rabid Phish fan since the late 90s, I truly understood what it takes to make an authentic connection between artist and fan.  Jack Johnson certainly embodies this as well, as each decision he and his wife made brought environmentalism and eco-friendly actions of positive disruption to the touring industry, venues, promoters, venders and fans.

SO I am honored to have a voice here, and hope I don’t let you all down this week with my selections.  

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 1 - “K’NAAN - T.I.A.”

Given the racial injustices that are being pushed squarely to the forefront of America’s COVID-landscape —and the world— it is only appropriate that I begin where we all come from - Africa.  K’NAAN’s T.I.A. (This Is Africa) message to America’s hip/hop and gang culture is to look to Africa for true roots connections.  It’s critical for us all to feel connections of history and culture to where we all come from.

“Around here we only bumping Fela Kuti 

Tupac, or Bob Marley, Lucky Dube. 

So we don't really give a fuck about your groupies 

This Is Africa, Hooray.”

This is not merely a “dark continent” as western colonialism would have us believe.  This is a vibrant continent full of music, people, cultures and languages that span 54 nations.  A mirror for America to see that we are also made up of many flavors of music, cultures and people.  

“Used to be at peace but now we using T-Shirts / And it reads RIP cause the peace dead.”

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 2 - “Tortoise - The Equator” 

Moving from an Africa inspired tune to a contemporary American jazz instrumental feels like a fitting progression.  With deep roots in jazz structure, Tortoise tears down conventions and reimagines what music can be in an era deeply in transformation from analogue to digital recording, arrangement and production conventions. 

As a review on Pitchfork aptly describes this group of Chicago based post-rockers:

“Instead, Tortoise floats free, a planchette moving over a Ouija board guided by 10 sets of fingers, where everyone watches the arrow float in one direction but no one is quite sure how it gets there or who is doing the pushing.”

I’ve spun “TNT” hundreds of times, possibly more than any record. I would listen to it each night drifting into dream space for quite a while. The mix of electronic atmosphere, polyrhythms and jazz structures makes for a creative environment, and stimulates flow state.  Through this soundtrack I have worked out the worlds problems in my mind’s eye, and  I encourage you to do the same as we contextualize our existence in 2020.

Sidenote: If Tortoise does it for you, feel free to trip and fall down the Thrill Jockey rabbit hole where you will find such gems as The Sea & Cake, Matmos, Sam Prekop, Mouse on Mars and so many others. 

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 3 - “Boingo - Change”

Okay, here we go, time to settle in a bit and dive deep into our souls. It’s day 3 and I resisted the first two days sharing this life changing track. From Danny Elfman’s spitting lyrics and minor key orchestration to its “Taxman” nod and jammed out B and C sections, this song embodies everything that formed my musical taste in my teen years. I would seek out 15+ minute studio tracks after hearing this (which I discovered prior to Pink Floyd’s Echoes and the like).

Now why the name change? Oingo Boingo is now just Boingo? Whaaa’ happen? Well Danny Elfman was deep in his transition from punk rock star to film & television composition master (thanks Tim Burton for taking a chance on Danny for Pee-wee’s Big Adventure!). The band lineup was slightly different on their 8th and final studio record. By the time this album Boingo was released in 1994 Mr. Elfman had written soundtracks for Pee-wee, Bettlejuice, Midnight Run, Batman, Nightbreed, Dick Tracy, Darkman, Edward Scissorhands and many others. He simultaneously wrote "The Nightmare Before Christmas" with “Boingo”— and you can certainly hear parallels between these two brilliant pieces of music and lyrics.

And to bring forward this song to 2020 when it feels like everything is changing before our very eyes. Perhaps humanity is on an evolutionary fork, a split, the fear driven lizard brains vs the love driven progressive brains. Fear driven people like stupid shit to remain:

“I like my stupid life just the way it is

And the chaos that surrounds me like a flock of screaming pigs

And it hurts my brain to think of all the stupid things I've said

And if I could change the future I would change the past instead“

Can the love driven brains outweigh the fear driven brains to force progressive and positive changes? My hunch is humanity’s got one more good shot, and the upcoming election is quite an important one.

“Do you really want to change?

Testaments and growing pains. Tranquilizers for the soul.

Nothing ventured, nothing gained - evolution's cruelest joke

Why is everyone upset? I once knew but I forget. Something happened,

Something strange, something it appears has changed

Hey . . . Don't you know? We're just products of our times

And hey, what d'ya say? Show me yours, I'll show you mine”

PS - Be sure to listen to the cover of “I Am the Walrus” on Boingo. Scratch that, listen to the whole damn record, again and again….

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 4 - “Jack Johnson - All At Once”

When quarantine began and we started to realize live music (and everything fun) would be postponed for an indefinite amount of months or years, the overwhelming feeling certainly washed over our household.  It was as if All At Once, nearly 8 billion people were slapped simultaneously to think about our relationship with our environment and with one another.  Hand washing, mask wearing, social distancing - a few attempts to make sense of how individual actions multiplied by millions creates global change.  

This is exactly the mantra of Jack Johnson’s global eco-focused initiative called At At Once which supports hundreds of environmental nonprofits around the globe.  “An individual action, multiplied by millions, creates global change.”  Based on his “Sleep Through the Static” tune of the same name as this initiative, Jack wrote some of my favorite lyrics for this opening track that helps quell my anxiety.  An advisor once asked me of the problems sitting in front of my face “will these problems still matter in 5 years?  If not, then know you’ll navigate through this and grow from it.”  And this too shall pass.

“I wanna take

The preconceived

Out from

Underneath your feet

We could shake it off

Instead

We'll plant some seeds

We'll watch em' as they grow

And with each new beat

From your heart

The roots grow deeper

The branches

Will they reach for what

Nobody really knows

But underneath it all

There's this heart

All alone”

What we assumed is reality will finally be questioned by more than just the questioning-minded individuals.  Our systems are being exposed for what they really are.  From the macro to the micro, the lessons easily apply - we keep asking ourselves are we really strong enough?

Of course we are!  We have community, we have each other.   The love driven progressive brains will win.  Our future is being shaped today, here and now.

“There's a world

We've never seen

There's still hope

Between the dreams

The weight of it all

Could blow away

With a breeze

If your waitin'

On the wind

Don't forget to breathe

Cause as the darkness

Gets deeper

We'll be sinkin'

As we reach for love

At least somethin'

We could hold

But I'll reach to you

From where time

Just can't go”

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 5 - “Supertramp - Oh Darling” 

Happy Friday, time for a bit of a throwback to one of the greatest and underrated classic albums of the 20th century, Supertramp’s “Breakfast in America.”  Rather than select one of the obvious choices — Goodbye Stranger, Logical Son, Take the Long Way Home — the tune that resonates most during this era is “Oh Darling” (no, not Paul McCartney’s version).

I’m seeing a metaphor of Richard Palmer’s lyrics describing American’s relationship with America in the midst of this critical period.

“The news is all over town

You better not let me down

Keep telling me you're feeling good

As good as you ever could

Please tell me that you'll never go, ah ah no no

Tell me that you'll never go, never go”

We’re split as a society, perhaps on separate evolutionary tracks.  One longing for the past America which supposedly was great at one time (but is not anymore), and another longing for a bright future based on the core principles America stands for.  Liberty and the pursuit of happiness. 

“I’m gonna (I'm gonna) I'm gonna (I'm gonna) 

I'm gonna (I'm gonna) I'm gonna catch you lady

I'm gonna (I'm gonna) I'm gonna (I'm gonna) 

I'm gonna (I'm gonna) I'm gonna catch you lady”

YES WE ARE.  YES WE CAN.  YES WE WILL.

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 6 - “Weird Al - Genius in France”

We’re deep into Saturday evening, almost as deep as this 9 minute homage to one of the all time great mixologist of music and comedy, Frank Zappa.  Weird Al understands the importance of Zappa in the context of music history, and pays special attention to the nuance of Zappa’s genre-bending styles and aesthetic. 

Growing up Weird Al was my second love, after the Beatles, and before I found classic rock, dove deep into Jazz, and ultimately discovered my soulmate Phish.  My first concert as a kid was Weird Al in San Diego, and I’ve seen him every few years since.  When Poodle Hat” was released in 2003 I couldn’t believe what I heard as the final track, “Genius in France” as I’d become quite the Zappa fan years prior (especially since Fishman’s “Zappa Picks” came out the year prior). 

Most know Weird Al for his parody, but I’m a fan of his pastiche even more than his brilliant parody songs.  Pastiche imitates other artists’ style, genre or period of time.  (Extra Credit: Weird Al’s Talking Heads pastiche “Dog Eat Dog”).  Attempting to pull Zappa’s multi-decade career, intricate compositions, zany lyrics and ripping guitar solos into one track is quite the undertaking. 

If you’re into Zappa, I doubt you will be disappointed.  Hell, even Dweezil Zappa shreds guitar on the track, which confirms Mr. Yankovich’s stamp of approval.

Are you wanting to go deeper into Weird Al’s catalogue?  DM me and I’m happy to send you some deep cuts that include both Al originals as well as parody / pastiche. 

Sanity Song of the Day: Day 7 - “Matthew McAvene - Prayer”

I’m not a religious man (outside of Phish of course), but to round out my week of Sanity Songs this Sunday I’ve decided to share a prayer.

I present to you… My dear friend of nearly 2 decades, puppet creator, sculpture, painter, creature costume maker, musician, master of many mediums, Matthew McAvene.  

Matthew inspired me to start my own record label Oniric Records in 2005 in support of his debut professionally produced album “777.”  We recorded it at our home office / studio with friends and captured a moment in time here in Santa Barbara.  We toured through California for a couple years, culminating with Solutions for Dreamers Festival where Matthew played to a sold out Arlington Theatre, and shared the stage with Jack Johnson, Michael Franti, ALO, Culver City Dub Collective and more.

When Matthew and I were making a TV show pilot in 2004, I asked him what we should use for the soundtrack, and he suggested maybe I take a listen to his own songs.  “You have your own songs?” And Matthew proceeded to tell me about his 3,000+ songs and snipers he had saved on a home cassette recorder over the course of many years through a process he called the One Take Sessions.  The ultimate disciplined songwriting framework of surrounding to the flow.  “You what? Okay we need to release an album.  Hmmm what record label?  How about we start our own?”  Next was a curation process where we selected 15 songs for his debut release. 

“Prayer” is quite possibly the song of his album meant for 2020’s global pandemic, racial justice movement, and everything tied to the consciousness shift.  Human consciousness, I bless you, god bless you, god bless human consciousness.  If 15 years after recording these tunes can inspire even one more of us to act, then amen!  

A huge shout out to JFINK for allowing me to contribute these past 7 days.  THANK YOU FOR GIVING VOICE!  

“Time

Self reflection

Introspection

Climbing the holy ladder

Improvement of the soul, through the mind you know

Incredible receiver of information

Cosmic dreams, shower on these things

And make everything grow in light

Towards what’s right

Human consciousness

I bless you

God bless you

God bless human consciousness

Like a blank paper blowing in the wind

Open pages within your destiny

God please heal this race, this place, these days

Our ways, holy days wash away the concrete maze

God please heal this race, this place, these days

Holy days wash away the concrete maze

And help us to heal

Help us use our hands for constructive purposes

Rather than the opposite and you know what that is

Oh defuse the bombs and see – 

That love is the only explosion we need

Love is the only explosion we need

Love is the only explosion we need

Love is the only explosion we need”

UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL. WE STAND WITH BLACK LIVES.

With pain comes progress. With extreme pain comes this pivotal moment in humanity’s evolution. There was a time before George Floyd’s death, and now we live in a post George Floyd world.

I see “Liberty and Justice for All” as the ultimate American moonshot goal. Slavery, Convict Leasing, Jim Crow, Lynchings, Segregation, Mass Incarceration, War on Drugs, Mandatory Minimums, Police Brutality — this is Black American history. This is American history. This history is not erased or past, this is our current situation.

Racism in America is not only individual, it is very much structural and systemic. Our systems are unequal and unjust. Economic disparities are designed inside these systems — housing, education, health care, employment, surveillance, criminal justice, to name a few.

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