Here's a really, really great video on Richard Manuel (and oh yeah, The Band).


 

News of Richard’s suicide in 1986 is the only music-related death that brought me to tears. As does this video. It also makes me laugh.

 

Levon Helm stated The Band considered Richard their lead singer, and hearing him in this video reinforces my opinion that he is the white Ray Charles, head and shoulders above all his contemporaries. If you consider that dissing them, I can live with that. For a special treat, listen to Richard and Van Morrison (the best of the British singers) dueting on "4% Pantomime" (on The Band’s Cahoots album).

 

Just a little over a half hour in length, this video is well worth your time to watch. It may give some of you a better understanding of why The Band are held in such high regard by the best musicians, singers, and songwriters in Rock ’n’ Roll.

 

https://youtu.be/7r2w5ioGgqE?si=nuyCwE0qUFd6kAb-

 

 

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The problem with heroin (now fentanyl) is that it’s such a good high that once you try it, it makes you want to dabble in it. Dabbling becomes addiction before you know it. Rick Danko remained addicted to the end of his life.

 

The only drugs we had in San Jose in the 60’s and 70’s (at least that I knew of) were weed, LSD, and amphetamine (speed). When I moved to L.A. in 1979, cocaine was everywhere. Every party I went to had mirrors with lines of coke floating around the room, like joints were in San Jose. I tried it a few times, and wondered what all the fuss was about. That was until one night, when I finally got enough of the stuff to really get off. It was so much fun that I decided right then and there to never do it again. Haven’t touched the stuff since.

Meanwhile, my sister (in Portland, Oregon) and my girlfriend’s sister and her husband (in.L.A.) got themselves addicted to heroin, the girlfriend’s sister and her husband doing a coupla stretches in prison for armed robbery. The husband died of an overdose (heroin laced with fentanyl) a few years ago, and the sister has been on all kinds of pills (including oxycodone) for years. My sister got clean, and remains so.

That longtime girlfriend of mine had been a productive, high-income (an assistant to a lawyer who represented big-time musical artists), level-headed kind of person, but in the first decade of the 2000’s got into weed on a deep level, and it completely changed her personality. That lead to our breakup in 2008, and her mental breakdown and firing resulted in her going on Social Security Disability, where she remains.

What a world!

 

It’s definitely a crazy world and a shame that drugs are such an integral part of the music business. I’m glad that you (and a lot of other people) managed to not fall into the trap.

I think it was Charlie Musselwhite who had a similar experience to yours. I read an interview where he said he tried heroin once and it was so good that he knew that there would be a heavy price to pay for using it, so he never did it again.

 

Musselwhite was wiser than his contemporary, Paul Butterfield. Paul got in tight with the Woodstock guys, doing a lot of playing with Levon Helm and Rick Danko in particular. He died of an overdose at age 44.

The debut Paul Butterfield Blues Band album was the first "real" Blues music I heard. It opened the eyes of my teenage suburban bandmates and I as to how bad most of the British bands performed the music (the exceptions being John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers and Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac).