Jackie Greene

Jackie Greene

For The Moonlit Blues Have Come

Aug 19, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

Jackie Greene is a young man, still, and will be for a number of years yet - a decade or more even. He'll be able to claim youth and he'll look it, albeit with deeply grooved sacks beneath his eyes. The San Franciscan musician is not of his years though, unsure of his true age. His insides, the parts that house and encase his soul - one that's deeper than a smokestack - must have rings around them, so many in fact, that if he were chopped down like a common tree and about to be made into paper products or a house in the suburbs, they would peg him to be someone in their mid-to-late 80s or more. He would likely even fess up to it, not feeling as if he were being such a deceptive subject. He could claim to being a sharecropper, to being a preacher or a preacher's son, a defector or a pool shark, a hobo, a railway hopper, a coal miner, a freedom fighter, a first or third generation hippie and no eyes would be batted or rolled. Greene is a songwriter and musician steeped in the glorious psychedelic and bluesy infatuation of the early and mid-70s when the Rolling Stones were working themselves up a sound that was heavy on borrowing from the rich and living music of black America, the blues and traditionals coming from the painfully echoing cotton and tobacco fields, played by hands stained with tar and sung by men who were doing everything they could not to be broken. He's steeped in those early beginnings of the hybrid when Paul McCartney was just trying to emulate Little Richard and Chuck Berry, when the music felt as if it was torched with personality and not just a representation or facsimile of it. On "Giving Up The Ghost," Greene, who frequently collaborates with Grateful Dead founding member Phil Lesh, shows himself and his tight band to be the embodiment of a man fearful of the devil and all his crooked temptations, the balls and chains of possessive women and the many vices and sins that come window-shopping for spoils. His sensibilities lean toward the sharply-worded vignettes of someone who's experienced far more than a guy one-fourth his age, coming across as someone who's buried all of his relatives and peers, been divorced three or four times, seen eight different presidential administrations and been estranged by his children, left to warn and left to soak in all of the feelings and moody moments that tend to accompany any of those wayward circumstances. The songs on the album aren't overly forlorn or downtrodden, just anchored by the kinds of learned sadness that become unshakable or irremovable barnacles that just get looked at and felt forever more. He sings, "No one man among us, is safe from the siren's call…Well, the world's so damp it's beginning to swim," and it sounds as if it's derived from so many strikeouts, from so many times through the fires, catching the very whites of the devil's eyes and glared at the smirk. It takes on the feel of something like a grandfatherly looking tree, twisting in an electric sky, knowing that its roots are sunk down into the ground four stories and nothings going to shake it to death that night, giving Greene's music a patience that's reminiscent of the kinds of moonlit blues that could come when the tensions break.

Jackie Greene Official Site
Jackie Greene MySpace Page

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  • I don't live in a dream is one of my favorite songs to play, thanks daytrotter for this fantastic session.

    B Wehde | Monday, September 28, 2009 | 12:08 pm

  • the article is very well written like Jackie green's song. he has a contemporary yet woodstuck feel with his music and voice.

    Petey Chase | Friday, August 28, 2009 | 12:09 am

  • mmmm I dont dig, its a bit too clean, bit middle of the road for me, nice, but lacks character. Well thats my 2c

    webcam411 | Wednesday, August 26, 2009 | 5:48 am

  • grate article and grate music! thanks very much, indeed! Jackie is wonderful. Got no doubt this kid is gonna continue to impress and delight us all. peace.

    ComfortablyComatose Joe | Saturday, August 22, 2009 | 3:19 am

  • Wow, rocking version of Ball and Chain!!!!

    Queen of Cool | Saturday, August 22, 2009 | 12:37 am

  • Every song of Jackie's is my favorite. Honestly, his songs are so musicaly evolved that I love every single one.

    Queen of Cool | Saturday, August 22, 2009 | 12:28 am

  • Best session since the Avett Brothers.

    jfike | Friday, August 21, 2009 | 2:36 pm

  • I beg your pardon-but he is a native son of Sacramento.

    DUNNDUNN | Friday, August 21, 2009 | 11:37 am

  • this is an amazing article. i love jackie. he has blown my mind over and over again. i love to see him play. his stuff. he added a lot to phil and friends but is his own prince of americana as rolling stones magazine said. just the best.... http://phishandthedead.blogspot.com/2009/08/bobby-seams-to-be-sitting-in-with.html

    earthfirstsammy | Wednesday, August 19, 2009 | 10:00 pm

  • shaken is my favorite :D

    indie4life | Wednesday, August 19, 2009 | 7:52 pm

Songs by Jackie Greene

  1. first song

    Welcome to Daytrotter

    Download Jackie Greene playing Welcome to Daytrotter
  2. second song

    Shaken

    Download Jackie Greene playing Shaken

    - original version appears on Giving Up The GhostThe late great jay Bennett was a big inspiration for this song. He was there while I was writing it and helped me figure some stuff out. He was a great musician and a kind person. He will be missed.

  3. third song

    Don't Let The Devil Take Your Mind

    Download Jackie Greene playing Don't Let The Devil Take Your Mind

    - original version appears on Giving Up The GhostI was kind of going for a traveling preacher vibe. In my mind, the singer is the old man standing outside the grocery store at 1 a.m., trying to convince each passerby that the end is near and "you better get right".

  4. fourth song

    I Don't Live In A Dream

    Download Jackie Greene playing I Don't Live In A Dream

    - original version appears on Giving Up The GhostThis song came to me while listening to some ruff mixes of Los Lobos' last record. I really liked the vibe of "Hold On". Thematically, it's just about the fact that I'm a human and deal with the same things that everyone else does on a daily basis. It's not a complicated song. I was trying to be very straightforward and simple.

  5. fifth song

    Like A Ball And Chain

    Download Jackie Greene playing Like A Ball And Chain

    - original version appears on Giving Up The GhostIs kind of sort of about drugs/women. The "she" is a substance and a girl... depending on who you ask. I wanted an excuse to have a real Stones-y riff kind of song -- and that's what came out.

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