The Joy Of The DMB

It was like being at a jazz concert. Not that I’ve been to many jazz concerts. It wasn’t about hits, but playing. It was about where the music was gonna TAKE YOU!

I gave up the herb many moons ago, but when the acrid smell permeated the Hollywood Bowl during the first number, I felt an adrenaline rush. This was the experience. The rock and roll experience.

You work all day to make enough money to go to the show. And when the band hits the stage, no matter if you’re in the very first row or the last, you become elated, you feel privileged just to BE THERE!

We live in a sick society. One in which a pop star is being driven towards suicide by an unrelenting need for the public to know. What do we need to know? That even if you’re rich, life is hard?

Tourists come to Hollywood to go clubbing with the twentysomething famous. They want the allure to rub off on them. But, if you were in attendance last night, you’d forfeit your pass to the freak show just to BE Dave Matthews. To get to play music EVERY NIGHT!

Stardom is the byproduct. At the heart, there’s music.

You can buy a Dave Matthews album. You can watch one of his videos. But you won’t get it until you go to the show. And, fans don’t care if you don’t come. They don’t want to be brought down. They want to be in reverie with their friends, a club outside the mainstream, where music can save the world.

They’re shimmying, they’re shaking. They’re nodding their heads. And when the numbers end, they’re ROARING!

It’s deafening. Like being at a baseball stadium. But the music isn’t being produced by hopped up athletes without a care in their brains, but thinkers. You’ve got to think to play. To be locked in.

And the Dave Matthews Band was locked in. I’m still coming down. And it’s twenty four hours later.

What did I like best? When suddenly they started playing "Grazing In The Grass", the Hugh Masekela version. With the TRUMPET!

They don’t have trumpets in rock bands. But the DAVE MATTHEWS BAND DOES!

A great concert enraptures you instantly. It sets your mind free, so it can recall the good times. You’re not bored, you hope it will go on forever. Dave’s almost three hours straight was not enough.

Who else would duel with a BANJO? And even John Mayer toned down the histrionics to get into the groove with Dave. It was one of those shows that burns into your memory bank. You don’t remember the music so much as the feeling. You need to go back.

I’m watching Carter Beauford on the big screen. He’s pounding the drums. And he’s SMILING! This isn’t work, this is play. This is the essence of human life. This is JOY!

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  1. Pingback by Bob Lefsetz » The Joy Of The DMB « BarefootBlog | 2007/10/03 at 20:21:44

    […] to play music EVERY NIGHT! Stardom is the byproduct. At the heart, there’s music.” Bob Lefsetz » The Joy Of The DMB

    […]


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  1. Pingback by Bob Lefsetz » The Joy Of The DMB « BarefootBlog | 2007/10/03 at 20:21:44

    […] to play music EVERY NIGHT! Stardom is the byproduct. At the heart, there’s music.” Bob Lefsetz » The Joy Of The DMB

    […]

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