Guest Post by Dr. Beechwood (@DrBeechwood on
Twitter)
With additions & edits by Light Into Ashes.
Mickey Hart left the Grateful Dead after the 2/18/71 show in
Port Chester, New York. Mickey didn’t stop playing music though, and returned
to his ranch in Novato, California, where he’d built a studio in the barn. There he would record his first solo album, Rolling Thunder, as well as more
projects in later years.
Mickey had first moved onto the ranch back in 1969, and it soon became a
haven for an ongoing crowd of friends, family, musicians, crewmembers, and
hangers-on. Mickey lived there through the ‘70s; after he moved out, the barn
burned down in a fire. All the buildings on the ranch are gone now, and the land is currently part of a Novato park.
This Warner Brothers promotional photo of the Grateful Dead
was taken at the ranch in fall 1970 by Herb Greene:
Or this sprawling crowd:
I think those photos were taken behind the barn that would soon be converted into a recording studio. Out on Mickey's remote ranch, the barn was a rustic place to build a studio, but it served him well:
For more on the history of Mickey’s barn studio, here’s a good
place to start:
The studio appears to have been built in the first place as
a result of tangled machinations between Columbia & Warner Brothers over
who would get to sign the Dead to another recording contract. Part of the story
is here:
To sum up, in 1970 Alan Douglas and Columbia Records cast a
kindly eye on Mickey’s recording aspirations, offering him a studio with the intent of luring the Dead
into signing with Columbia. Not to be outdone, Warners gave Mickey a
three-album record contract (even as he left the group) to keep the Dead happy
with the label. A year and a half later, Mickey finally delivered his first
album, Rolling Thunder. But time had marched on, and the Dead were leaving
Warners to form their own label, so Warners didn’t pay attention to (let alone
release) Mickey’s further album offerings, and quietly dropped him.
As far as press reports, the first glimmer of Mickey’s
studio comes in
a November ’70 Billboard article stating that Alan Douglas was
providing the studio for a recording project on his record label, as part of
the same deal that produced the Hooteroll album:
“Douglas Records will record two albums with individual
members of the Grateful Dead, a Warner Bros. group. In the arrangement, Alan
Douglas, head of Douglas Records, will produce and release one LP featuring
Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia and organist Howard Wales… The second
album will be based on a percussion concept developed by the Grateful Dead's
two drummers, Bill Kreitzman and Micky Hart... The Kreitzman-Hart LP will be
recorded at a fully equipped 16-track studio Douglas has installed in Hart's
barn in Navato, Calif. The studio, designed by Kreitzman, Hart, and Phil Lesh
of the Grateful Dead under the supervision of engineer Dan Healey, will be
completed within the month.”
A
Billboard article on the Dead in Jan ’71 announced that
“Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann…are recording an album in the new studio in
Mickey’s barn… [It] will be on Warner Bros.” (Douglas had now dropped out of
the picture.)
A May ’71 Billboard article confirmed that Mickey was
recording a solo album for Warners. Now that Mickey had left the Dead,
Kreutzmann was no longer mentioned, and indeed wouldn’t appear on the album.
(Bill said in his memoir, “Our brother Mickey left the band and retreated to
his ranch in Novato and it really strained our relationship for a while.”)
The studio was mentioned again in a facetious June ’71 SF
Examiner article:
"Hidden in an old barn on 50 acres of farm land outside
Novato is Hart’s Rolling Thunder studio. The fully equipped, ultra-modern,
16-track recording complex took three years to complete – a stroke of genius,
finished just in time for the trend toward the basics. Hart plans to
incorporate into his music the live sounds of barnyard animals... He calls it
Organic Rock."
(Tom Campbell, "Musical Moos of
Organic Rock," SF Examiner 6/12/71)
This idea, too, was dropped. Not one to be rushed, Mickey
emerged a year later with a more straightforward set of songs and Indian-inspired
instrumentals, aided by all the friends in the Bay Area rock scene he could
round up. Far from being an album of “percussion concepts,” it’s more of a
conventional guitar-rock album, spiced up by a horn section, with most of the songs written by either Robert
Hunter or Dead friend Peter Monk, and two songs borrowed from the Dead. (One
single was even released, ‘Blind John,’ sounding very much like a Jefferson
Airplane track – in fact, the Airplane soon released
their own version.) It
didn’t storm up the charts or stir up much interest for future Mickey Hart
albums, but remains quite listenable.
The rest of the Dead still kept in touch with Mickey and
dropped in to help with the album. The well-known 8/21/71 jam at Mickey’s ranch
would have taken place during the album recording sessions. More info on the
background of that day is here:
The players that day included several who were working on
Mickey’s album, including members of the Dead, John Cipollina, Robbie Stokes
& David Freiberg.
Once the album was released in '72, Mickey continued recording
other album projects at his studio (including
“Fire on the Mountain” and
“Area Code 415”), using many of the same crew as on Rolling Thunder – the above
players, along with Barry Melton, Jim McPherson, Steve Schuster, and others.
(They’re sometimes called “the Marin County Collective” though I don’t know
where the name originated.)
These recordings would remain unreleased as Warners ignored
Mickey’s submissions, but by 1974 he found a more fruitful use for his studio
when it became the recording base for several Round Records releases. The barn
studio would remain in use for various people’s projects until Mickey left
around 1981.
The Dead had been delighted to find the ranch, a new bucolic paradise where anyone was welcome to stay and soak in the country life. As Rosie McGee writes, "The many buildings, some no more than shacks, became home for members of the Dead's extended family, who came and went randomly." The Grateful Dead Family Album has a number of happy memories
of life on the ranch: “Over the first few years, almost everyone in the Dead
Family lived there at one time. And they kept leaving and coming back, to make
music, to party, to ride horses, to share sunrise ceremonies, to stay for a
while, or just for some quiet time.” (But as people crowded into the house and moved
into every available building on the place, including barns and sheds, this
meant “endless cooking” by the women!)
But the ranch wasn’t always full of parties. David Browne’s
book So Many Roads has a darker look at Mickey’s time there in the early ‘70s.
Even as Mickey’s studio was being built, he was in low spirits, his father’s
betrayal weighing on him.
According to Mountain Girl, after Lenny Hart bolted with the
band’s money, Mickey was “in a terrible state of apology and depression and
said that leaving the band was the only thing for him to do. He was so ashamed
and humiliated.” Mickey gradually withdrew over the course of 1970: “The road
was hard for me. It was getting really difficult with all the drugs and stuff…I
tried everything.” His friend Sue Swanson said he “went into a tailspin,” and
the lively atmosphere at his ranch became “sad and confusing.” (So Many Roads p.171-72)
By early 1971, as McNally describes it, Mickey was “a
complete wreck.” (LST p. 392) For
Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey was getting too erratic to deal with: “It became impossible
for me to play with him.” Mickey “was in bad shape…getting into dark drugs…[he]
wasn’t able to play.” The Dead had enough when Mickey bugged out during the
Capitol Theater run, and asked him to leave. “He was deeply hurt by that.” (Deal p.151-52)
Other friends remember the ranch growing “dark” as Mickey
isolated himself. His girlfriend Jerilyn Brandelius said, “He was a complete
hermit, and he was very depressed and broken-hearted… He cut himself off from
everybody. He was so upset with everything that happened with his dad and the
band.” (SMR p.233)
Making Rolling Thunder was a period of recovery for Mickey –
as he put it, “building my studio and learning what I sounded like.” He
considered the Rolling Thunder album to be “what my life sounded like for one
year…the soundtrack to Mickey Hart that year.” (Swing 51 #13) McNally writes that “building a studio and coming to
ground had been beneficial for Hart” – and on top of that, the funds from
Warners “gave him the means to improve the barn’s equipment.” (LST p.437-38)
Rolling Thunder was recorded from early 1971 to mid-1972 and
was released in September of 1972. I haven’t found any exact recording dates,
but would guess that much of 1971 was spent tinkering with recording
experiments that didn’t make it to album.
The March 1972 Dead newsletter announced, “For those of you
who are curious about what happened to Mickey Hart, he's still in Marin County
working on what he hopes to be the final stages of his own album; he's been
working on it for about a year now…it’s called ROLLING THUNDER.” The August
newsletter proclaimed that the album “is finally finished after a year and
half's work” and would be released in September.
Like later albums recorded at the barn, the final album wasn't mixed there but was mixed over at Alembic Studios. (Mixing facilities in the barn seem to have been inadequate.) Judging by the number of people credited with engineering and mixing the album (eight in all), it took a lot of work to get the final mix down.
The front cover art was designed by Alton Kelley (per the
Grateful Dead Family Album) and credited to Kelley/Mouse Studios - they had
done the art for several Dead albums. The back cover was a collage of photos
with no identifying captions. The photography was credited to Ron Rakow & Bruce
Baxter, who probably put together the collage. (Ed Thrasher, Warner Brothers art
director, was thanked in the album notes for “art direction,” but considering
his similar credit for the Anthem of the Sun cover, most likely he had little
involvement.)
For the first time, I have tried to identify the people on
the back cover. In this research I was helped directly or indirectly by the
following people: Rosie McGee (RM), Mickey Hart (MH) and his assistant, Rose
Solomon, Dennis McNally, Sue Stallcup, David Gans, and Jesse Jarnow.
I
appreciate Light in Ashes for allowing me to post on his blog. And please see
our earlier collaboration identifying the people on the back cover of
Aoxomoxoa:
Many of the photos are dark, blurry, or otherwise difficult
to identify. Despite this, I have made significant progress with
the help of the people acknowledged above.
The photos depict the following groups of people:
(1) Musicians who played on the album: drummers such as Zakir
Hussain and Greg Errico, Dead members who contributed, and other instrumentalists
such as Stephen Stills, Robbie Stokes, etc.
(2) People who helped with the project, either as recording
engineers, roadies, or managers.
(3) Friends and Family, mostly people who lived at the
ranch, including some infants.
The collage is by no means a complete Rolling Thunder group portrait -- not everyone who worked on the album is shown. The album
insert thanks a large number of people, some of whom I have identified on the
cover and some who may be there but I haven’t found them yet. The ones thanked
but not ID’ed include: Bill Champlin (organ), Paul Kantner (vocals), Sam
Andrews (guitar), Mike and Nancy Hinton (marimbas), Carmelo Garcia
(percussion), Dan Healy (mixing), John Wollman and Rick Davis (engineers), Rock
Scully (director), and Jerilyn Brandelius.
Here’s the list of people we have identified positively or
tentatively. In general I’ve tried providing more info on the lesser-known
people and what their roles were. If you have more information, can identify
the unknowns, or question some of the current ID’s, please let us know in the
comments and we will update the post accordingly!
#1: Mickey Hart, drummer for the Grateful
Dead, Oct. 1967 – Feb. 1971. He would rejoin the Dead in Oct. 1974.
#2: Unknown
#3: According to
RM, this is Johnny d'Fonseca, Jr.
– son of Johnny d’Fonseca, Sr. (see #17)
Johnny d’Fonseca Jr. (1958-1987) was the drummer in the
Jerry Garcia Band for six months in 1979-80, but had been in Mickey’s circle
for some ten years before that. Robert Hunter wrote in the liner notes to After Midnight:
“Little Johnny Dee was the son of Big Johnny Dee, a jolly
Jamaican carpenter who built Mickey's studio in the pastures of Novato. I
remember Little Johnny as a quiet kid who grew up around the scene and liked to
work out on Mickey's drum kit, which was always set up in the studio, getting
tips from the master along the way.”
#4: Unknown
#5: According to
MH, this is Danny Rifkin, one of the
Grateful Dead’s managers since 1966. He appears to be naked.
#6: According to
RM, this is Sandi Winslow.
Sandi was the wife of Joe Winslow (1948-2012), one of the
Dead crewmembers who came from Pendleton, Oregon. Joe worked for the Grateful
Dead road crew in 1971-74; per Dennis McNally, in 1974 “crew member Joe
Winslow, his wife Sandy, and some other former crew members began Hard
Truckers, which manufactured speaker and instrument cases and cabinets.” (Long Strange Trip p.481)
#7: MH says that
this is one of the engineers on the album, but he doesn’t remember which one.
The listed engineers included Mickey Hart, Dan Healy, John Wollman, Rick
Davis & David Freiberg. We know it’s not Mickey, Dan, or David, so maybe it
is John Wollman or Rick Davis.
#8: RM identifies
her as Debbie Eisenberg, aka “Debbie
Doobie.”
She’s given “special thanks” in the album credits, was later
listed as part of the “crew” for the Rhythm Devils’ Apocalypse Now Sessions,
and was also thanked in the Go To Heaven credits as part of the Front Street
crew. (She’s also the “Debbie” listed as a supporting musician on Aoxomoxoa.)
#9: Grace Slick, according to RM.
Grace was the lead singer for the Jefferson Airplane. She
contributes piano & vocals to ‘Blind John’ on the album.
#10: Rolling Thunder (1916-1997).
“His Western name was John Pope,” Mickey wrote. He met the
Dead in 1967 and frequently stayed at Mickey’s ranch in the ‘70s, acting as a Shoshone
medicine man. The Dead family were quite impressed with him; Jerilyn Brandelius
wrote, “He came to heal and provide spiritual guidance to many of us through
the years. He was a regular visitor at Mickey’s ranch with his warriors and
while he was in residence, we got up for a sunrise ceremony every morning.”
Mickey named the barn studio and the album after him, even
opening the album with his ‘Shoshone Invocation.’ The sunrise ceremony also
inspired the Dead song ‘Sunrise.’
#11: MH identifies
this horse as Tychain.
“At the Novato ranch…Valerie acquired for Mickey a
thoroughbred racehorse named Tychain.”
#12: Stephen Stills.
Singer, songwriter, guitarist, and founding member of the
Buffalo Springfield and Crosby Stills & Nash. At the time of this album he
was working as a solo artist and also formed the band Manassas. On this album
he plays bass on ‘The Main Ten’ and helped with mixing.
#13: Phil Lesh, Grateful Dead bassist. Here
he plays bass on ‘Pump Song.’
#14: Unknown
child.
#15: RM
identifies him as LuVell Benford
(1940-2014).
Dennis McNally writes that he met the band in 1966 and
visited them at 710 Ashbury: “LuVell Benford was a tall, striking black man
from Oakland, a businessman with a most enlightened air about him, whom Weir
first recalled seeing at Olompali riding a white BWM motorcycle with white
saddlebags, a big white cowboy hat on his head. He was noticeably warm and
generous, more monklike than any trader could reasonably be.” (Long Strange Trip p.161)
According to one biography: “Born in Pasadena, CA in
1940…after graduation he joined the Marines to “see the world”. He spent
several years stationed in Asia where he took up Martial Arts and Buddhism.
After his discharge, he found engineer work at IBM’s inaugural base and became
acquainted with a local researcher, Timothy Leary. A single acid trip changed
his fate over-night. Rebelling against his life as a “suit”, he moved to San
Francisco and fell in with the burgeoning counterculture movement, befriending
Jack Kerouac and witnessing the birth of The Grateful Dead. Legendary music
promoter, Bill Graham, hired him to be a bodyguard for his artists and he spent
the better part of a decade jet-setting and hobnobbing with stars.” He later
moved to Hawaii.
#16: RM
identifies him as Bruce Baxter – one
of the photographers for the cover. He also gets "special thanks" in the credits.
Dennis McNally’s book describes him as “Loose Bruce Baxter,
a Texas heir who would live at [Mickey’s] ranch for some time. Periodically,
Hart recalled, they’d clean him up and send him to a meeting with his mother so
that he could continue getting his $10,000 monthly allowance.” (Long Strange Trip p.308)
Robbie Stokes (see #56) writes, “There was Bruce B., who
drove a Mercedes sedan and had a pretty, blonde hippie girlfriend named Lacy.
He was the scion of a famed Texas ranch outfit, the famous King family, and was
rumored to be loaded with inherited Texas money. He seemed to be some sort of,
ahem, "businessman."”
According to McNally, it was Bruce who had turned the Dead
on to cocaine in 1970: “Loose Bruce Baxter, their wealthy friend, had showed up
with a large baggie full of the powder.” (p.362)
Loose Bruce’s sister was Frances Carr, a wealthy heiress who
worked for Out of Town Tours with Sam Cutler; in 1975 she and Cutler opened up
Manor Downs in Austin, Texas.
#17: RM
identifies him as Johnny d'Fonseca, Sr.
– (see also #37)
D’Fonseca (1934-1977) was a carpenter & caretaker who
lived on Mickey’s ranch for several years in the ‘70s. Per Dennis McNally, he
came into the Dead orbit in 1968: Ron Rakow was managing the Carousel “with his
lover, Lydia d’Fonseca, as chief bookkeeper and secretary… Lydia’s brother
Johnny, a superb carpenter, took care of the rebuilding of the stage… [Circa
1970] Lydia’s brother Johnny d’Fonseca, who had been the carpenter at the
Carousel, moved himself and his family to the ranch and, working with Dan
Healy’s designs, remodeled the barn into a studio and took care of everything
else that needed fixing.” (Long Strange
Trip p.256, 308)
He received a well-deserved "special thanks" in the album credits, and continued to work for the Dead family for a few years longer.
#18: MH
identifies him as Greg Errico.
“Hart and Errico became friends in about 1968. Hart simply
invited himself over to Errico's house in Mountain View and introduced
himself.”
Greg had been a drummer for Sly and the Family Stone, but
left the band in 1971, and at this time was mostly doing session work. He had
stayed on Mickey’s ranch, and played on one track on the album. In later years
he joined Mickey in the Apocalypse Now Sessions, played drums for the Jerry
Garcia Band at a number of shows between 1975-1983, and sat in with the
Grateful Dead at a couple shows including 12/31/78.
#19: David Gans
identifies him as David Freiberg.
Freiberg was a founding member of Quicksilver Messenger Service, and
joined Jefferson Airplane in 1972; he would later be a member of Jefferson
Starship. He also played in the PERRO sessions and on some of Mickey’s album projects.
On this album he contributed to a number of tracks, including the water pump in
‘Pump Song,’ and also helped with the mixing.
#20: Robert Hunter, lyricist for the
Grateful Dead. He wrote lyrics for three songs on the album: ‘The Main Ten’ and
‘Pump Song’ were shared with Weir’s Ace album (where they were retitled), and
‘Fletcher Carnaby’ is only found here.
#21: John Barlow, lyricist for the Grateful
Dead. As far as I know Barlow doesn’t have any lyrics on this album.
#22: Unknown
drummer.
#23: RM
identifies him as Rex Jackson
(1945-1976), Grateful Dead roadie from Pendleton, Oregon, who had worked with the band since 1968.
#24: RM
identifies him as Mickey Hart, but I’m skeptical.
#25: Unknown
drummer.
#26: RM identifies
him as Gerald Durham’s older brother
(see #44)
#27: RM identifies
her as Cookie Eisenberg.
Cookie was Mickey’s girlfriend at the time, and gets a "special thanks" in the album credits. She met Mickey in New York in Spring '68:
“Cookie had connections to [wealthy heir] Billy Hitchcock and the world of
Millbrook [and] was part owner of a travel agency… Through Cookie the Dead had
met a new circle of people, extremely wealthy New Yorkers…” (Long Strange Trip p. 282, 308)
#28: Sue Stallcup
identifies him as
David Parker.
Parker had been the financial manager of the Grateful Dead and
NRPS since Lenny's departure in 1970:
“Next door is the office of David Parker, business
manager—who also happens to be an 11-year friend of Jerry Garcia’s. At one time
he played washboard and kazoo in Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions.”
#29: Unknown.
#30: Jon McIntire (1941-2012), one of the
Grateful Dead’s road managers since 1969.
#31: Unknown
infant.
#32: Bill Kreutzmann, Grateful Dead drummer.
He doesn’t play on the album.
#33: Unknown.
#34: Unknown.
#35: RM
identifies him as Alla Rakha
(1919-2000), the famed Indian tabla player who often accompanied Ravi Shankar.
Alla Rakha was a special inspiration to Mickey: as one Dead
newsletter put it, “Mickey met Alla Rakha in 1967 and gave himself over to the
teachings of Indian rhythms during their first meeting.” Mickey took lessons
and called him “my greatest teacher” and “the highest form of rhythmic
development on this planet.” Alla Rakha contributes “rain” on the opening track
of the album.
#36: Unknown
#37: Unknown
person standing next to an airplane. Possibly Johnny d’Fonseca, Sr. (see #17).
Robbie Stokes writes, “There was a ranch hand named Johnny
D. who flew light planes at night with add-on bladder tanks for extra fuel for
purposes unknown … I will leave that to your imagination, but consider the time
and place.”
#38: MH
identifies him as Zakir Hussain.
Hussain was Alla Rakhar’s son and continued in his father’s
steps as a tabla player. He met Mickey in 1970 and they became close in long
jam sessions at the barn. Hussain plays tabla on three tracks on the album.
Along with more percussionists, Mickey & Zakir would later collaborate in the Diga Rhythm
Band and other projects, and continue to play together to this day.
#39: Ali Akbar Khan (1922-2009).
Classical Indian musician, sarod player, and teacher;
founded the Ali Akbar College of Music in Berkeley in 1967, where Mickey
studied and teamed up with other players. Khan does not appear on this album,
but a 1970 concert of his is featured on the latest volume of Bear’s Sonic
Journals.
#40: Bob Weir, Grateful Dead guitarist.
Appears on several tracks.
#41: Barry “The Fish” Melton.
Guitarist and founding member of Country Joe and the Fish,
which had broken up; at this time he was recording as a solo artist. He was
friends with Mickey: he appears on three tracks here and frequently recorded projects
with Mickey at the barn; he even started one of his solo albums there.
#42: Unknown
musician, MH thinks he’s possibly from the Tower of Power.
#43: Steve Schuster (confirmed by Steve).
Flute and horn player, mostly known for playing with
Jefferson Starship. He plays flute on a couple tracks on the album, and
recorded other songs with Mickey as well. He also appears on later albums in
the Dead orbit: Tales of the Great Rum Runners, Cats Under the Stars, Blues for
Allah, and Shakedown Street.
#44: RM
identifies him as Gerald Durham. I
couldn’t find any information on him.
#45: Mic Gillette, horn player in Tower of Power.
#46: Stephen "Doc" Kupka, horn player in Tower of Power.
#47: Mickey Hart.
#48: Peter Monk (1937-1992).
Poet and monk, born Peter Zimels. He wrote lyrics for three
songs on this album and also the Grateful Dead’s ‘Passenger.’ From Alan Trist’s
biographical note in the Complete
Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics: “He majored in Philosophy and graduated
from the University of Michigan in 1958. He served in the US Navy from 1958 to
1962. On leaving the Navy, he again made his way around the world from New
York, through Europe to Asia and eventually to Sri Lanka and Thailand, where he
became an ordained Buddhist monk, a calling he took seriously for the rest of
his life. Returning to the United States in late 1967, he served as some kind
of spiritual force during his years in the Grateful Dead’s extended family,
attending many births and performing many marriages.” (He would perform the
wedding ceremony for Jerry Garcia & Mountain Girl in 1981.)
#49: Jerry Garcia, Grateful Dead guitarist.
He plays on several tracks on the album, including “insect fear” in ‘Pump
Song.’
e
#50: Ron Rakow, one of the photographers for
the cover.
A hustler and business manager, he’d lent money and
enthusiasm and crazy schemes to the early Dead scene, and became manager of the
ill-fated Carousel in 1968. In 1972 he presented the Dead with the plan for
their own record label, which he would manage in another ill-fated venture.
#50 was formerly identified as
Jim Staralow, aka Curly Jim, aka CJ Stetson,
former manager of the 13
th Floor Elevators who’d hung out with the
Dead since 1966. He co-wrote a couple songs on the album with Peter Monk. Unless he's lurking elsewhere on the cover, this ID seems to have been a mistake.
#51: RM thinks
this is Terri Eisenberg, daughter of
Cookie Eisenberg (see #27). (I don’t know how old Terri was at the time.)
#52: John Cipollina (1943-1989).
Guitarist for Quicksilver Messenger Service; by this time
he’d left that group, forming the band Copperhead and doing session work. As an
old friend of the Dead’s he could often be
found at Mickey’s jam sessions and
recording projects, and plays on several songs on the album.
#53: Unknown.
#54: MH thinks this
is one of the engineers on the album. (Resembles Mickey.)
#55: Larry Shurtliff aka “Ram Rod” (1945-2006).
Grateful Dead roadie & crew chief since 1967, highly respected by the band.
#56: MH identifies
him as Robbie Stokes.
Stokes was a guitarist who’d been in the band Devil’s
Kitchen. He plays on several tracks on the album, and was a frequent visitor to
Mickey’s studio.
“My band Devil’s Kitchen’s road manager Ron Litz…gave me a
solid tip that Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead was open to area hotshots
coming up and sitting in on some tracks at his studio. Devil’s Kitchen … broke
up in 1970, [but] I ended up hanging out there a year and half, playing on
Mickey’s solo LP "Rolling Thunder" and Robert Hunter’s "Tales of
the Great Rum Runners"”
#57-59: Unknown.
#60: Greg Adams, horn player in Tower of Power.
(Formerly identified as Terry Haggerty, guitarist for the Sons
of Champlin. The band was still active in ’71-72 (under various names),
and Haggerty appears on just one track on the album. I don’t think he played
with Mickey very often; most of the rock musicians at Mickey’s sessions were ‘between
bands.’)
#61: Emilio Castillo, horn player in Tower of Power.
#62: Skip Mesquite, horn player in Tower of Power.
For comparison, some undated Tower of Power pics: