“Mindbender (Confusion’s Prince)” (1965) – The Grateful Dead

“Mindbender (Confusion’s Prince)” (1965) – The Grateful Dead * Written by Jerry Garcia and Phil Lesh * LP: Birth of the Dead  (2003) * Producers: Tom Donahue, Bobby Mitchell * Label: Rhino

The five original members of the Grateful Dead recorded their first demos as The Emergency Crew at Golden State Recorders on Harrison Street (two blocks away from where the Giants now play). This was the studio of choice for Autumn Records, co-owned by legendary disk jockey Tom Donahue, which had generated the first conception of a “San Francisco sound” with the misty jangle of the Beau Brummels. Although the future Dead had already generated a live buzz as the Warlocks, they scrapped the name for the sessions, having gotten wind of another band already recording under that name. The six demos are true curiosities, sporting a decidedly Autumn sound and a short-lived intra-band understanding that bassist Phil Lesh would serve as a primary vocalist. The track “Mindbender,” in particular, follows a trail through the minor-key moods of early Beau Brummels into the espionage exotica of Monty Norman’s “James Bond Theme,” a 1964 US radio hit for Billy Strange.

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