David Grisman is normally associated with the
bluegrass wing of country music, but his music
owes almost as much to jazz as it does to traditional
American folk influences. Because he couldn't
think of what to call his unique, highly intricate,
harmonically advanced hybrid of acoustic bluegrass,
folk, and jazz without leaning toward one idiom
or another, he offhandedly decided to call it
"dawg music" — a name which, curiously enough,
has stuck. A brilliant mandolinist, with roots
deep in the Quintet of the Hot Club of France,
Grisman's jazz sensibilities were strong enough
to attract the admiration of the HCQ's Stephane
Grappelli, who has toured and recorded with Grisman
on occasion.Grisman was already playing the piano,
saxophone, and mandolin by the time he was a teenager,
taking up the latter at age 16. While attending
New York University in 1963, he began playing
with the Even Dozen Jug Band, which at one time
included Maria Muldaur and John Sebastian. In
1966, bluegrass bandleader Red Allen invited Grisman
to join his Kentuckians, and the following year
Grisman joined Peter Rowan in the progressive-minded
Earth Opera, which blended folk, country, rock,
pop, and jazz. After two albums, he moved to San
Francisco and hooked up with Jerry Garcia, playing
on the Grateful Dead's classic American Beauty.
He went on to play in Garcia's bluegrass side
project, Old & in the Way, along with Peter Rowan,
who also re-teamed with him in the loose all-star
group Muleskinner. In 1974, Grisman co-founded
the Great American String Band with Muleskinner
fiddler Richard Greene, which first allowed him
to explore the lengthy instrumental improvisations
that would become his trademark.Greene didn't
stick around for too long, and in 1976 Grisman
assembled a new group dubbed the David Grisman
Quintet, which featured guitarist Tony Rice, fiddler
Darol Anger, bassist Joe Carroll, and mandolinist/bassist
Todd Phillips. The Quintet's self-titled debut
was released in 1977 on Kaleidoscope, and proved
a seminal influence on the so-called "newgrass"
or "new acoustic" movements, thanks to its progressive,
jazz-fueled harmonies and improvisations. The
follow-up, 1979's Hot Dawg, was Grisman's breakthrough
album; it was released on A&M's jazz imprint,
Horizon, and featured guest work by jazz violin
legend Stephane Grappelli. By this time, there
was already personnel turnover in the Quintet;
mandolinist Mike Marshall joined up, and by the
time Grisman moved to Warner and recorded Mondo
Mando in 1981, bassist Rob Wasserman and violinist
Mark O'Connor joined Rice, Anger, and Marshall.
In all, Grisman recorded four albums for Warner
over 1980-1983; 1982's Dawg Jazz/Dawg Grass was
another notable outing with Grappelli that, true
to its title, split its repertoire between swing
and bluegrass.By 1984, the original "dawg music"
lineup had largely broken up, with most of the
members moving on to productive solo and/or collaborative
projects (Anger notably joined the Turtle Island
String Quartet). Grisman played on a number of
sessions in the meantime, including with jazz-minded
banjo virtuoso Béla Fleck, who claimed Grisman
as a major influence. In 1985, Grisman organized
a new group with seasoned jazz musicians: bassist
Jim Kerwin, guitarist Dimitri Vandellos, and drummer
George Marsh, who backed him on a 1987 duet album
with jazz violinist Svend Asmussen, Svingin' With
Svend. The more traditional bluegrass outing Home
Is Where the Heart Is followed in 1988, before
Grisman formed his own Acoustic Disc label in
1990 and got much more prolific. A steady stream
of releases appeared on Acoustic Disc during the
first half of the '90s, starting with Dawg '90,
which debuted a new core group that included Kerwin,
fiddler/drummer Joe Craven, and flutist Matt Eakle,
as well as returning alum Mark O'Connor, guitarist
John Carlini, and fiddler Matt Glaser. Other notable
releases included a 1991 reteaming with Jerry
Garcia and two albums of Tone Poems (i.e., duets
with Tony Rice and Martin Taylor, respectively).
Argentinean guitarist Enrique Coria joined the
lineup of Grisman, Kerwin, Craven, and Eakle for
1995's Latin-flavored Dawganova. Grisman entered
another productive period in 1999, issuing several
widely varied projects, and reconvened that quintet
for 2002's Dawgnation.
by Richard S. Ginell & Steve Hue