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Topic: Jefferson Airplane Drummer in Misery (nsc) Return to archive
28th May 2004 03:13 AM
UGot2Rollme from the news wires:
----------------------
Spencer Dryden didn't feel the heat, but he heard what he thought sounded like kids shooting BBs at the house. Cooking a late lunch in his kitchen in September, he turned and looked down the hallway of his Petaluma, Calif., home and saw the fire.

"The bedroom door from floor to ceiling was solid orange," he said. "I knew this was no wastebasket fire. This sucker was going up. That was it."

The BBs he thought he heard turned out to be his ammunition going off. Wrapped in a blanket on the tilted kitchen floor of the funky Sonoma County cottage where he now lives are the remains of two charred, cherished rifles, the barrels clotted and scorched, the stocks all but burned off.

"God knows what can be done with those," he said. "I imagine they're a total waste."

The onetime drummer for the Jefferson Airplane lost virtually everything he owned - his gold albums, his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame award, all the posters he saved, his extensive photo and film archive including all the Super 8 home movies he took during the early days of the Airplane, his audio and video equipment, five computers, and all kinds of one-of-a-kind items like the huge painting done by Airplane vocalist Marty Balin that was a gift to Dryden from the band's original drummer, the late Skip Spence, or the Jefferson Airplane metal sculpture that used to hang above the entrance to the Fillmore Auditorium.

There was no insurance. The Red Cross found him a hotel room.

"I'm not one of those boo-hoo kinds of people," said Dryden. "But you do realize, when all is said and done and you're sitting in a hotel room with nothing to do, you realize, well, I don't have much anymore."

Dryden, 66, also is dealing with some serious health problems. He underwent one hip replacement surgery and is awaiting a second. He hobbles around slowly with the aid of a cane. Hearing loss has left him nearly deaf. Doctors recently put Dryden in the hospital for heart trouble (a valve was discovered to be pumping backward) and he needs to have an operation for that, too.

"The heart surgery is what scares me," he said.

Dryden was playing rim shots behind comics and strippers at the Pink Pussycat on the Sunset Strip in 1966 when he received a call from the Jefferson Airplane's manager inviting him to audition.

He joined the band in time to back the group's new vocalist, Grace Slick, on the Airplane's second album, "Surrealistic Pillow," which produced two Top 10 hits - "White Rabbit" and "Somebody to Love" - that vaulted the Airplane into the front ranks of the new rock bands of the day.

The bolero beat he played underneath "White Rabbit" was novel for rock music. As a member of the Airplane, Dryden played the Monterey Pop Festival, Woodstock and Altamont, where he dropped LSD, got lost looking for the band after performing and ended up hitching a ride home from some concertgoers.

Sitting at his kitchen table covered with notepads, laptop and cell phones, he freshened his cranberry juice from a pint of vodka in the freezer without rising from his chair, and lit another cigarette.

He gets by on Social Security, disability payments and an occasional feeble royalty check, though his friends - including Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead - organized a benefit on his behalf in San Francisco last week.

His eyes brimmed with tears as he talked about the benefit.

He hasn't really worked since he officially retired in 1995, although, truth be told, he wasn't working that much before then, either.

"I'm gone," he said. "I'm out of it. I've left the building."

(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.shns.com.)

Copyright Scripps Howard News Service 2004

29th May 2004 12:07 PM
Taptrick
I have liked a lot of his work - sad to see he has health problems and continues to smoke.

.
[Edited by Taptrick]
30th May 2004 09:14 PM
VoodooChileInWOnderl From the 2400 Fulton Street mailing list:


Donation checks of any size can be sent to:
Spencer Dryden,
P.O. Box 751405, Petaluma, CA 94975.

Online http://www.jamscene.org
Best Regards! John B. Krug

30th May 2004 09:20 PM
VoodooChileInWOnderl Also posted by John at the same list

Hi.... Hmmm, perhaps it's too dated to be elaborate, so....
It was 5-22-2004, m' Lord... Slim's got crowded real fast. During
the first band's set, I was hungry, so I chowed down a sandwich at the
bar....There was a table by the club entrance that had some JA stuff to
sell, such as "Jefferson Airplane Loves You" bumper stickers, "Spencer
Dryden For Precedent" campaign buttons (i.e. a clipping of him from the
SP cover surrounded by the letters), and, of course, a copy of that JA
book by Mr. Tamarkin. They were also selling raffle tickets for various
prizes. My number was close to those picked, but no cigar....
I think a new organization was formed there that night. Another
Sardine for Spencer (ASS). Initiation was leaning
forward and backward, depending on which way another sardine wanted to
go.
For a good part of the show, I found a relatively good spot to stand by
the platform with the video camera on it. The music was clear, no sound
problems. I thought it was great that the crowd was a mix of the
generations, We had your "flower geezers" (coined by Wavy Gravy),
Deadheads and younger jamband fans....
Towards the later part of the night, free large and small nekked lady
concert posters were circulated by the front door.
I wonder when the concert DVD will be released to fans, how can I
get a copy (?)....just like I've wondered about the JS Fillmore concert
in 1998 and last year's Galactic Reunion show in Marin....Why these are
being sat on by those in charge, I just don't know....
Best announcement of the night: "There will be no smoking of any
kind!". I think this had something to do with the fire codes and all....
I ran out of stamina about 12:30, so I missed the finale with Kathy
Peck singing
a JA song (!), Pete Sears playing bass, etc...
I hope to see more concerts like this one in the future, but if at
all possible in venues that can handle crowds like that...
Next up for me seems to be that the current edition of "It's A
Beatiful Day" will be playing at my local blues club Moe's Alley on June
4th. And then there's the Haight St. Fair the next following weekend.
(More on this later)...
Best Regards! John B. Krug