USA TODAY
June 11, 2004
Boundless Warren Haynes is a rock 'n' roll four-band man
By Brian Mansfield, Special for USA TODAY
The Bonnaroo festival celebrates the spirit of jamming and musical
mingling. Warren Haynes should be the Bonnaroo poster boy.
The 44-year-old guitarist boasts membership in no fewer than four bands.
He fronts his own trio, Gov't Mule, and plays with both the Allman
Brothers and The Dead. He's also part of Dead bassist Phil Lesh's side
project, Phil Lesh & Friends.
Oh, and he also put out a solo album this week.
Live at Bonnaroo, a solo acoustic performance recorded on a Sunday
afternoon before about 80,000 people at the Manchester, Tenn., festival
last June, features Haynes singing his own songs and eclectic covers
ranging from Radiohead's Lucky to Otis Redding's I Have Dreams To
Remember.
"I put together a set of songs I thought it would be fun to play
for the
crowd," Haynes says. "I wasn't thinking about making a record — hence
the large amount of cover songs that I would've probably rethought if I
had had any idea it was going to be a record."
Haynes has become a fixture at Bonnaroo, which will host 90,000 people
this weekend for performances by the likes of Bob Dylan, Dave Matthews,
Wilco, Patti Smith, Los Lonely Boys, Nellie McKay, Los Lobos and Robert
Randolph.
In addition to his solo set, in Bonnaroo's previous two years Haynes
has
performed with Gov't Mule and the Allmans, as well as sitting in with
numerous other acts, including Widespread Panic, Primus bassist Les
Claypool and New Orleans' Funky Meters.
This year, Haynes has scheduled Saturday performances with Gov't Mule
and The Dead. He'll almost surely wind up on stage with somebody else,
too. "There are so many people there that are close friends, we play
together every chance we get," he says.
Haynes got his first big break as guitarist for country renegade David
Allan Coe during the early '80s. He moved to Nashville, seeking work as
a session guitarist. Around this time, he co-wrote Two of a Kind
(Workin' on a Full House), which became a hit for Garth Brooks and is
still probably the biggest moneymaker in Haynes' varied career. He began
playing with Allmans guitarist Dickey Betts, which led to his joining
the Allmans in 1989. Lesh and Haynes began playing together in 2000.
The Dead's Bonnaroo performance launches Haynes' first tour with that
band. He's scheduled to open frequently with a solo set.
"Warren's range
is so great," Lesh says. "He can get
down in the dirt
with the slide guitar, or he can go out into space. He
has the capacity
to forget about everything he's ever played in the past,
in all those
other contexts he's been in, and just be in the moment.
In The Dead,
that's kind of the basic point from which you start."
Haynes says: "The Allman Brothers and the Grateful Dead are the
two
forerunners of the whole jam-band scene. They have similarities in their
approaches, but a lot of differences as well.
"When it comes to improvisation in the Allman Brothers, they are
about
getting to the point and finding that magic, but finding it very
quickly. In the Grateful Dead, they're much more about laying back and
waiting for the magic to come. They're both beautiful approaches;
there's no wrong or right with either one. It's a thing of beauty to see
them both operate."
In those bands, Haynes fills the roles of two of rock's most revered
guitarists, Duane Allman and Jerry Garcia. Gov't Mule, which will
release its sixth studio album this fall, gives Haynes the opportunity
to develop his own style outside of those icons' shadows.
"Gov't Mule is definitely a place in my heart where I can create
anything musically that I want to create," Haynes says.
"The Dead tour goes right into the next Allman Brothers tour, which
goes
right into the next Dead tour, which goes back into an Allman Brothers
tour," he says. "By then, it'll be time to put the Gov't Mule record
out
and start a big Gov't Mule tour.
"At that point, we'll be looking at Thanksgiving."
Says Lesh: "Here's a man who lives music. It's a delight working
with
somebody for whom that is his primary reason for being."
Says Haynes: "When I look at what my goals were a long time ago,
most of
them I've achieved in one way or another. But I can't say that I'm
satisfied with that. I'm constantly finding things I would love to
accomplish. I've been doing this a long time, but things are better than
ever for me.
"I just want to continue making the best music I can." |