John Kahn
John Kahn | |
---|---|
Born |
Memphis, Tennessee United States | June 13, 1947
Origin | Beverly Hills, California |
Died | May 30, 1996 48) | (aged
Genres | Rock |
Instruments | Bass guitar, Double bass |
Years active | Late 1960s – 1996 |
Associated acts | Jerry Garcia, Old and in the Way, Legion of Mary, Paul Butterfield |
John Kahn (June 13, 1947 - May 30, 1996) was an American rock and roll bass guitarist. From 1970 to 1995, Kahn was Jerry Garcia's principal musical collaborator outside of the Grateful Dead.[1]
Biography
John Kahn was born in Memphis, Tennessee. Adopted at birth by talent agents, he grew up in Beverly Hills, California and was babysat by Marilyn Monroe. At Beverly Hills High School, he earned a reputation as a precocious musician playing jazz guitar and composing a symphonic piece, "Western Impressions", the first orchestral work by a student to be publicly performed by the school's orchestra under the direction of Robert Holmes.
In his junior year, Kahn switched to double bass and formed a jazz duo with a pianist, Peter Isackson, who encouraged him to study with Monty Budwig, a member of the house rhythm section at Shelly's Manne-hole. After briefly attending the University of Southern California, he transferred to the San Francisco Conservatory of Music in 1965. During this period, he lived in nearby Sausalito, California and began to gravitate toward the incipient rock culture of the Haight-Ashbury district. In 1967, he began working as a session musician with a litany of notable blues, folk, and rock performers, including Mike Bloomfield, Nick Gravenites, Mississippi Fred McDowell, John Lee Hooker, Brewer & Shipley (a longstanding collaboration that encompassed their 1971 Top Ten hit "One Toke Over the Line"), Tom Fogerty, Maria Muldaur, Al Kooper, Jackie DeShannon, and Otis Rush.[2][3]
Kahn first played with Garcia in May 1970 as the bassist of a jazz rock group that coalesced around Garcia and organist Howard Wales during Monday night jam sessions at The Matrix, a San Francisco nightclub of the era; this ensemble would go on to record Hooteroll? (1971; credited to Garcia and Wales). He also played acoustic bass in Old and in the Way, a bluegrass supergroup that toured in 1973 and 1974. Along with Kahn, the band featured Garcia on banjo and vocals, future progressive bluegrass luminary David Grisman on mandolin and vocals, songwriter Peter Rowan on guitar and vocals, and Vassar Clements on fiddle. From 1970 to 1975, Kahn played in the Merl Saunders and Jerry Garcia Band and was an integral part of later iterations of the Garcia/Saunders collaboration, including Legion of Mary (1974-1975) and Reconstruction (1978-1979); ironically, the latter group was initially intended to serve as a musical outlet for Kahn during Garcia's tours with the Grateful Dead. Kahn was the only founding member of the Jerry Garcia Band (1975-1995) to remain with the group until its dissolution following Garcia's death in 1995. He also played alongside Garcia in the Jerry Garcia Acoustic Band (1987-1988) and served as the guitarist's only accompanist in the Garcia & Kahn acoustic duo that toured intermittently from 1982 to 1989.
Kahn did occasional work for the Grateful Dead, serving as a recording engineer alongside Betty Cantor-Jackson and Bob Matthews for the band's aborted Egypt '78 live album documenting performances at the Giza Plateau in September 1978; selections from these concerts were eventually released as Rocking the Cradle: Egypt 1978 (2008). He also contributed organ and additional production to Shakedown Street (1978) following the departure of nominal producer Lowell George.
He died of a heart attack in his sleep on May 30, 1996.[4]
References
- ↑ John Kahn Biography at AllMusic. Retrieved April 14, 2015.
- ↑ John Kahn Discography, Grateful Dead Family Discography. Retrieved April 14, 2105.
- ↑ "John Kahn Live Performance History 1969", Lost Live Dead, December 4, 2010. Retrieved April 14, 2015.
- ↑ Jackson, Blair (1999). Garcia: An American Life. Penguin Books. p. 470. ISBN 0 14 02 9199 7.
As had happened with Garcia, Kahn's heart simply gave out. Though there were drugs in his system at the time of his death, it was not ruled an overdose.
External links
- John Kahn on Allmusic
- John Kahn on IMDB
- John Kahn discography on DeadDisc.com
- John Kahn at Find a Grave