Jerry Garcia: He Did It Himself and So Can You
To make it big in the music business you need to know the right people, get several lucky breaks, listen to your producer and your label and be willing to be shaped by others. This was true when Jerry Garcia and members of Grateful Dead were growing up in the 1950s and ’60s, and to a large extent it remains true today.
Unless you find another way.
Jerry Garcia Life Lesson: Do It Yourself
Jerry Garcia and friends were masterful at finding a new and better way. Finding one’s way was in the air in the San Francisco circa 1967. Take the Diggers. They found a way to feed all the hungry kids in Golden Gate Park who showed up for the Summer of Love with no place to stay, little money or food and basically no clue. Sure, the Diggers redistributed other’s wealth to get the job done, but I don’t want to judge their Robin Hoodishness. I just want to acknowledge their “can do” spirit.
Grateful Dead was an ingenious outfit and they were not afraid to go it alone, or do it themselves. Thanks to benefactor Owsley Stanley (a.k.a. Bear), and his money from the sale of LSD, plus his uncanny ability to design and make complex things, the Dead created their own homemade but totally state-of-the-art sound system. The band later created its own record label, produced its own feature film and created its own mail order distribution system for concert tickets.
The band’s DIY ethos was in part a rejection of mainstream music business culture, but that’s not all it was. It was also about the balls out pursuit of innovative solutions. It meant creating something elegant and better than what existed before. I met Owsley in 1987, and we had a long talk in the car as I drove him from Alpine Valley to the Hilton in Lake Geneva. He didn’t say so, but I am pretty sure he felt the technology that the band relied on had to be good enough to compliment the LSD, often his LSD, that people were taking. Put another way, bad sound could easily ruin a perfectly good trip and Owsley wasn’t about to let that happen.
Jerry was also an avid painter and illustrator throughout his life. He did attend art school in San Francisco for a short time, but like he did with most things he figured it out. And then some, as Jerry’s larger canvases were selling for $40,000 while he was alive. Today, his work (including prints) continues to fetch top dollar.
Jerry was a super smart guy. He was witty, sharp, a great conversationalist and brilliant in a lot of ways. Jerry had the other essential qualities to go with it: curiosity, passion, charm and a great ear. He was also a native San Franciscan, and this made a difference because there’s a pioneering gene common to many residents of the city by the Bay. It’s not known as the “Athens of America” for no reason. In San Francisco so many things are possible, and this wide open approach to things — “if we can dream it, we can do it” — was Jerry’s way.
It’s pretty clear to me that this lesson, about self-reliance, innovative thinking and not taking no for an answer, has impacted me in a large way.
I didn’t study to become a copywriter. I just became one, by attending the school of hard knocks and by learning on the job. Same with hypertext markup language. I wanted to make websites, so I took an online tutorial in html and started to make them. That was in 1999 on slow days at the agency. Since that time, I’ve built many client sites, and established myself as a well known ad industry critic and industry champion thanks to another DIY moment in 2004, when a former colleague and I started Adpulp.com.
In 2009 I founded Bonehook, a guide service and bait shop for brands to serve the needs of companies making a difference in their customers’ lives.
Doing it yourself doesn’t mean flying solo. When you combine the DIY ethos with superior teamwork, magic happens.
This article was originally written in 2013 and published on davidburn.com to celebrate “Nine Days of Jerry,” which takes place each year from August 1 to August 9. To read the entire series of Jerry Garcia-inspired articles, click here and let the good times roll. #9DaysofJerry