Buried Treasures & Peter Lewis of Moby Grape

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Jim and Greg are always on the lookout for buried treasures - newly released music that is flying underneath the critical and commercial radar. They're back this week with some exciting new songs. Jim and Greg also talk with a member of a somewhat buried treasure act from the past, Peter Lewis of Moby Grape. They discuss ways the 1960s  San Francisco group turned convention on its head and some of the bad luck that befell the band.

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Buried Treasures

Jim and Greg listen to loads of music each week and don't always have time to talk about it all. They share some new music aka buried treasures that they think you need to hear!

Greg

  • Mini Meltdowns, "I Wanna Die"
  • Jade Jackson, "City Lights"
  • Altin Gün, "Leyla"
  • Joan Shelley, "Coming Down For You"

Jim

  • Clive Tanaka Y Su Orquesta, "Popular Lips"
  • Future Silence, "Kansas Plains"
  • Reunion Island, "Rokka"
  • Sasquatch Turf War, "The Conversation Piece"

Peter Lewis of Moby Grape

Moby Grape

When Moby Grape formed in San Francisco in 1966, some critics saw them as America's answer to The Beatles. Their line-up was stacked with three talented guitarists (Skip Spence, Peter Lewis and Jerry Miller) and all five band members sang lead and wrote songs (bassist Bob Mosley and drummer Don Stevenson rounded out the band). They could play radio-friendly music as well as psychedelic experimental music. Columbia Records was excited to support them and it seemed there was nowhere to go but up. But before they could ascend to the top of the music industry, a string of bad luck got in their way.

This week, guitarist Peter Lewis explains to Jim and Greg how a bad manager, an overzealous publicity strategy and mental illness combined with a drug cocktail relegated Moby Grape to "buried treasure" status, even 52 years after their debut album was released. He also talks about how they developed their three guitar approach, their friendship with Buffalo Springfield and Skip Spence's solo album Oar, which he wrote over his six months in Bellevue psychiatric hospital.

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