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Spencer Dryden

 
Artist:

Spencer Dryden

Spencer Dryden

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  • Born: April 07, 1938, New York, NY
  • Died: January 11, 2005, Petaluma, CA
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Drums

Biography

Spencer Dryden was the drummer in the classic lineup of Jefferson Airplane, from the spring of 1966 until the winter of 1969-1970, and for most of that time was one of the three most well-known drummers on the San Francisco scene (along with the Grateful Dead's Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart). He also came out of a background completely different from the rest of the band -- where the other members of the Airplane were all relatively new to the world of full-time professional music, Dryden had been making a decent living and working full-time as a drummer for years before he crossed paths with Marty Balin and company. And unlike the others, San Francisco wasn't where he made his home or planned on making a career, and he was never part of the folk scene like the other members. His way into music -- and his living for a good ten years before joining the band -- came from jazz.

Dryden came from a performing family, though not one directly involved in music. He was born in New York City, the son of a British actor (who was a half-brother to Charles Chaplin) and a dancer. The family moved to Los Angeles in 1939, and it was there, in the late '40s and early '50s, that Dryden began discovering jazz -- his parents had split up in the mid-'40s, and his father happened to love jazz; one of the things that they would do on their days together would be to go to the jazz clubs around the city. He became fascinated with the drumming in the bands that he saw and decided to take up the drums himself. He studied with Jimmy Dorsey veteran Ray Bauduc, whose career went back to the '20s, and by his mid-teens, he had also discovered modern jazz and was starting to sit in with professional and semi-professional bands in and around Los Angeles. While millions of American teens were swept up in the rock & roll boom of the mid-'50s, Dryden was playing with Charles Lloyd and Bobby Hutcherson in the early days of their careers. He didn't really turn toward rock & roll until the early to mid-'60s, when the combined impact of the British Invasion and the folk-rock boom that followed began overtaking some of the jazz clubs where he worked. Dryden became a member of a band called the Ashes -- who later evolved into the Peanut Butter Conspiracy -- who were doing well enough until their lead singer became pregnant and quit.

Dryden was approached during this period by the Jefferson Airplane's then-manager, who was looking for a replacement for Skip Spence, the group's original drummer -- Spence, who was really a guitarist and songwriter, had quit following the recording of their first album. At the time he joined, in the early summer of 1966, the Airplane was, as luck would have it, also in the process of losing its female singer, Signe Anderson, to pregnancy. Her replacement came aboard in September of 1966 in the form of Grace Slick, whose more exciting and charismatic singing, coupled with a pair of songs she brought with her, suddenly jump-started the group's career and carried them into the Top Ten on the singles charts twice in 1967. Dryden was along for the ride and rose to the occasion -- from playing clubs in 1966, he went to performing in front of 50,000 people in June of 1967, at the Monterey Pop Festival. His drumming, along with Slick's voice and the new boldness of the other members, helped turn the Surrealistic Pillow album

into one of the best-selling and most enduring albums of the late '60s.

Dryden played an essential role within the group's sound, providing more of a compelling, driving beat for many of the songs on Surrealistic Pillow than the band's first LP had shown, as well as great sensitivity as a percussionist on some of the more subtle songs such as the ballad "Today." On the band's two subsequent, more experimental records, After Bathing at Baxter's and Crown of Creation, his playing took on a more diverse, at times surprisingly melodic role. He offered little in formal, traditional songwriting but did provide one of the more delightful psychedelic moments on After Bathing at Baxter's, in the form of "A Small Package of Value Will Be Coming to You Shortly". Still, Dryden wasn't entirely a perfect fit with the group -- perhaps due to his not having been part of the folk scene before entering the group, and to his previous ten years having been spent in the music business, he was never as laid-back in his approach to life or work as the others; in fact, for a time (partly due to a physical attraction), his

closest ally there was the other "new" member, Grace Slick. Additionally, though his skills were daunting, he initially lacked some of the straight-ahead, raw power -- which became a necessity once the group began playing ever-larger venues -- in his playing that the group wanted. Dryden adjusted, however, and his sound on the live album Bless Its Pointed Little Head is certainly a match for the rest of the band.

Dryden left the group following the release of Volunteers and the wearying year of 1969, in which the Airplane had managed to play both Woodstock and Altamont. By that time, neither the music that the group was making nor the shows they were doing were satisfying to him, and he'd already made up his mind to leave at the point that he was fired by the band, to be replaced by Joey Covington. Dryden's departure merely opened a door through which singer/founder Marty Balin exited during the following year. Additionally, despite his unhappiness with the group, Dryden did play on Paul Kantner's 1971 solo album Sunfighter. In 1971, he became a member of the New Riders of the Purple Sage, playing with them for seven years; he eventually took over their management representation as well. During this period, he also played on the Grateful Dead offshoot album Seastones.

Dryden was enough of a fixture on the San Francisco scene that he was asked in to various combos of veteran Bay Area players during the '80s, including the Dinosaurs, whose members included veterans of such bands as Country Joe & the Fish, Big Brother & the Holding Company, and the Quicksilver Messenger Service, and played on one of Barry Melton's albums as well. He was the only member of the classic lineup not to participate in the Jefferson Airplane's 1989 reunion tour and album, though he was present in 1996 for the group's induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

In 2003, Dryden's home was destroyed by fire and the following year he was the recipient of a benefit concert to help with his mounting medical bills. After numerous ailments, Spencer Dryden passed away January 11, 2004 at his Petaluma, CA home. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Spencer Dryden

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Spencer Dryden

Background information
Born April 7, 1938
New York, New York, United States
Died January 11, 2005 (aged 66)
Penngrove, California, United States
Genres Psychedelic rock, Acid rock, Country rock, Jazz
Occupations Musician
Instruments Drums
Years active 1966 - 1995
Labels RCA, BMG, Columbia
Associated acts Jefferson Airplane
New Riders of the Purple Sage
The Dinosaurs
Notable instruments
Fibes Drums

Spencer Dryden (April 7, 1938 – January 11, 2005) was an American musician who was best known as the drummer for Jefferson Airplane, New Riders of the Purple Sage and The Dinosaurs.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Dryden was born in New York City to Alice Chapel and Wheeler Dryden, a half-brother of Charlie Chaplin. He moved to Los Angeles as an infant, when his father went to work as an assistant director for Chaplin. Spencer fondly recalled playing at his famous uncle's Hollywood studio as a child. His father was a jazz fan, and took him to LA jazz clubs in the 1950s, which inspired his musical ambitions.

Jefferson Airplane

In mid-1966 Dryden was recruited to replace Skip Spence as the drummer in leading San Francisco psychedelic band Jefferson Airplane. The former jazzer, together with bassist Jack Casady, created an exceptional rhythm section. A feature of live Airplane sets at the time were free-form improvisational jams, with Dryden's licks complementing Casady's fluid style. During this time also, he had an affair with Grace Slick.

The song Lather, appearing on Jefferson Airplane's Crown of Creation (1968), is said to have been written by Grace Slick on the occasion of Dryden's 30th birthday. Its lyrics tell of a boy who stays as young as possible until one day when he is shattered by having to finally grow up. The instrumental sections are wild and purposefully discordant.

Dryden quit Jefferson Airplane in February 1970, motivated in part by the group's unpleasant experiences at the notorious Altamont Festival, during which lead singer Marty Balin was knocked unconscious by Hells Angels bikers and a festival patron, Meredith Hunter, was fatally stabbed.

New Riders of the Purple Sage, The Dinosaurs

Dryden left the music business for a short period, and returned to drumming as a member of the Grateful Dead offshoot The New Riders of the Purple Sage. He performed and recorded with them from late 1970 until 1977, at which point he became the manager of the band. After leaving the New Riders, Dryden went on to play a lengthy stint with The Dinosaurs and Barry Melton's band before retiring from drumming in 1995.

Later life

Spencer did not participate in Jefferson Airplane's 1989 reunion. In 1996, Dryden was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with the rest of Jefferson Airplane.

He had been suffering from a hip replacement and heart surgery in the past few years before his death. In 2004, several musicians, led by Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead and Warren Haynes (Gov't Mule and the Allman Brothers Band), raised US$36,000 to help pay Dryden's medical bills.

Spencer died from colon cancer in relative obscurity, reportedly living in a shack at the back of a rented property in Petaluma, California or Penngrove, California.

He was survived by his three sons Jeffrey, Jesse and Jackson Dryden and his mother Alice Chapple Judd, who died on December 25, 2005 at the age of 94.[1]

Grace Slick remembers him in a Rolling Stone magazine article here.

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
White Rabbit: Live [Blu Mountain] (2003 Album by Jefferson Airplane)
Peanut Butter Conspiracy (Rock Band, '60s)
New Riders of the Purple Sage (1971 Album by The New Riders of the Purple Sage)

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