The Silver Snarling Trumpet
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Discovered at last, the legendary lost manuscript of Grateful Dead
co-founder and primary lyricist Robert Hunter, written in the early
1960s-a wry, richly observed, and enlightening remembrance of 'the
scene' in Palo Alto that gave rise to an incredible partnership of
Hunter and Jerry Garcia, and then to the Grateful Dead itself-with
a Foreword by John Mayer, an Introduction by Dennis McNally, and an
Afterword by Brigid Meier. 'Strange to think back on those days
when it was perfectly natural that we all slept on the floor in one
small room . . . These were the days before practical
considerations, matters of "importance", began to eat our minds. We
were all poets and philosophers then, until we began to wonder why
we had so few concrete worries and went out to look for some.'So
wrote Robert Hunter in The Silver Snarling Trumpet, both a
novelistic singular work of art and the missing piece of the
Grateful Dead origin story. In these pages, readers are privy to
the early days of Hunter, Garcia, and their cohorts, who sit at
coffee shops passing around a single cup of bottomless coffee
because they lacked the funds for more than one. Follow these
truth-seeking souls into the stacks at Kepler's Books, renting
instruments at Swain's House of Music, and through the countryside
on mind-expanding road trips. Witness impromptu jams, inspired
intellectual pranks, and a dialogue that is, by turns, amusing and
brilliant and outrageous. Hunter shares his impressions of his
first gig with Garcia for a college audience, along with
descriptions of his most intense dreams and psychedelic
explorations. All of it, enlivened by Hunter's visionary spirit and
profound ideas about creativity and collaboration. The lost
manuscript is augmented with a Foreword by John Mayer, an
Introduction by Dennis McNally, and an Afterword by Brigid Meier,
who was part of their scene in the San Francisco Bay Area that
served as a bridge from the beatniks to the hippies. Also included
is Hunter's own 1982 assessment of his work-about how he shared it
with close confidants but then decided to leave it unpublished.
Five years after Hunter's death, the text has been found, so
readers and fans of Hunter's indelible poetry and song will see the
origin of his genius and his craft.