Since
the Grateful Dead were notorious for recording awkward studio albums, it always seemed that the answer to their problem was simply getting the right producer to coax magic out of the band -- and nobody would seem better suited for the position than
Little Feat leader
Lowell George, whose own band shared
the Dead's tendency to wander and jam in a live setting, yet made almost nothing but good studio records. But 1978 was not a great year for either camp, as
the Dead were drifting in their attempts to score a crossover hit for
Clive Davis'
Arista Records, while
George was pushing
Little Feat toward disbandment as he was inching closer to his premature death in 1979. Add to that
the Dead's sudden, inexplicable fascination with
disco, a desire to have
Donna Jean Godchaux be an integral part of the record, plus no new songs ready to go at the beginning of the sessions, and it's little surprise that
Shakedown Street wound up as a mess. It rambles and wanders all over the place, as
the Dead cover
the Rascals'
"Good Lovin'" before they revive
"New Minglewood Blues" (which they originally cut for their debut), as
Jerry Garcia and
Robert Hunter write their own
"Stagger Lee" while
Mickey Hart and
Bill Kreutzmann get a percussion workout on the brief instrumental
"Serengetti" and
Bob Weir affects a bluesy growl on
"I Need a Miracle." In
George's hands, this is all given a smooth gloss not all that far removed from such latter-day
Feat LPs as
The Last Record Album, but since
the Dead favor hazy, lazy grooves to
Feat's laid-back but tight New Orleans
funk -- and since
George didn't produce so much as he created an appropriate atmosphere in the studio --
Shakedown Street meanders mercilessly, and its indulgences wind up overwhelming the album as a whole. And there isn't just one kind of indulgence here; there's a plethora of them, ranging from the
disco pulse of the title track to the fuzziness of the two songs sung by
Donna Jean. This can make
Shakedown Street a bit of a difficult, dated listen, since even the good songs boast bad arrangements (
"Shakedown Street" and
"Fire on the Mountain" were later reworked and revitalized in concert), yet it falls short of flat-out disaster, partially because it's a fascinating listen due to the very things that make it a severely flawed record. The
disco flirtations, subdued
funk, misguided commercial concessions, and overarching Californian slickness do make
Shakedown Street fascinating for at least one spin, even if they'll keep even hardcore Deadheads -- maybe especially hardcore Deadheads -- from coming back to the record more than once every decade or so. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine