@AirplayBeats reacts to The Grateful Dead - Franklins Tower Like comment and subscribe patreon.com/user?u=81569817 Airplay Beats 3609 Bradshaw Rd Ste H #337 Sacramento, CA 95827 Www.Airplaybeats.com
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@mikepiccione88611 ай бұрын
The Grateful Dead is more than a band we are a family, a community, a spirit,😊❤
@lisarainbow970311 ай бұрын
NFA!!! (~):} 💜✌🎶
@JoeandAngie11 ай бұрын
Of p a g ans
@JB-Deadskins11 ай бұрын
Tons of Christian imagery and references in their songs
@alansnowdeal984511 ай бұрын
Amen That!
@ValoA1Arts9 ай бұрын
☮ ❤ (~);} GDF
@booboo857711 ай бұрын
One reason we followed them is every night was different. Every version of a song was different. There were no set lists. Every show was a unique experience. Stick with the live cuts guys. That's where the magic lies. My favorite show of all time: Robert F. Kennedy Stadium on 1973-06-10. 3 sets with The Allman Brothers playing with. Legendary.
@lesblatnyak594711 ай бұрын
The reason they didn't ban recording devices or live broadcasts. Most bootleged band ever. Sadly I only saw them twice in the 70s. Brilliant!
@richardsteiner899211 ай бұрын
My little brother had hundreds of tapes, some pretty low gen. He didn't record himself, but the trading community was very active and it was sanctioned by the band. That's what made it special. You were welcome to share the experience with others as long as it wasn't for profit.
@lesblatnyak594711 ай бұрын
@@richardsteiner8992 how cool is that
@North-Woods11 ай бұрын
Exactly! The songs evolved also. They changed tempos and lyrics too.
@MaGiKRat42011 ай бұрын
@@lesblatnyak5947I think american beauty is an album worth them hearing in it's entirety
@victorpineiro872711 ай бұрын
Speaking for myself…the first time I saw The Dead live I looked around at all the people, felt the energy in the room, felt the vibes from the band, and understood immediately, I have found my tribe in this world. These are my people. Once you feel that in your core it becomes more than music, it becomes life. A Dead show was a communal celebration in its purest sense. Like Church. Once you really taste that feeling you can’t help but want to taste it again, over and over.
@mikemaricle994111 ай бұрын
YEP! My first show was 8/12/81 at the Salt Palace. I saw them 17 times with Jerry RIP, and a half dozen or so after.
@BlastingConcept10 ай бұрын
@@mikemaricle9941What a show that was…!
@TuomasLeone11 ай бұрын
As other's have said every show was unique, some were flat out duds, most were great, and every now and then pure magic. Also it wasn't like just going to a concert, more like a family reunion, with a really big, wild, fun family.
@hungandfaded81510 ай бұрын
Spoken like a true Deadhead 😂😂🤙
@RiverRat19539 ай бұрын
You guys are getting into the DEAD music! I am 70 years old and still rocking scene 1972!
@vespoint11 ай бұрын
I have to take a minute to point out Robert Hunter’s lyrics - he was magical. “If you plant ice, you’re gonna harvest wind.”
@crazyfingers1911 ай бұрын
One of many favorite lines ever!
@hog720310 ай бұрын
Hunter is a freaking genius.
@oldarpanet9 ай бұрын
My major issue with reactors is that no one pays enough attention to the lyrics. Your quote above is one of my favorites ever, but Perry really named the band with The Music Never Stopped: They're a band beyond description like Jehova's favorite choir People join in hand in hand While the music plays the band Lord, they're settin' us on fire. "the music plays the band" is such a perfect description of the Dead!
@m.ericwatson9689 ай бұрын
"if you get confused listen to the music play" ...simple but I love that one
@randyallaben990011 ай бұрын
Going to a Grateful Dead show was a complete experience. Imagine a nice sunny summer day at an outdoor venue. Hundreds of vendors were set up with their tents selling paraphernalia, tie-dye, scented candles, and others walking around with a variety of mind altering substances. Everyone is happy. The concert starts and you start feeling the music and getting into a groove and the band is jamming and you stand up and start dancing in your own way. You’re watching, many of the women, that I called twirlers, start going around in circles with their tie-dye dresses, spreading out. People, smiling and grooving love and happiness in the air. It was a total happy and beautiful experience. No two songs are the same. The band constantly tried to compose in real time while they were playing to come up with new grooves and new sounds. They are the only group that did not put an album out and then tour to support the album. They did it in reverse. they would tour and work songs into their Setlist and then, almost as an afterthought, they would put out an album. They were not the greatest studio band. They were absolutely magical live.
@darthvegan43511 ай бұрын
You nailed it brother...
@barbarascotto387311 ай бұрын
You can't explain the Dead until you've experienced a show. Then you either get it or you don't. Most of us got it 👌
@cmstone517811 ай бұрын
In the early 90's I saw Pink Floyd at Foxboro Stadium and the next year at the Carrier Dome. Same songs, same sets, same show note for note. Only difference was the outdoor and indoor light show. Same years I saw the Dead at the Knickerbocker four times in a week, the next year five at the Boston Garden. Never saw the same show twice.
@JB-Deadskins5 ай бұрын
Probably only saw a couple of songs twice in all those shows too. Different setlists every night.
@cmstone51785 ай бұрын
@@JB-Deadskins Yup, and a new T-shirt with the setlist printed by the next day by the Heads.
@alphaomega606211 ай бұрын
One thing that sets the Dead apart from others is that they were artists rather than performers they didn't have a set list they just played what felt good at any given time. The magic didn't always happen but when it did there was nothing else like them. People would go to shows and just accept what happened - if it was good you were happy you were there and if it wasn't so good you were still happy you were there!
@DrKingSchultz185911 ай бұрын
You have to listen to Help is on the way> Slipnot> Franklins always in order.
@Krust_Acean11 ай бұрын
They're not wrong
@jimbattista112011 ай бұрын
There's nothing wrong with a Half Step > Franklins
@floorticket11 ай бұрын
@@jimbattista1120 Or Stranger > Franklin's
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
My first show was Dancing in the streets > Franklins
@scottenglert408311 ай бұрын
During a Boston show they did Help->Slip->Fire... I learned that recently... Pretty unusual, no ?
@doriwiljt11 ай бұрын
Someone suggest a great live version of Estimated Prophet!! Guys, they have so many great songs and so many great live versions it’s mind boggling, I don’t know where to begin, but Estimated Prophet is one of my favorites live.
@jm0709011 ай бұрын
Pembroke pines March 77. Take a listen
@bobmarley827010 ай бұрын
Here is one Estimated Prophet/Eyes of the World/Warf Rat! kzbin.info/www/bejne/d3ipkIacm8ymbtk
@vetstadiumastroturf575611 ай бұрын
We went to see the Grateful Dead We were hungry We got fed
@jimbattista112011 ай бұрын
Then we went back the next night for seconds.
@crazyfingers1911 ай бұрын
Falafel or peanut butter, banana and honey sandwiches? ☮💟
@vetstadiumastroturf575611 ай бұрын
@@crazyfingers19 Bagel and cream cheese only a dollar! what the f#ck - it's only a buck! make a hippie happy!
@crazyfingers1911 ай бұрын
That’s right! @@vetstadiumastroturf5756
@LSD199669 ай бұрын
"Toast on stick" was a good one, and "nothing for a buck" was always a sell-out
@markthompson798311 ай бұрын
Check out a great Jazzy version of "Eyes of the World" with Branford Marsalis playing saxophone from the 1990 album Without a Net. Depending upon when you saw them, there would be elements of Rock, Folk, Funk, Jazz, Country and Blues within their songs. They melded all these styles into what is uniquely Grateful Dead music. On stage the heavy improvisation kept it interesting for the band and the audience. Each show you saw was different, and you didn't want to miss what could be a transformational show.
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
I did that whole Nassau run - spring of ‘90 = 🔥
@evannelson420311 ай бұрын
I'm going to double down on this comment....this should be the next one y'all listen to.
@Stephen-nd1sx11 ай бұрын
I was there too. And 23 + other times. 89-93
@tdgallagher21811 ай бұрын
You are correct in saying there was a different version for any given song, however, each show typically featured a different set of songs each night. If they played Franklin's Tower the first night, that meant it was almost certain they would not play it again for their remaining shows. Each show was a one-of-a-kind experience. It was definitely worth going to all their shows whenever they came to town.
@eileenbradshaw13366 ай бұрын
Deadhead for life i am 70 yrs old and still have good memories went to all concert since 67
@Jeff-yc2js11 ай бұрын
Yes exactly they took risks which can inevitably lead to mistakes and the whole thing rolling off the tracks. But it also opens the door to magic which they could reach consistently. You even start to enjoy and appreciate the mistakes because of how human and imperfect it is. Imperfect yet beautiful.
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
The answer to che’s question- google the Jerry Garcia -licorice quote..You have to listen to Help > Slip > Franklins from Great American Music Hall on From the Vault Vol.1 in its entirety.. the reason they are followed is every show is different, people chase songs, cities, and venues.. the music sounds different and is shaped by the environment and crowd - indoor vs outdoor, east coast vs. west coast etc.. as the song states -if you get confused listen to the music play..
@MelanieAF11 ай бұрын
I always recommend listening to these (Help/Slip/Franklins) together for the great jamming and the way they segue seamlessly into each other-those “between” parts are a thing unto themselves.
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
It’s the most digestible version to start someone off with, that still hits all the spots ..
@maine420grow811 ай бұрын
I make time to listen to one from the vault at least once a week. "will you welcome, please, the Grateful Dead" gives me chills just typing it.
@CuzKatieSaysSo10 ай бұрын
Help>Slipknot>Franklin's is always awesome!
@JamieRHubert8 ай бұрын
❤️⚡️💙⚡️❤️ The reason they were the most followed live band was because people who LOVE to party & dance felt completely at home at Dead shows in a way that no place else on earth feels like home. Comfy-cozy, get the funk on, and space your face! It’s a vibe. People loved the vibe so much, they just went on tour with the band and LIVED it. Pure bliss. ❤️⚡️💙⚡️❤️
@alphaomega606211 ай бұрын
You have an example of why people loved them right there - Jerry forgets the words but it doesn't really matter!
@LSD199669 ай бұрын
The boys were in the musical transportation business, and anybody was welcomed with open arms on the bus, because all of us contributed to the overall success of the show. You go to a show with your friends and kick back and laugh and enjoy the company and you listen and pretty soon you are tapping your toes, and then start swaying, then start dancing and pretty soon Jerry has you crying over a Stella Blue after ripping your face off with a Other One. It was a trip in every sense, and a long strange one at that. You never knew where you were going but knew you were goung to have a good time getting there and then have Jerry bring you home safely
@ricksloop107511 ай бұрын
Great reaction. There was a set with Grateful Dead where Etta James and Tower of Power joined. Etta said, GD is the best American blues band… but how’d you get that name? Actually they are their own genre or every genre. Just an amazing experience live.
@michaeldooley680411 ай бұрын
Tell momma!!!
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
12/31/82
@submandave112511 ай бұрын
The story of the "Grateful Dead" is actually a very old folk tale from mediaeval times or before. In a version of the story I read, several brothers are sent by their father, the King, on a Quest to determine the heir. As they ride from the castle that pass an old man dying by the side of the road. All rode past except the youngest brother, who took the man to an inn, hired a doctor to tend his wounds and illness, stayed with him until he passed, and paid for a proper burial. He then proceeded on the Quest, and although he was far behind his brothers at every challenge or obstacle he received unlikely help of guidance, from a bird, a deer, a stranger, or even the wind itself. As he returned home, with a beautiful bride and the first to complete the Quest, it was revealed that he had been aided at every step by the spirit of the man he had helped pass peacefully, the Grateful Dead.
@ricksloop107511 ай бұрын
@@rick063092thanks!
@Iyiouseismouse10 күн бұрын
They were so followed live because for your ticket you got a 3-4 hour concert, and it was never the same. The April 1975 and the August 1975 and the March 1992 were all different. Every show had a different version of every song. Also, they toured doing at least a couple hundred shows a year for around 40 years, and when a member passed it went from Grateful Dead to Ratdog to Dead and Company etc. It’s a one of a kind thing for every one of thousands of shows. They have “the vault” which is recordings of every show and it was worth it when it’s all unique. If it was all exactly like the studio it’s like “what’s the point” to people, but jam bands are different, and they are the Rolls Royce of jam bands lol 😂❤
@susanbrynt11 ай бұрын
What makes the Grateful Dead special to me is that sometimes the music plays it can become magical. I got lifted away and didn't realize it until the music ended and I felt I was released from something. The music can lift you to a level you've never experienced before. It is a shame that you aren't able to see them in concert. But Deadheads know what I am talking about.
@rhlang1111 ай бұрын
we've all been lifted. the boys took you places.
@rhlang118 ай бұрын
being lifted was a rare occurrence but I know what you mean. it happens. like being lifted up by a magic cloud.
@lisarainbow970311 ай бұрын
The energy created by that many kind souls ( thousands!) all grooving together and enjoying the flow of the music and dancing was one of the most uplifting experiences I ever had~ It was a spiritual experience. More than I ever experienced in any church. That's partly why the following was so huge....💜✌🎶
@rhlang118 ай бұрын
They were followed because it gave everyone a renewed sense of humanity. And it was fun.
@kathyrams11 ай бұрын
I went to a Grateful Dead concert and the song they played was good!
@ValoA1Arts9 ай бұрын
☮ (~);} Love all my felllow dead heads! I love these videos! Brings light and Joy to my heart! Truly amazing seing the music being heard for the first time its such an experience to get to share with someone..thank you for the videos! ❤ ☮ (~);}
@Tijuanabill11 ай бұрын
It wasn't just the music, although that is the main thing of course. It was a whole culture. It was the embodiment of hippie culture, living on well past the late 60s. This was not just fans showing up in that town to watch them. They had a whole following, that travelled to every show. Others, would try to make it to 3 or 4 different cities maybe, on a tour. They were bringing their own audience with them, from venue to venue.
@CuzKatieSaysSo3 ай бұрын
Such a joyful song!!! How can it Not make you happy?
@user-dy3cq9cu9j8 ай бұрын
I’m a brother that saw the Dead as far back as the 70s. Jerry Garcia is a guitar virtuoso that fashions his style of music as an electric version of bebop. Go listen to Charlie Parker go listen to John Coltrane and Dizzy Gillespie and then listen to Jerry’s solos. You’ll be amazed! Jerry is playing bebop solos in an essentially country rock framework, but with. James Brown rhythm section ! Just like James Brown they have two drummers to keep the bottom down, and then Phil Lessh on Bass…. There’s nothing I can say about that, you hear him being the Bootsy Collins of the genre…
@zolch577111 ай бұрын
Known for having the largest sound system, ever..The Wall of Sound
@tomas3479 ай бұрын
Kinda hard to describe what the Dead does except when they get you you get it. Love their reach for higher. They play as one when at their best. I loved the concerts in the early seventies up until my last one in '89 at Alpine Valley. Sublime. Everyone is part of the show.
@tommathews39644 ай бұрын
Most bands take a “show” on the road and repeat nightly. The Dead took their whole catalog (quite extensive!) on the road and spun the wheel every night!
@jaquestraw111 ай бұрын
Gonna be a good day! 🌞
@destinyreelly297411 ай бұрын
Hey guys. A couple of my favorites if you’d like to react to them: “Ripple” and “Brokedown Palace”. They were the ultimate jam band. My first boyfriend was a dead head and travelled the country seeing them live. And yes, it involved a lot of weed and acid. ❤😂
@toddhumphreys21867 ай бұрын
Their jamming and almost everyone is boogieing, you have to, the music comes in through your ears and you have to dance it out, constantly, it was like being plugged in electronically, and YES we were tripping on good old clean LSD, freaking magical, best times of my life. Lucky I saw them 36 times from 85 to 95, mostly Alpine, Milwaukee and Chicago but others as well ✌️😎
@mikeb884311 ай бұрын
Several reasons they were number one live band--- working repertoire of 150-200 songs, could go 6-8 shows without repeating even 1 tune (despite 3-4 hr shows), always played tunes differently (constantly rearranging), superb sound systems, super tight and loose at same time, and they BOOGIE woogie--chill but also energetic! Nothing like a GD show... the best chill fans in history
@johnharkness711411 ай бұрын
" super tight and loose at same time" Right? And deeply grounded while often being way out in space. A band of contradictions, but it all made its own kind of sense
@darthvegan43511 ай бұрын
@@johnharkness7114 *a band beyond description...
@scotturban458011 ай бұрын
Rare Earth live in concert 1971. Trust me you'll love it.
@arizrich11 ай бұрын
I had the same thought 10 seconds before I saw your comment, specifically (as he said)... are you ready for 20 or 30 minutes of "Get Ready?"
@jahineverybody11 ай бұрын
Bless up. The concerts aren’t normal concert’s. They’re crazy lit party’s. Like to the extreme.. People come hours early to start partying. Almost everyone is getting lose on something. Tons of psychedelic’s. The next day, you think to yourself “ the music was great, but overall that was the funnest time I’ve ever had in my life”. Glad y’all are digging it. Bless up Nipsey. Love the pic in background. Grateful Dead, and Nip. You my guys right here
@scottsnyder272611 ай бұрын
Going to Dead shows were 3 hour (or more) long peasant skirt 😉 dance parties. Bill and Mickey laid the rhythm foundation with their pocket strewn drums. Phil joined with his bass, Bob with rhythm guitar, the keyboardist and Jerry with his lead. Jerry’s ethereal playing ligh-heartingly took everyone on a musical journey. Band members typically look their cues with highlighted solos as Jerry backed off and/or played some rhythm too. As the song progressed multiple players very much in the groove went off on their side instrumental excursions. As the “Roll Away the Dew” chorus the band would return to the center only to exit and morph into an another jam.
@scottsnyder272611 ай бұрын
Their music was rhythmic, jazzy, danceable and joyous, yet chill. Crowd was on their feet, moving or dancing and this wonderful, loving communal spirit typically brought everyone’s best out. Dancing and talking to friends, strangers, and whoever in the celebration of life!
@scottsnyder272611 ай бұрын
Musically they would regularly screw up individual notes but the whole of the musical spirit remained in tact. Pure joy attending their shows!
@adaberns11 ай бұрын
I've loved your reactions to the Dead so far! I see you're in Sacramento; there's an amazing Grateful Dead tribute group called Joe Russo's Almost Dead that is playing at Frost Amphitheater in Stanford. If you guys are able to make it down I'd love to cover the show for you. Always trying to spread the love and passion for the Dead.
@JohnMayerIsDeadToMe11 ай бұрын
Please keep this series going. I'm so glad you are starting to dive into the live shows. I'm hanging out and listening to my favorite tunes while you guys are starting to get it. We still have a great scene going on and everybody is welcome at the show. It's like home to us and mi casa es su casa.
@TedtimTom-lg4no11 ай бұрын
Look up wall of sound, Greatful Dead. Outstanding sound for 1973 - 1974 origin. This is one reason they sounded so very great live. That and excellent musicians.
@AlwaysWorking20085 ай бұрын
Your very insightful question about "why the Grateful Dead?" and then "did that cut or something?" are actually perfectly related! Every night at a live show as part of the audience you were listening to, and a part of, a musical conversation. Sometimes quite frankly it was an awful train wreck. LOL Other times, it was sublime! And no matter what, it was beautiful to behold. What you asked about was one of the band asking a musical question, and not necessarily getting the answer they wanted. LOL
@bobschenkel792111 ай бұрын
As a confirmed Dead Head, it is easy to know why we always followed The Dead. Every show was different, and in general, it was more fun than humans should be allowed to have. Everything flowed from Jerry Garcia's Guitar, and his persona. You HAD to be there. Not to mention, he was an amazing guitar player, and his singing was just fine. The rest of the band members were also EXCELLENT musicians, and it all blended together seamlessly. They were all doing something different, and yet it all worked together perfectly. In concert, "Franklin's Tower" was usually preceded by the songs "Help On The Way>Slipknot". Check out the version on "One From The Vault", including the intro by Promoter Bill Graham. Worth it.
@Gravitywell5711 ай бұрын
So funny you mentioned keeping them on during the whole party! They were the house band for the acid tests in the SF Bay area when it was still legal. Out in the park, beautiful. "Always live, Always dead". Unlimited devotion!
@darrenmaxwell108511 ай бұрын
La & Chi Dead fans now!!!! That closing jam to finish the song is epic! Love it guys, great reaction!
@mtzoar11 ай бұрын
Happy to say i was lucky enough to be at the May 1977 Cornell University (Barton Hall) show. Also at 15th anniversary in Boulder June 1980. Also in Rochester NY and Morgantown WV. Great stuff
@bluesrock111 ай бұрын
I saw the Dead in St. Louis 1976, all of 15 years old. It was an eyeopening experience for a young man. The contact high was unavoidable.
@mthayer4211 ай бұрын
Hey guys, Thanks for continuing to explore the music of the Grateful Dead. Che was right when pointing out that Jerry Garcia sounded a little out of tune in one section, he stumbled on the lyrics a little also. When you listened to the Dead live you sometimes got the warts and all. But man oh man, when they were on point they took the music to such beautiful and fantastic places. And La mentioning that they were all soloing at once was perceptive... they considered the band a true democracy, no leader, everyone contributed what they would and thus each performance was unique. If you want to see what a live show was like check out the Grateful Dead Movie. Fantastic footage of the crowd and the band in fantastic form.
@m.ericwatson9689 ай бұрын
Cool thing about the Dead, which reminds me of jazz, they're very adept players, very confident in their playing but not cocky, it's an ensemble performance and they trust each other on another level, so professional but so laid back too
@andylawson875 ай бұрын
Jerry Garcia used to say that at their core the Grateful Dead were a dance band. 😊 He said one time that the government should commission the Grateful Dead to go out and play where people need to get high! Like a public service gig, a mission.
@dansmedstadmedia11 ай бұрын
Great stuff! I saw The Who and the Dead at the Oakland Coliseum for one of the "Day On The Green" shows back in 1976...just magical! I think it was October 9 or 10...about 47 years ago to the day!
@philipbarton26346 ай бұрын
I'll tell why they were the most followed. I'll tell you exactly why. Because they were the best fucking dance party on planet earth. Starting with Family Dog, the Matrix, Fillmore.....and onward. And a whole bunch of people finally figured it out.
@denisduran910111 ай бұрын
As others have said,, they never played the set list, or a song the same way. However, the band will be the first to admit that they often failed. But that's part of their brilliance. They were always ready to take a chance, they often succeeded
@timrudolph39726 ай бұрын
I caught 70+ shows in the 80s and 90s. EVERY show was a dance show. Virtually no one sat. Dough knees, indeed.
@scottenglert408311 ай бұрын
Jerry once in a while stumbling on lyrics was all the more endearing to us... he was a real human... they were authentic... no pretenses...no polish... amazing musicians but human imperfection too... we *loved* that about them. They were a band and people who confirmed to us that it was not a requirement (or even feasible) to be perfect...
@cshubs11 ай бұрын
Please do an Eyes of the World from 1973-4.
@darlene-MamaD11 ай бұрын
Pershing Municipal Auditorium Lincoln, NE 1973 comes to mind
@augustwest527311 ай бұрын
“ May the four winds blow you safely home”. I tell that to my kids always.
@dudleyriggs47109 ай бұрын
The boys on a great night were off the charts!!! The warfield Jerry shows were The high Church! I was an atheist, and after a bunch of sober shows, i believed in the Divine because i knew the Divine played thru them, because it took me so high, and touched something way beyond description. This was a semi common thing for the dead on a rippin night! nothing like them!!!
@timpafundi632111 ай бұрын
Hmmm, what was it about them that made people follow them? In one word…EVERYTHING. It as the fact that you could see three shows in a row and not see the same show. It was the fact that you would see all your friends at every show and you could always find new ones along the way. It was the fact that you might see some of the most kind, amazing, and beautiful acts of brotherly and sisterly love. It was the fact that you can always find what you need at the Shakedown scene, food-drink-heady consumables. It was all that and a million other things that goes unmentioned.
@gentryxc11 ай бұрын
Listening to Jerry's guitar is always uplifting to me.
@aspenward39011 ай бұрын
I fell in love with a beautiful woman, at a show, when this song played. She twirled around me, and I would catch her eyes and shiny smile. She was laughing and the acid kicked in, and she and I began seeing each others thoughts. She sent my mind flowers and patchouli. Her dress fanned outward as she spun around. Her beads flung around her neck. She reached out her hand, and touched mine, and I fell in love.
@gchampi211 ай бұрын
Everybody can talk about the constantly changing sets, the cameraderie, the jams as reasons to see The Dead. I'll go in a different direction. THE SOUND. The Dead were pretty much the first band to tour with their own sound system. When other bands were using whatever level of P.A. system a venue had, The Dead would bring their own rig, and it sounded GOOD. Presumably you guys are familiar with the modern "Line Array" style of P.A? The Dead pioneered that, back in the early 70's, with their infamous "Wall of Sound". Time-delayed reinforcement towers for outdoor gigs? GD again pioneered their design & use. Heck, half the Pro live sound companies around today came directly from the Grateful Dead's sound crew, or at least have been directly influenced by the Dead's live sound.
@Poopship11 ай бұрын
Definitely need the help on the way Slipknot before
@harlanginsberg726911 ай бұрын
Many of the Dead members micro-dosed acid for pretty much every show. The drummer Kreutzman said when they jammed it prevented them from having any indecision in what they were doing. These guys played the acid tests where a song might last for hours.
@robertgrosek112411 ай бұрын
same thing as Pink Floyd. I saw Eric Clapton at MSG in the late 80s. fucking awesome show. love everything Clapton. later that week trucked up to Hartford to see him again. what a bummer. same set list. same riffs. same jams. same encore. thats what sets the Dead apart. never the same. sometimes better. sometimes worse but always different
@jschwartz126011 ай бұрын
You ask the right question for someone just discovering the Dead. It’s much more than being a great jam band. Listen to a show all the way through from beginning to end. Then you’ll get it.
@soulpatchjackson307611 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this reaction guys.... do the studio of Terrapin Station...YOU WILL LOSE YOUR MIND,!
@SmilingMedicineEntertainment11 ай бұрын
Now we're getting somewhere. My favorite Jerry Garcia description of what he feels the Dead does live on stage is basically the band starts off building a platform. Each song adds something to the platform, stability, height, whatever. At a certain point they have this solid, tall, secure platform they've created with the music, then they jump off of it. Seeing that moment when they "jump off the platform" was one of the reasons I toured with them for the last 17 years of their career.
@alansnowdeal984511 ай бұрын
One of The Best Versions!!Thanks Brothers!!
@toddhumphreys21867 ай бұрын
Love your takes on this BTW, you guys get it for sure! Lots of people need to see live for it to sink in.
@NebulizerChi11 ай бұрын
The react to *"Dark Star" from Live/Dead* is going to be essential appointment viewing...
@jamessullivan586011 ай бұрын
Besides all the words of greatness, the word “freewheeling “ always creeps into my head.
@marksabottke3384 ай бұрын
As others have said, EVERY show could be different in the way a song was played along with different solos.
@michaelgray496411 ай бұрын
The Dead and the Allman Brothers basically invented "jam bands". They'd take a song and stretch it out 10, 12, 18 minutes. They'd play tight and melodic, drift along, and eventually hit a point where everyone sorta drifts apart and plays their own lines. They'd go polyrhythmic, weave in and out among each other, jazzing along. Then they'd eventually come to a point where the whole band would just snap back together, boom! and they'd be back to the base song and carry on. The other thing is that it was never canned. They'd improvise, solos would change, or someone would quote a guitar solo from another song entirely. The set list was fluid. If you go see the Stones on tour they basically play the same set every night. They might drop in a different song once in a while, but basically its the same show. Not the Dead.
@rick06309211 ай бұрын
The only difference is that Allman sets were extremely static song wise ..
@frankgarcia17 ай бұрын
The GD were not an event to go to. They were a lifestyle. When one tour was over, everyone only talked about how they were getting to the next tour opener and what they were doing in between. It was a lifestyle. I cant explain it any other way. It was your job, your social life, your adventure, its where your friends were. It was everything. When you left tour and went back home you felt alone. I cant describe this any better. Seeing dead shows was what you did. It was like being a plumber or being a lawyer. It wasnt like going to see a concert or a ballgame. It was who you were. Its honestly who I am still at age 60 and I live in Thailand and want nothing to do with America now. I will always be a dead head until I die though.
@ML-un1oi11 ай бұрын
Great reaction to a great song by a great band. Appreciate you fellas 🙏 ❤
@CuzKatieSaysSo10 ай бұрын
🌹... If you plant ice, you're gonna harvest wind...🌹
@redrum48211 ай бұрын
Welcome to the Deadhead fam. We've been waiting for you!
@user-nw7ow1ei1q3 ай бұрын
Just like Jerry said "a dance band" a serious, personal dance.
@mattdienstag24139 ай бұрын
I love The Roots comparison. My two favorite bands of all time. The Legendary Roots Crew and The Good ol’ Grateful Dead
@JB-Deadskins10 ай бұрын
The reason for that ending is because you jumped into the middle of a Help on the Way>Slipknot>Franklin's Tower song progression, and the ending harkens back to Help on the Way.
@user-mn2gy7ll3m10 ай бұрын
The dead were so intertaining live it’s so different live than just listening to them on recordings. It was always a different and you got a high from them without drugs
@floorticket11 ай бұрын
A perennial favorite played 221 times between 6-17-75 and 6-22-95. That equates to about once every six shows. I must have seen it twenty times.
@fadeawayinwestla9 ай бұрын
My favorite part of the Dead is when they build tension and build up to a release (see 11:11 and the 20s following).
@sweetnnekked6 ай бұрын
"They're a band beyond description..."
@christofcurlz618011 ай бұрын
Every performance was honest and unique. Always for real, in the moment and perfect for recording and infinite listens!! Best jam band ever, without a doubt… Check out some live Allman brothers band, also incredible. Great reaction 😊
@MelanieAF11 ай бұрын
The Grateful Dead were the highest grossing concert band for years upon years. Because those who loved them were faithful and knew that any given night might bring the magic, you just couldn’t know which night.
@Fred_Jones5635 ай бұрын
The Dead were the hardest working band in the business. The toured 8 - 9 months per year. The never had an opening band. They would start playing around 7:30 or 8:00 and play until at least 11:00. Sometimes, much later.
@Josephshmosepf11 ай бұрын
Love you guys. You should probably always watch the live video of them though, and there’s a good one of this concert. Many groups take on a distinctive culture, but none more so than this band and audio-only you can miss some of it.
@custardflan11 ай бұрын
Bob Weir is the greatest rhythm guitarist ever. Saw them live on the Wall of Sound back in the early 70s.
@Calistogakid2u11 ай бұрын
You continue to delight
@andretib461411 ай бұрын
Cool version, very laid back version. Listen to the same song from 5/9/77, so much higher energy, killer gutiar solos, or my favorite, from One From the Vault album (live), also a very high energy rocker with smoking guitar work. All totally different every night, very song was like that. most nights were great, some were train wrecks, and every once in a while it was pure magic. but it was always fun, thats why we followed them.
@humpy93611 ай бұрын
The Dead is always best listened to on live versions.
@johnharkness711411 ай бұрын
This was partly inspired from a sea shanty, "Blow Away The Dew", but of course they took it into their own level, and it has many other levels of meaning that I'm sure others have explored
@darrenmaxwell108511 ай бұрын
The hours upon hours I have played this around the house, doing chores, house projects, lawn work during spring and fall I wear them out all the time! Love them. Pass the doobie!
@garyrausch118411 ай бұрын
You guys would be in the crowd firing up a joint and bopping to the groove
@lesblatnyak594711 ай бұрын
Nice gentlemen. Been to 2 Dead parties and at both most of the front seats got shoved out and a dance floor of trippers would be grooving.
@retiredfirelt58611 ай бұрын
"The tree", that was funny as hell La. I have never heard it called that. 😎