The feature film The Music Never Stopped is based on the true story of an estranged father and son reconnecting through the power of music, particularly the music of the Dead. How has the music of the Dead helped to heal you? Is there a specific song that has given you inspiration when you needed it? A memory of the Dead that has greatly enriched your life? Submit your personal tale of "gratefulness" in the comments of this page and not only we will pass along your anecdotes to the band, but you may just win a copy of The Music Never Stopped soundtrack and a t-shirt from the film. 10 winners will be selected at random.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Open only to legal residents of the 50 United States and D.C. (excluding Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam), 18 and older (or 19 and older for residents of AL and NE) at time of entry. Void where prohibited. To enter: Visit https://www.dead.net between 12:00pm Pacific Standard Time (“PST”) on March 21, 2011 and 12:00pm PST on April 1, 2011 and follow online instructions to submit entry. Limit one (1) entry per person/address/email address. Subject to Official Rules available HERE.Features
- https://www.dead.net/features/news/share-your-stories-healing-deadShare Your Stories Of Healing With The Dead
The feature film The Music Never Stopped is based on the true story of an estranged father and son reconnecting through the power of music, particularly the music of the Dead. How has the music of the Dead helped to heal you? Is there a specific song that has given you inspiration when you needed it? A memory of the Dead that has greatly enriched your life? Submit your personal tale of "gratefulness" in the comments of this page and not only we will pass along your anecdotes to the band, but you may just win a copy of The Music Never Stopped soundtrack and a t-shirt from the film. 10 winners will be selected at random.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Open only to legal residents of the 50 United States and D.C. (excluding Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam), 18 and older (or 19 and older for residents of AL and NE) at time of entry. Void where prohibited. To enter: Visit https://www.dead.net between 12:00pm Pacific Standard Time (“PST”) on March 21, 2011 and 12:00pm PST on April 1, 2011 and follow online instructions to submit entry. Limit one (1) entry per person/address/email address. Subject to Official Rules available HERE.https://www.dead.net/features/news/share-your-stories-healing-deadShare Your Stories Of Healing With The DeadThe feature film The Music Never Stopped is based on the true story of an estranged father and son reconnecting through the power of music, particularly the music of the Dead. How has the music of the Dead helped to heal you? Is there a specific song that has given you inspiration when you needed it? A memory of the Dead that has greatly enriched your life? Submit your personal tale of "gratefulness" in the comments of this page and not only we will pass along your anecdotes to the band, but you may just win a copy of The Music Never Stopped soundtrack and a t-shirt from the film. 10 winners will be selected at random.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Open only to legal residents of the 50 United States and D.C. (excluding Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands and Guam), 18 and older (or 19 and older for residents of AL and NE) at time of entry. Void where prohibited. To enter: Visit https://www.dead.net between 12:00pm Pacific Standard Time (“PST”) on March 21, 2011 and 12:00pm PST on April 1, 2011 and follow online instructions to submit entry. Limit one (1) entry per person/address/email address. Subject to Official Rules available HERE.26736
- CopperDomeBodh…13 years 7 months agoTwo Songs of Weeping bring Healing - so GratefulSo, in the last four months I have lost four loved ones, one each month. I was very close to all of them my best friends mom, friend who is the same age as me, still in his early twenties, and two of my aunts. Needless to say its been a bit rough. Two songs recently have really just hit me hard and washed over me and after an initial reaction wanting to weep it felt very healing. One recently when listening to Black Muddy River from 10-20-1988 and the other not the Grateful Dead but listening to Furthur from 3/6/11 playing We Bid You Goodnight. Both of these songs recently just hit me hard and have really helped heal my grief, it was tough not to start weeping in the middle of my college's food court the other day and look like a crazy person. Got on the bus half way through sophomore year of high school three and half years ago having now seen Furthur, The Dead, and DSO having listened to 200+ shows I only await the day I get to see them again. So very Grateful. ********************************* Once in a while you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right. Peace and Love
- AreWeReally13 years 7 months agoSkateboard injuryThis one is for Bob Weir... I was 40 years and still skateboarding in 1989 when I fell off my skateboard and tried to stifle my landing by using my right arm to stiff arm the ground. The result was that I my radial head exploded into a hundred pieces. The radial head is the end of the radius in the elbow that allows you to open and close doors using pronation and rotation. I had to undergo emergency surgery where the radial head was totally removed. The bone was sawed off an inch and a half below the right elbow and the ligments and tendons were re-attached. I was informed the next day by the surgeon that I had a 15% chance of gaining full use of my right arm. I am right handed. After eight months of intense physical therapy, my right arm was still useless and unusable. The surgeon's estimate was slowly coming true. I felt doomed. At that time, my friends bought a ticket and took me to a Grateful Dead show in Oakland. During that show I watched Bob Weir play guitar realizing he had suffered a broken shoulder about a year previously from a bicycle accident. There he was on-stage playing away. That gave me the inspiration to focus on my arm during the show. To the amazement of myself and my friends, I motivated myself to start snapping my fingers and move my arm slightly. By the end of the show, I had regained rhythm in my right arm. During the year following that show, I regained 100% full use of my right arm. That's inspiration! Thank you Bob Weir.
- DarkMagus13 years 7 months agoStory of healingMy story of healing is quite literal. In 1994, I did the entire fall east coast run. It wasn't a particularly hard tour- 18 dates across four cities- but it was by far the longest run I had ever done and when it was over I was exhausted and nine kinds of sick. The hard living ravaged my immune system and the communal food and sleeping left me with what felt like a malingering low-grade flu I simply couldn't shake. About a week after the shows, I received a visit from a fella I'd met on tour and he brought me a soundboard cassette from a '67 Dead show. For the life of me I can't recall the date, but it was the first show I had ever heard from that year and also one of the few soundboards I'd encountered outside Cornell '77. I was lying in bed, amazed at the clarity of the sound and the seperation of the instruments, when they broke into "Cold Rain & Snow." I was familiar with this tune, but the style in which they played it- an uptempo blast of go-go boogie led by Pigpen's Hammond B3- literally snatched me out of bed and made me dance around my room. The song triggered a release of endorphins and dopamines that jumpstarted my stalled healing process and within a day I felt wonderful. For years afterward, when I found myself down I reached for that three-minute shot of goodness for the briefest of dance parties, something I still do today.