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
- wescarzaga13 years 7 months agoShare Your Stories Of Healing With The DeadIn the late nineties I spent 25 days in the county clink for driving with a suspended license. I think the cops were just upset because after seeing the dead stickers on my car and not finding any contraband (whew!!) they hit me with the full extent during sentencing. Who knew you could get 25 days for not paying a speeding ticket! I was allowed to bring one book with me for my stay. I brought MY bible..."Box of Rain" by Robert Hunter. I had a lot of trouble sleeping, I just couldn't seem to relax (could you?). So I would create a setlist during the day, make sure I had all the songs i was going to "play" memorized, and when it came time to sleep I would close my eyes and the show would begin. I would make them as elaborate as i could, taking pieces from the 32 shows i got to see firsthand and cutting and pasting them together to create "mind-shows" It has been 15 years now, and whenever I have trouble sleeping I close my eyes and let the show begin..... P.S. The shows always open with Help on the Way!!
- Brent Lover13 years 7 months agoThe Days BetweenMy friend Sheila died, unexpectedly, on August 1, 2009. Coinciding with Jerry's Birthday and the beginning of "The Days Between," I found Robert Hunter's words and Jerry's music for this awesome song, late in Jerry's catalog, to be great help in making it through this time. We had been to many shows together as well as with our Deadhead group of friends, from Shoreline to Vegas where we saw our last three GD shows in May of 1995. "The Days Between" was the song played underneath the picture slideshow at her memorial service. The song, along with all of the Grateful Dead catalog are a special way of remembering Sheila and connecting with the world of "kind" friends. Mikky Mark
- Sven DiMilo13 years 7 months agoa mindsaveIn January 1981 some friends and I decided to Prank Ronald *spit* Reagan's inauguration festivities by attending in full-on dayglo freakflag gear, the idea being to have us some fun and blow some Republican minds. Instead it was my mind that got blown, as my lysergically augmented perceptions were receiving strong beams of vicious hostility from those to the right (including one Travis-Bickell-like crewcutted dude who sent hostile murderous mental transmissions my way while following me around at stalking distance) but also from some more serious politically-motivated protest-types to my left. What was I doing there? What's the point, of anything? When the parade went by, Nancy in a bright orange/red dress, I lost it and experienced my first and last truly Bad Trip. Fortunately nobody else was at the Jefferson Memorial at the time (there was a parade!) and the TJ quotes and the green/white marble there were somewhat calming; enough so that I was somehow in my existential despair able to find my way back to the Georgetown frathouse where we were going to crash, put on somebody's headphones and play the first tape I could find: a King Biscuit broadcast of some 1980 Nassau Coliseum stuff, as I recall. Terrapin. Essentially Garcia talked me all the way down merely by singing "faced with mysteries dark and vast, statements just seem vain at last." At that moment, it was the only thing in the Universe that made sense. And it was enough.