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  • TheLatinDead
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    Grateful Dead Latin Style

    Hi all, I am latin percussionist and Lifelong Deadhead. I am planning to launch an equity crowdfund for a Latin Jazz Grateful Dead Tribute project called "The Latin Dead" but first reaching out to the Dead community in case there was some interested investors looking to take the ride and help us thrive! I have a detailed business plan I can provide for any serious inquiries. Please feel free to message me directly here or via email at... latindeadmusic@gmail.com

    Thanks, Brenden

  • Dudegruvy
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    The Funk of The Dead

    I am a musician who has been heavily influenced by the Dead. During my covid 19 lockdown I went into my studio and composed this medley. Enjoy! https://soundcloud.com/andy_shorenstein/the-funk-of-the-dead-1

  • bravebrowser
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    thanks for the podcast link!

    thanks for the podcast link!

  • Rainer
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    Awesome

    thanks for the podcast link!

  • watson90s
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    Oldie bue goodie: Neal Casal Interview

    The interview is a few weeks old, but it really opens Neal up about his musical influence and general music talk. Great listen.

    http://www.makingitwithchrisg.com/podcast/043

  • ddderek
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    Neal Casal and Band FTW intermission music?
    Neal Casal of the Chris Robinson Brotherhood and also played lead on a lot of songs at the Move Me Brightly sessions, arranged a band that recorded 5 hours of music for the Fare Thee Well intermission music. It was outstanding to say the least. I heard rumors that it would be put out for purchase has anyone heard anything furthur about this? Franklins of the World was their chosen name for the project...
  • swungwell
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    THE HIGGS
    THE HIGGS are a jam band from Orange County California. Influenced by the Boys for sure. Check out there rendition of Shakedown Street: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPZ0YR2wjCk https://archive.org/details/thehiggs2014-08-15.aud.bsc1-k31.wharfratjoe… www.thehiggsmusic.com Check out there tours, There on the move.
  • randomusername
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    .
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  • Larree
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    lovecraft!
    I dig what you had to say. It is all about taking the music to new places.
  • Larree
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    My music is heavily influenced by the Dead.
    Feel free to check out some samples. Peace. Guitar God System
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17 years 6 months
The jamband scene and beyond...
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17 years 5 months
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My music has been infuenced by the Dead, as well as many other Northern CA Musicians. Hear my quick load MIDI tunes at www.archure.net/music/rock.html You'll hear all sorts of influences like early Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Butterfield Blues Band, Steve Miller, etc www.archure.net/music/rock.html Music for the New Millennium by ARCHURE reg tmrk www.archure.net
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17 years 2 months
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.
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17 years 5 months
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Is a blues band in Chicago that does some Dead-influenced jams. Covers Lovelight in a really awesome way. They started to do this, way back when, when they were just starting up at my university. In the bar where they had their early gigs, alot of the public were Deadheads. So one night, just for kicks, Howard threw in the Lovelight, with a bit of a Jerry flavor guitar, and was such a success that they have performed it ever since.
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Is the band I play guitar for....we do a lot of GD - plus a BUNCH of original tunes and other covers, as well. Jerry, Bobby, Phil, Billy, Mickey, Brent, Keith and Pigpen were ALL HUGE influences on our music. We're a quartet of late 30s - early 50s musicians and we take it pretty seriously. Give us a listen!!!www.theCAUSEjams.com Happy Birthday, Bobby! ~ Pappy Lead Guitar, Vocals - theCAUSE "Once in a while you can get shown the light in the strangest of places, if you look at it right."
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this comment isn't going to be popular, but it's something that I feel strongly about. I've been a GD fan since I was in high school in Philly. Saw my first show in 86, and saw the band about 130 times; my last show was at Tampa Stadium in 95 (I live in Tampa now; after following the 89 Fall tour to Miami, I never left Florida). The GD inspired me to learn to play the drums. I spent the 1990's working as a professional drummer in various bands. The first was a GD cover band called "The Family;" that band played together for a little over a year before the keyboard player and I left to start an original band. Our "legacy" remains, though, as there is a well-known Tampa venue (Skipper's) that still hosts the Grateful Dead Night that we started 20 years ago. Rob, the Family's keyboard player/vocalist and I were getting bored playing GD songs. We were starting to get into what was then the very "underground" techno/house/rave scene. We melded our GD influences with this "new" music we'd stumbled on, and founded one of the firts "live techno bands" in this area. We incorporated my drums and percussion with his keyboards and vocals, along with sampling, looping, etc, and came up with a "techno jam band" sound. Lots of bands are doing stuff like that now, but at the time (1991) we didn;t know of anyone doing this kind of thing. There were no road maps for the idea; we had to figure out how to adapt the technology, and how to make the blend of electronics and "live" playing work together. We were fortunate to build a strong following, and for the next three years we played all over the southeast, from Miami up to D.C. Eventually we got older, started families, etc, but I'll always be Grateful for the time we spent following our muse. The point is that our band, while very influenced by what we learned from the GD, sounded nothing like the GD. What we learned from them was the idea that we should follow our own path, and find our own way. Far too many bands that are "influenced" by the GD follow the typical "jamband" models. They wear these influences on their sleeves. Just as a George Jones ("The Race Is On") fan might not recognize the influence of country music on the GD when the band was cranking out an exploratory Dark Star, the same goes that a Grateful Dead fan might not have recognized the influence the GD had on us when we were slamming out a ten-minute power-trance groove. The influence was there for someone who really listened (a fan of "Drums/Space" certainly might pick up on it), but we didn't display it so blatantly that someone would hear us and think "oh, these guys must be Dead heads." In my opinion, writing a loping, Americana-based groove with "hippy-dippy" lyrics, or playing ten-minute guitar solos or whatever aren't the only ways to carry forth the Grateful Dead banner. The BEST way is to find a NEW sound, to forge a new model that surprises and challenges listeners. I know that's easier said than done, but that IS exactly what the REAL Grateful Dead did. It's easy enough to imitate what's come before. To really do a service to the best traditions of the Grateful Dead, though, try to remember what made them so important and significant, and use THAT as your "influence."
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I think that was a terriffic post! very well written and TOTALLY true! Huzzah! Being influenced does NOT mean being a copycat, and yeah well -keep on finding your own musical way!********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
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what's the problem again? I thought it was great also.
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Thank you, TigerLilly and Marve. I'm not trying to be insulting to ANYONE who tries to play music. God knows it isn't easy to come up with something that doesn't sound like it's been done before, and done better. And as I mentioned, I played in a Grateful Dead cover band (actually I played in two; one in PA called Born Cross-Eyed, and then one here in Tampa called The Family). When I first started playing drums, I used to play along with my collection of GD cassettes. So I learned to play by imitating my musical heroes. But the point is that I eventually moved out from under that umbrella of hero-worship and started to think of myself as more of a musician than a fan who happened to play. With this realization, I began to find my own voice, my own ideas, and my own goals. A lot of bands that are influenced by the Grateful Dead tend to wear those influences on their sleeves. They adopt the sound or the style of their heroes. And again, I did the same thing. I look at it now as if I was a child learning to speak by repeating words that I heard. I didn't know at first what those words meant, I was just parroting them. Eventually, though I did grow to understand the words, and eventually I could string them into sentences and express my own ideas. What I learned from the GD wasn't to cobble together a bit of rock and roll, a bit of jazz,a bit of folk, and a bit of country music. That's what THEY did. What I learned from them was to combine my OWN influences, and to at least try to come up with something new, something challenging. I haven't always been successful, but I'm still just as passionate about the pursuit as ever, and THAT is the gift they gave me. (((Grateful Dead)))
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16 years 1 month
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I dig what you had to say. It is all about taking the music to new places.
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12 years 7 months
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Neal Casal of the Chris Robinson Brotherhood and also played lead on a lot of songs at the Move Me Brightly sessions, arranged a band that recorded 5 hours of music for the Fare Thee Well intermission music. It was outstanding to say the least. I heard rumors that it would be put out for purchase has anyone heard anything furthur about this? Franklins of the World was their chosen name for the project...
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4 years 4 months
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Hi all, I am latin percussionist and Lifelong Deadhead. I am planning to launch an equity crowdfund for a Latin Jazz Grateful Dead Tribute project called "The Latin Dead" but first reaching out to the Dead community in case there was some interested investors looking to take the ride and help us thrive! I have a detailed business plan I can provide for any serious inquiries. Please feel free to message me directly here or via email at... latindeadmusic@gmail.com

Thanks, Brenden