Little Red Rooster
Lazy River Road
Me and My Uncle
Maggie's Farm
Broken Arrow
Deal
China Cat Sunflower
I Know You Rider
Long Way Home
Truckin'
Smokestack Lightnin'
drums
The Other One
Standing on the Moon
Throwin' Stones
One More Saturday Night
Rain
dead comment
i was back stage for this
My wife and I were married
My First Show
This was my first dead show
lightning
One of my Favorite Shows
rain rain get the %$@* out of here
Midwestern boy...
The Lightning was amazing !!
First show!
My Last GD Show...
This ended the era for me. I was on a different trip, both musically and socially, and as I remember I had to be convinced by an old sweetheart with spare tickets to go to this run of shows.
Maggie's Farm and Rain were the highlights for me. It seems appropriate in hindsight that the last song I ever saw them perform was a song I had never seen them perform before that.
At the time it seemed like it was the end of my love affair with the band, I'd seen them over 50 times and felt like they had lost their spark and magic. I turned towards different things, different people, different expectations, and felt deep sadness two years later when Jerry passed, and also a sense of relief that I wasn't still wrapped up in the scene when it happened.
Now I'm 50 years old, I circled back to their music again many years ago, and now I'm happily building up a huge collection of GD vinyl. I appreciate this band so much, I am so happy I made the decision to drop out of high school and see as many of their concerts as I could over a 3-year period, and have nothing but good feelings about the choices I made, the people I met, and the huge number of places I got to visit while pursuing these guys across the country.
I was 14 the first time I saw them live, 15 when I quit high school to follow them around, 17 when I decided that living on the road wasn't a good life for me, and 19 years old the last time I saw them live. It seems so, so long ago, and as a man who is now a father it strikes me as such a bold, risky, dangerous proposition I embarked on. I would be horrified if my kids did the same thing.
I don't regret a thing, the Grateful Dead gave me a view of the world few ever get, the experiences on tour gave me street smarts and a personal confidence none of the people I grew up with had, and led to bigger and better things that never would have happened if I hadn't had them as a springboard to bounce off of.
All before it was legal for me to drink a beer.
Thank you, guys, for the amazing experiences I had, and which I will never, ever forget.
This ended the era for me. I was on a different trip, both musically and socially, and as I remember I had to be convinced by an old sweetheart with spare tickets to go to this run of shows.
Maggie's Farm and Rain were the highlights for me. It seems appropriate in hindsight that the last song I ever saw them perform was a song I had never seen them perform before that.
At the time it seemed like it was the end of my love affair with the band, I'd seen them over 50 times and felt like they had lost their spark and magic. I turned towards different things, different people, different expectations, and felt deep sadness two years later when Jerry passed, and also a sense of relief that I wasn't still wrapped up in the scene when it happened.
Now I'm 50 years old, I circled back to their music again many years ago, and now I'm happily building up a huge collection of GD vinyl. I appreciate this band so much, I am so happy I made the decision to drop out of high school and see as many of their concerts as I could over a 3-year period, and have nothing but good feelings about the choices I made, the people I met, and the huge number of places I got to visit while pursuing these guys across the country.
I was 14 the first time I saw them live, 15 when I quit high school to follow them around, 17 when I decided that living on the road wasn't a good life for me, and 19 years old the last time I saw them live. It seems so, so long ago, and as a man who is now a father it strikes me as such a bold, risky, dangerous proposition I embarked on. I would be horrified if my kids did the same thing.
I don't regret a thing, the Grateful Dead gave me a view of the world few ever get, the experiences on tour gave me street smarts and a personal confidence none of the people I grew up with had, and led to bigger and better things that never would have happened if I hadn't had them as a springboard to bounce off of.
All before it was legal for me to drink a beer.
Thank you, guys, for the amazing experiences I had, and which I will never, ever forget.