• https://www.dead.net/features/blair-jackson/blair-s-golden-road-blog-dancing-dead-captures-early-scene-stories-and-photos
    Blair’s Golden Road Blog - 'Dancing with the Dead' Captures the Early Scene in Stories and Photos

    By Blair Jackson

    If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve read your share of books about the Dead—from general histories, to band and crew memoirs, to picture-filled coffee-table books. But even if you think you know it all and have seen all you need to see, you owe it yourself to check out Rosie McGee’s remarkable new e-book, Dancing with the Dead - A Photographic Memoir. It really is both those things: a collection of about 200 photos, most never published before; and a fascinating memoir of life around the Grateful Dead and the San Francisco scene from 1964 to 1974.

    As Phil Lesh’s girlfriend for four years, beginning in late 1965, Florence Nathan (she became “Rosie McGee” later, as she explains in the book) had a ringside seat during the Dead’s formative years and witnessed so many key events in the group’s history—Acid Tests, the Olompali spring of ’66, the move to 710 Ashbury, the Human Be-In, Monterey Pop, early recording sessions, the Marin County diaspora, Altamont, the Chateau D’Herouville weekend, Europe ’72, and on and on. It’s an insider’s view, but not in a showy way. Though her approach to conveying her story is deeply personal — it’s always clearly her perspective, not that of some objective historian — her writing also has a wonderful you-are-there quality that really seems to capture the flavor of each episode she describes.

    It’s not just about the Dead, either. Rosie’s riveting tale starts at the beginning of her life as the daughter of French Jews living in Paris and emigrating to San Francisco in the early ’50s. She writes about growing up in a conservative but loving family environment that was, like the culture as a whole, quite restrictive. Hearing her descriptions of her teenage life, probably similar to many others in the late ’50s and early ’60s, it’s easy to understand why when “the ’60s” arrived, with pot and psychedelics and rock ’n’ roll, she rebelled against the stifling conformity and let her freak flag fly!

    Before she hooked up with the Dead, Rosie already had one foot planted firmly in the emerging counterculture, which was evolving from the Beat period. Hanging out in Bohemian enclaves in North Beach and Sausalito “were an antidote to the straight and humorless life with my parents,” she writes, and it wasn’t long before she’d met people like Howard Hesseman, of the comedy troupe The Committee, and “Big Daddy” Tom Donahue, already a radio legend in San Francisco before he helped launch freeform FM radio a couple of years down the road. She got a job with Donahue’s Autumn Records label (which famously turned down The Warlocks, who cut a demo for the label as The Emergency Crew in 1965), and worked on some of Donahue’s big concert productions. Her candid photos of David Crosby (of The Byrds), singer Bobby Freeman (“The Swim”) and Autumn Records producer Sylvester Stewart (Sly Stone) before a rock ’n’ roll cavalcade at the Cow Palace are priceless! From this pre-Dead period, Rosie serves up rich anecdotes about encounters with Marty Balin, Phil Spector and Lenny Bruce, among others. In late ’65 she takes her first acid trip with Gary Duncan, whose band, Quicksilver Messenger Service, is just getting going at that time.

    Throughout the book there are stories and vignettes involving a fascinating parade of people outside the Dead world—Julie Christie, Timothy Leary, the Youngbloods’ Jesse Colin Young and just about everyone in the San Francisco music scene. And one of the longest and most colorful chapters is about her experiences on the Medicine Ball Caravan traveling rock fest, which the Dead were originally slated to play, but which they backed out of at the last second. Wait till you see Rosie’s photos of the gorgeous tie-dye teepees the crew set up at each stop on that unique and very odd tour.

    But, of course, the Dead and the “family” surrounding the band, is the heart of the book, and Rosie writes in depth—and affectionately, for the most part—about the whole cast of characters, from the earliest days through the early ’70s. (OK, her portrait of the power-tripping Owsley during this period is not so fond.) This is the first Dead memoir to be written by a woman (Jerilyn Brandelius’ fine Grateful Dead Family Album was more scrapbook than autobiography), and it’s illuminating to read her take on the role of the girlfriends (“old ladies” in the parlance of the band) in the developing Dead ecosystem. It will probably not surprise anyone to learn that the women were largely responsible for fulfilling traditional female roles—cooking, cleaning, doing the laundry, child-rearing; so much for the “liberated” ’60s!

    Except that they were liberated in many ways. Rosie writes frankly about the importance of sex and drugs in the scene, which were definitely not just “guy” pursuits. As the story goes on, we watch Rosie blossom and become more confident and independent. It takes her a while and many adventures to get to that place, but by book’s end (in 1974), we feel as though she has arrived in a good place—living with the fine man who would become her husband and join her for a new life in Taos, New Mexico.

    Pig relaxes at Olompali, 1966. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

    I won’t spoil any of her stories here; they should be read in the flow of the book and accompanied by the spectacular photos spread throughout. There’s never been a collection of offstage pictures of the Dead, crew and family (as well as other SF groups) quite like this one. There’s Pigpen hanging out by the pool at Olompali; Phil and Rosie frolicking on a San Francisco hillside; Jerry and Kesey backstage at the Newport Pop Festival in ’68; the whole band on an afternoon horseback ride near Mickey’s Marin ranch; Jerry and Bob at the Eiffel Tower in ’71; Owsley backstage at Santa Barbara in ’73. Just scads of great shots—and also many excellent performance photos, too. The digital images are sharp as can be.

    Never read an e-book before? I hadn’t, and I liked it just fine. (Would I prefer a conventional paper book? Yes! But I am so 20th century.) This digital book can be downloaded and read on many different devices, including computers (PC or Mac; I read it on my PC), tablets, e-readers and Android devices. A “buy” link on https://www.rosiemcgee.com takes you to the various purchase options—just click on the format for your device. It’s easier than it sounds!

    I got together with Rosie recently to talk a bit about writing the book and a few of the issues it deals with.

    Your book is such a window into that time. I was really interested in your take on the intra-band and “family” dynamics in the era you cover, and how it reflected what was going on socially in the culture at large.
    I think it’s important to note that my book covers 1964 to 1974, which is the first decade of the three-decade Grateful Dead, and over that span there was certainly an evolution. The comments that I can make about the inner family in that first decade are going to be really different from people who were in that position in the ’80s or the ’90s. I’m not really in a position to talk about what happened after I left.

    Even though there were certain roles that everyone filled in the early days, it seems as if there was also a certain equality among the band and crew and close family.
    At the very beginning it was egalitarian, just because nobody was thinking about who was doing what; we were just doing it.

    There was no master plan.
    There was no master plan and we were a group of friends. We lived communally at first, pretty much for financial reasons, and because it just evolved that way. We all liked each other. But you’ve got to remember that we came from all these different families and backgrounds and upbringings; then suddenly we were together. It’s amazing it worked as well as it did. But when people talk about about the Grateful Dead in the same sentence with “commune,” that’s not it at all. We were never truly a commune, as that word is generally used.

    Phil looks happy to be playing a free gig in NY's Central Park, 1968. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

    As far as the women’s roles, and I talk about that in the book quite a bit, at the time I never thought about it in terms of “women’s lib” or “we’re doing all the women’s work and the guys are having all the fun.” We were all having all the fun. [Laughs] We were this great group of friends where every person did what they did for the communal good. In that time, particularly, it was more natural for women to do the cooking and the cleaning. I’m sure there are some women who will beat me over the head for saying that, but in that era, coming out of the ’50s and early ’60s, that’s the way it was. Even today, women tend to keep the home fires burning, because they’re the ones who have the children, and generally they’re the ones who raise the children in the home, if they’re around.

    But we never felt put-upon. There was never a division over it. One of the reviews I got on my book on Amazon, a woman wrote: “Thank you for telling the woman’s side; it reminds me of my experience”—though she didn’t say she was with a group of musicians. But she says, “I remember the way it was, where we were doing the cooking and cleaning and this and that and the other. And the guys were sitting around smoking dope and playing guitar and playing around.” And that so-called “free love” was a lot more complicated than it seems to outsiders who weren’t there. That’s an important point.

    As time went on and we split up into different households, it became much more clear that even as we were in the middle of this insane Grateful Dead scene, there was a lot of traditional stuff going on. Especially when the band became a regular hardworking road band. Then it became the traditional rock ’n’ roll world, which is the women get left behind and there are groupies on the road and blah-blah-blah.

    You were aware of all that sort of stuff happening at the time.
    Of course. The more well-known they became, the more temptations there were, and they were also gone for a longer time. I’m sure to this day, when you’re talking about any band—or baseball players or football players on the road—there’s a kind of boys’ club, honor-among-thieves mentality: Whatever happens on the road stays on the road, and that’s the way it is. The difference for me was, at the time I was with Phil, I really didn’t have a lot going on, on my own. I didn’t have a lot of self-confidence. I was starting to recognize my skill as a photographer and I was writing a little bit, but mostly I was just kind of going along, being me. As I talk about in the book, my upbringing did not lead me to a place of confidence.

    To be a woman whose man has a passion that is outside of her and that is so strong and so all-encompassing and all-consuming, unless she’s got a lot happening on her own, it can be devastating. You don’t have anything to shore yourself up: “Well, he’s got this going on, but I’ve got my own stuff going on.” I didn’t have that.

    There were so many different scenes around the Haight in ’66-’67. The Diggers had their own world and their own agenda. There were political groups. Was there pressure on the Dead to latch onto whatever was happening? I would think that people would’ve hit them up all the time for everything.
    They did, of course. The word that came to mind when you asked me that was “maelstrom.” The Haight in ’66 and early ’67 was a maelstrom of all these different scenes. I remember making a comment to Sue Swanson [one of the band’s original fans and an GD employee forever] when I was in the middle of writing my book. I said, “I sort of feel guilty, or funny, that there was all this serious anti-war and political stuff and the Diggers and all that, and I just didn’t participate." I can’t say none of us; but most of us didn’t. She just laughed and said, “You’ve got to remember that we were all about the band.” We were in our own bubble within the community.

    Whether we were involved in the political scene or not, it was up to the individual. I remember Jerry said many times: “Hey, man, we’re a dance band. We don’t get involved in politics. We don’t make political statements.” And he held true to that most of his life. “We’re a band. Let us be a band. We don’t represent anything.” As a group, we were just having fun and doing our thing, trying to advance the band.

    Jerry at Mickey's ranch in Marin, 1969. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

    Which in its way was sort of a political statement: “This is who we are and this is how we live.”
    “This is who we are and leave us alone.” [Laughs] But at one point when I was writing the book I started to feel bad because it felt like I had been socially unconscious.

    Did you feel like the San Francisco scene and the San Francisco sound were transferable to other places?
    I’m not sure there was a San Francisco sound. There was a San Francisco scene and a San Francisco vibe. But you can’t take the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver and Big Brother and all of those guys and say that’s the sound. What is it? Psychedelic space-out some of the time, maybe. But they really weren’t all that similar musically. I guess that idea helped to promote the individual bands over time, but it also led to things like the Summer of Love, which was a disaster.

    Did it feel that way at the time?
    It started to, yeah. It was too many people and too much chaos, too many people with no place to go and being taken advantage of. The streets got really, really dirty. It was just insane.

    Jerry talked about the “drag energy” in the scene. People who wanted things but didn’t put anything positive back into the community.
    That’s a good way to put it. People came into the community looking to take. As I say in the book, the real Summer of Love was the year before [1966], when it was just this giant group of friends who loved each other and got along and helped each other and played music for free in the park. We had big dinners at each other’s houses. I blame Timothy Leary for some of it, with his whole thing [at the Human Be-In] in January ’67 with “Turn on, tune in, drop out.” The media got a hold of it and started writing about it—“Oh, the San Francisco scene is so great. Come here and wear flowers in your hair!”

    How did you determine what you would write about and what you wouldn’t write about in your book. Robert Hunter once said something to the effect that he wouldn’t write a memoir as long as the people he would be writing about were still alive, because he wanted to be honest, but he didn’t want to hurt people. I guess he knows too much.
    We all know too much. [Laughs]

    Somebody asked me, why did you wait so long to write this book? There were a number of reasons, but one of them actually was I waited until both my parents had passed. My second parent died in ’93, and then I really started thinking about it. I was driven to it by people saying, “You’ve gotta write a book, you’ve gotta write a book!” I always wanted to do a book of the photos, but I honestly didn’t think my story would be of interest to people, and it turned out I was wrong.

    When I started writing, I did what I call “brain dumps.” I knew it was going to be a series of stories—I have a really good memory—so I’d go one story at a time. I’d think of a story or an anecdote and I’d go to the computer and just spit it out with no editing or censoring of myself. Just my best recollection of what actually happened. After a while, I had 20 stories, then I had 30, and I started to see a shape.

    But then I had to quit playing around and I realized I had to really think about it: Do I really want to do this and, like you said, what about all these people who are still alive? What do you want to reveal? And I’m still alive—what do I want to reveal about Rosie? How intimate do I want to go?

    There are passages in there that I ultimately left in that I rewrote a bunch of times and almost threw out. Another writer gave me a really smart piece of advice: “Don’t hedge your bets. Tell the truth. Readers have incredible radar for bullshit. Don’t be afraid of the depth of it. If you’re authentic and you reveal the depth of it—good and bad, stuff that makes you cry as well as stuff that makes you laugh—your readers will follow you anywhere. But if you BS them, they’ll abandon you. Because once you get that idea that the writer is BSing, then it calls the whole book into question.”

    Sound engineer Betty Cantor outside the Chateau D'Herouville, France, 1971. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

    The other thing I had to grapple with was the obvious—the drugs and the sex. I mean, I had a lot of drugs and I had a lot of sex. How am I going to talk about that? I can’t leave it out, because it’s at the heart of what that period was like. And I came to an understanding with myself that I had to write about it the way it was at the time, which was totally matter-of-fact. It was like, “Yeah, we dropped acid every weekend. Yeah, I had sex with these people. So what. It was 40 years ago; does anybody really care?”

    Obviously there are stories I didn’t tell, because telling those truths would have made me uncomfortable, or they were about people I didn’t need to reveal that about to anybody, because its nobody’s business.

    People do bad things, people do ugly things, people do stupid things.
    Including me!

    But not everything has to wind up in a book.
    That’s right. So I had to pick and choose things that I could tell the truth about.

    One of the things I liked about your approach is that it always feels as though you’re in the time you’re writing about and that the stories are not colored by what might have happened after 1974—how this person changed later, or how events put into motion in the late ’60s and early ’70s might have played out one or two decades down the line.
    I take that as a high compliment, because one of the other pieces of advice I got—and both of these came from Sam Cutler [GD road manager in the early ’70s and author of his own memoir, You Can’t Always Get What You Want]—was: “When you’re writing about the past, especially the distant past, it’s going to be best if you put yourself into that mind space and emotional space of who you were then, and write from that place, rather than who you are now looking back to that place.” At first, I vacillated between those two mindsets as I wrote the stories: “I remember this and this and this,” but my writing had no deep flavor until I internalized that piece of advice. That’s also when it became fun: “I can immerse myself and tell the story with that mindset.” So that’s what I did.

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  • Chitown rider
    12 years 2 months ago
    Bring on the Hard Copy!!
    Looking forward to reading it. A hard copy would be a grate addition to my collection!
  • Default Avatar
    Zuckfun
    12 years 2 months ago
    20th Century Style
    Thanks for a great article and interview. I too am in the chorus of people singing for release of this book in a hardcover format.
  • marye
    12 years 2 months ago
    I love this book
    The photos are amazing, and the window on what it all felt like at the time is a real boon. Like Blair, I hope it makes it to print eventually, but having it in digital form is pretty great too.
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15 years 7 months

By Blair Jackson

If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve read your share of books about the Dead—from general histories, to band and crew memoirs, to picture-filled coffee-table books. But even if you think you know it all and have seen all you need to see, you owe it yourself to check out Rosie McGee’s remarkable new e-book, Dancing with the Dead - A Photographic Memoir. It really is both those things: a collection of about 200 photos, most never published before; and a fascinating memoir of life around the Grateful Dead and the San Francisco scene from 1964 to 1974.

As Phil Lesh’s girlfriend for four years, beginning in late 1965, Florence Nathan (she became “Rosie McGee” later, as she explains in the book) had a ringside seat during the Dead’s formative years and witnessed so many key events in the group’s history—Acid Tests, the Olompali spring of ’66, the move to 710 Ashbury, the Human Be-In, Monterey Pop, early recording sessions, the Marin County diaspora, Altamont, the Chateau D’Herouville weekend, Europe ’72, and on and on. It’s an insider’s view, but not in a showy way. Though her approach to conveying her story is deeply personal — it’s always clearly her perspective, not that of some objective historian — her writing also has a wonderful you-are-there quality that really seems to capture the flavor of each episode she describes.

It’s not just about the Dead, either. Rosie’s riveting tale starts at the beginning of her life as the daughter of French Jews living in Paris and emigrating to San Francisco in the early ’50s. She writes about growing up in a conservative but loving family environment that was, like the culture as a whole, quite restrictive. Hearing her descriptions of her teenage life, probably similar to many others in the late ’50s and early ’60s, it’s easy to understand why when “the ’60s” arrived, with pot and psychedelics and rock ’n’ roll, she rebelled against the stifling conformity and let her freak flag fly!

Before she hooked up with the Dead, Rosie already had one foot planted firmly in the emerging counterculture, which was evolving from the Beat period. Hanging out in Bohemian enclaves in North Beach and Sausalito “were an antidote to the straight and humorless life with my parents,” she writes, and it wasn’t long before she’d met people like Howard Hesseman, of the comedy troupe The Committee, and “Big Daddy” Tom Donahue, already a radio legend in San Francisco before he helped launch freeform FM radio a couple of years down the road. She got a job with Donahue’s Autumn Records label (which famously turned down The Warlocks, who cut a demo for the label as The Emergency Crew in 1965), and worked on some of Donahue’s big concert productions. Her candid photos of David Crosby (of The Byrds), singer Bobby Freeman (“The Swim”) and Autumn Records producer Sylvester Stewart (Sly Stone) before a rock ’n’ roll cavalcade at the Cow Palace are priceless! From this pre-Dead period, Rosie serves up rich anecdotes about encounters with Marty Balin, Phil Spector and Lenny Bruce, among others. In late ’65 she takes her first acid trip with Gary Duncan, whose band, Quicksilver Messenger Service, is just getting going at that time.

Throughout the book there are stories and vignettes involving a fascinating parade of people outside the Dead world—Julie Christie, Timothy Leary, the Youngbloods’ Jesse Colin Young and just about everyone in the San Francisco music scene. And one of the longest and most colorful chapters is about her experiences on the Medicine Ball Caravan traveling rock fest, which the Dead were originally slated to play, but which they backed out of at the last second. Wait till you see Rosie’s photos of the gorgeous tie-dye teepees the crew set up at each stop on that unique and very odd tour.

But, of course, the Dead and the “family” surrounding the band, is the heart of the book, and Rosie writes in depth—and affectionately, for the most part—about the whole cast of characters, from the earliest days through the early ’70s. (OK, her portrait of the power-tripping Owsley during this period is not so fond.) This is the first Dead memoir to be written by a woman (Jerilyn Brandelius’ fine Grateful Dead Family Album was more scrapbook than autobiography), and it’s illuminating to read her take on the role of the girlfriends (“old ladies” in the parlance of the band) in the developing Dead ecosystem. It will probably not surprise anyone to learn that the women were largely responsible for fulfilling traditional female roles—cooking, cleaning, doing the laundry, child-rearing; so much for the “liberated” ’60s!

Except that they were liberated in many ways. Rosie writes frankly about the importance of sex and drugs in the scene, which were definitely not just “guy” pursuits. As the story goes on, we watch Rosie blossom and become more confident and independent. It takes her a while and many adventures to get to that place, but by book’s end (in 1974), we feel as though she has arrived in a good place—living with the fine man who would become her husband and join her for a new life in Taos, New Mexico.

Pig relaxes at Olompali, 1966. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

I won’t spoil any of her stories here; they should be read in the flow of the book and accompanied by the spectacular photos spread throughout. There’s never been a collection of offstage pictures of the Dead, crew and family (as well as other SF groups) quite like this one. There’s Pigpen hanging out by the pool at Olompali; Phil and Rosie frolicking on a San Francisco hillside; Jerry and Kesey backstage at the Newport Pop Festival in ’68; the whole band on an afternoon horseback ride near Mickey’s Marin ranch; Jerry and Bob at the Eiffel Tower in ’71; Owsley backstage at Santa Barbara in ’73. Just scads of great shots—and also many excellent performance photos, too. The digital images are sharp as can be.

Never read an e-book before? I hadn’t, and I liked it just fine. (Would I prefer a conventional paper book? Yes! But I am so 20th century.) This digital book can be downloaded and read on many different devices, including computers (PC or Mac; I read it on my PC), tablets, e-readers and Android devices. A “buy” link on https://www.rosiemcgee.com takes you to the various purchase options—just click on the format for your device. It’s easier than it sounds!

I got together with Rosie recently to talk a bit about writing the book and a few of the issues it deals with.

Your book is such a window into that time. I was really interested in your take on the intra-band and “family” dynamics in the era you cover, and how it reflected what was going on socially in the culture at large.
I think it’s important to note that my book covers 1964 to 1974, which is the first decade of the three-decade Grateful Dead, and over that span there was certainly an evolution. The comments that I can make about the inner family in that first decade are going to be really different from people who were in that position in the ’80s or the ’90s. I’m not really in a position to talk about what happened after I left.

Even though there were certain roles that everyone filled in the early days, it seems as if there was also a certain equality among the band and crew and close family.
At the very beginning it was egalitarian, just because nobody was thinking about who was doing what; we were just doing it.

There was no master plan.
There was no master plan and we were a group of friends. We lived communally at first, pretty much for financial reasons, and because it just evolved that way. We all liked each other. But you’ve got to remember that we came from all these different families and backgrounds and upbringings; then suddenly we were together. It’s amazing it worked as well as it did. But when people talk about about the Grateful Dead in the same sentence with “commune,” that’s not it at all. We were never truly a commune, as that word is generally used.

Phil looks happy to be playing a free gig in NY's Central Park, 1968. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

As far as the women’s roles, and I talk about that in the book quite a bit, at the time I never thought about it in terms of “women’s lib” or “we’re doing all the women’s work and the guys are having all the fun.” We were all having all the fun. [Laughs] We were this great group of friends where every person did what they did for the communal good. In that time, particularly, it was more natural for women to do the cooking and the cleaning. I’m sure there are some women who will beat me over the head for saying that, but in that era, coming out of the ’50s and early ’60s, that’s the way it was. Even today, women tend to keep the home fires burning, because they’re the ones who have the children, and generally they’re the ones who raise the children in the home, if they’re around.

But we never felt put-upon. There was never a division over it. One of the reviews I got on my book on Amazon, a woman wrote: “Thank you for telling the woman’s side; it reminds me of my experience”—though she didn’t say she was with a group of musicians. But she says, “I remember the way it was, where we were doing the cooking and cleaning and this and that and the other. And the guys were sitting around smoking dope and playing guitar and playing around.” And that so-called “free love” was a lot more complicated than it seems to outsiders who weren’t there. That’s an important point.

As time went on and we split up into different households, it became much more clear that even as we were in the middle of this insane Grateful Dead scene, there was a lot of traditional stuff going on. Especially when the band became a regular hardworking road band. Then it became the traditional rock ’n’ roll world, which is the women get left behind and there are groupies on the road and blah-blah-blah.

You were aware of all that sort of stuff happening at the time.
Of course. The more well-known they became, the more temptations there were, and they were also gone for a longer time. I’m sure to this day, when you’re talking about any band—or baseball players or football players on the road—there’s a kind of boys’ club, honor-among-thieves mentality: Whatever happens on the road stays on the road, and that’s the way it is. The difference for me was, at the time I was with Phil, I really didn’t have a lot going on, on my own. I didn’t have a lot of self-confidence. I was starting to recognize my skill as a photographer and I was writing a little bit, but mostly I was just kind of going along, being me. As I talk about in the book, my upbringing did not lead me to a place of confidence.

To be a woman whose man has a passion that is outside of her and that is so strong and so all-encompassing and all-consuming, unless she’s got a lot happening on her own, it can be devastating. You don’t have anything to shore yourself up: “Well, he’s got this going on, but I’ve got my own stuff going on.” I didn’t have that.

There were so many different scenes around the Haight in ’66-’67. The Diggers had their own world and their own agenda. There were political groups. Was there pressure on the Dead to latch onto whatever was happening? I would think that people would’ve hit them up all the time for everything.
They did, of course. The word that came to mind when you asked me that was “maelstrom.” The Haight in ’66 and early ’67 was a maelstrom of all these different scenes. I remember making a comment to Sue Swanson [one of the band’s original fans and an GD employee forever] when I was in the middle of writing my book. I said, “I sort of feel guilty, or funny, that there was all this serious anti-war and political stuff and the Diggers and all that, and I just didn’t participate." I can’t say none of us; but most of us didn’t. She just laughed and said, “You’ve got to remember that we were all about the band.” We were in our own bubble within the community.

Whether we were involved in the political scene or not, it was up to the individual. I remember Jerry said many times: “Hey, man, we’re a dance band. We don’t get involved in politics. We don’t make political statements.” And he held true to that most of his life. “We’re a band. Let us be a band. We don’t represent anything.” As a group, we were just having fun and doing our thing, trying to advance the band.

Jerry at Mickey's ranch in Marin, 1969. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

Which in its way was sort of a political statement: “This is who we are and this is how we live.”
“This is who we are and leave us alone.” [Laughs] But at one point when I was writing the book I started to feel bad because it felt like I had been socially unconscious.

Did you feel like the San Francisco scene and the San Francisco sound were transferable to other places?
I’m not sure there was a San Francisco sound. There was a San Francisco scene and a San Francisco vibe. But you can’t take the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver and Big Brother and all of those guys and say that’s the sound. What is it? Psychedelic space-out some of the time, maybe. But they really weren’t all that similar musically. I guess that idea helped to promote the individual bands over time, but it also led to things like the Summer of Love, which was a disaster.

Did it feel that way at the time?
It started to, yeah. It was too many people and too much chaos, too many people with no place to go and being taken advantage of. The streets got really, really dirty. It was just insane.

Jerry talked about the “drag energy” in the scene. People who wanted things but didn’t put anything positive back into the community.
That’s a good way to put it. People came into the community looking to take. As I say in the book, the real Summer of Love was the year before [1966], when it was just this giant group of friends who loved each other and got along and helped each other and played music for free in the park. We had big dinners at each other’s houses. I blame Timothy Leary for some of it, with his whole thing [at the Human Be-In] in January ’67 with “Turn on, tune in, drop out.” The media got a hold of it and started writing about it—“Oh, the San Francisco scene is so great. Come here and wear flowers in your hair!”

How did you determine what you would write about and what you wouldn’t write about in your book. Robert Hunter once said something to the effect that he wouldn’t write a memoir as long as the people he would be writing about were still alive, because he wanted to be honest, but he didn’t want to hurt people. I guess he knows too much.
We all know too much. [Laughs]

Somebody asked me, why did you wait so long to write this book? There were a number of reasons, but one of them actually was I waited until both my parents had passed. My second parent died in ’93, and then I really started thinking about it. I was driven to it by people saying, “You’ve gotta write a book, you’ve gotta write a book!” I always wanted to do a book of the photos, but I honestly didn’t think my story would be of interest to people, and it turned out I was wrong.

When I started writing, I did what I call “brain dumps.” I knew it was going to be a series of stories—I have a really good memory—so I’d go one story at a time. I’d think of a story or an anecdote and I’d go to the computer and just spit it out with no editing or censoring of myself. Just my best recollection of what actually happened. After a while, I had 20 stories, then I had 30, and I started to see a shape.

But then I had to quit playing around and I realized I had to really think about it: Do I really want to do this and, like you said, what about all these people who are still alive? What do you want to reveal? And I’m still alive—what do I want to reveal about Rosie? How intimate do I want to go?

There are passages in there that I ultimately left in that I rewrote a bunch of times and almost threw out. Another writer gave me a really smart piece of advice: “Don’t hedge your bets. Tell the truth. Readers have incredible radar for bullshit. Don’t be afraid of the depth of it. If you’re authentic and you reveal the depth of it—good and bad, stuff that makes you cry as well as stuff that makes you laugh—your readers will follow you anywhere. But if you BS them, they’ll abandon you. Because once you get that idea that the writer is BSing, then it calls the whole book into question.”

Sound engineer Betty Cantor outside the Chateau D'Herouville, France, 1971. Photo: Rosie McGee © 2012

The other thing I had to grapple with was the obvious—the drugs and the sex. I mean, I had a lot of drugs and I had a lot of sex. How am I going to talk about that? I can’t leave it out, because it’s at the heart of what that period was like. And I came to an understanding with myself that I had to write about it the way it was at the time, which was totally matter-of-fact. It was like, “Yeah, we dropped acid every weekend. Yeah, I had sex with these people. So what. It was 40 years ago; does anybody really care?”

Obviously there are stories I didn’t tell, because telling those truths would have made me uncomfortable, or they were about people I didn’t need to reveal that about to anybody, because its nobody’s business.

People do bad things, people do ugly things, people do stupid things.
Including me!

But not everything has to wind up in a book.
That’s right. So I had to pick and choose things that I could tell the truth about.

One of the things I liked about your approach is that it always feels as though you’re in the time you’re writing about and that the stories are not colored by what might have happened after 1974—how this person changed later, or how events put into motion in the late ’60s and early ’70s might have played out one or two decades down the line.
I take that as a high compliment, because one of the other pieces of advice I got—and both of these came from Sam Cutler [GD road manager in the early ’70s and author of his own memoir, You Can’t Always Get What You Want]—was: “When you’re writing about the past, especially the distant past, it’s going to be best if you put yourself into that mind space and emotional space of who you were then, and write from that place, rather than who you are now looking back to that place.” At first, I vacillated between those two mindsets as I wrote the stories: “I remember this and this and this,” but my writing had no deep flavor until I internalized that piece of advice. That’s also when it became fun: “I can immerse myself and tell the story with that mindset.” So that’s what I did.

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If you’re reading this, chances are you’ve read your share of books about the Dead—from general histories, to band and crew memoirs, to picture-filled coffee-table books. But even if you think you know it all and have seen all you need to see, you owe it yourself to check out Rosie McGee’s remarkable new e-book, Dancing with the Dead—A Photographic Memoir. It really is both those things: a collection of about 200 photos, most never published before; and a fascinating memoir of life around the Grateful Dead and the San Francisco scene from 1964 to 1974.

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The photos are amazing, and the window on what it all felt like at the time is a real boon. Like Blair, I hope it makes it to print eventually, but having it in digital form is pretty great too.
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Thanks for a great article and interview. I too am in the chorus of people singing for release of this book in a hardcover format.
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Looking forward to reading it. A hard copy would be a grate addition to my collection!
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I hope my comment didn't make it seem like a paper release of the book was imminent or even likely. I think it's extremely unlikely, and I would hate for anyone to NOT buy the digital book because they were holding out (false) hope for a paper release. Time to go digital, folks. It's the new wave...
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It seems it will be a long time before great novelists, poets and literary scholars stop producing their work in paper form. Many people still enjoy holding an actual book when reading it. So as the new wave comes ashore, I'll be sitting beachside reading a paperback.
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...have nothing to do with it, Zuck. These are the new realities of the book business and book distribution. If it's the difference between certain books coming out in digital form only and not coming out at all (which it frequently is now), I'm going to side with digital delivery. Obviously YMMV...
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Books that would only be available in digital form, would never see the light of day without the avenue of virtual distribution. If you're a a fan of paperbacks, great novelists have a lot to do with it. For a mass market is a primary fiscal incentive to produce a physical product. Is it true if more people bought only paper books we'd be holding a copy of Rosie's new book instead of reading it on an e-reader? Who knows...
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as it's been some years since sales of digital books have exceeded sales of physical books. I like physical books too, but distribution of physical goods keeps getting pricier and pricier while instantaneous delivery of digital gets cheaper, and when you combine that with people like Rosie being able to put out their books without jumping through hoops for a publisher, it's a huge win. But in that reality, even bestselling authors have trouble getting book deals because it costs so much to print and distribute and the publishers need to make money.
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My decision to self-publish this book in digital form was in no way a slam against traditional print books. Nor do I believe that there is any danger of print books fading away into oblivion - there are far too many people who are passionate about the printed word (and photo), including myself. I was simply led to that decision by financial realities. Last November, I came to a crossroads in the creation of this book. I had spent about two years writing and compiling the stories, gone through several edits, but still wasn't yet quite done. I had spent a similar amount of time sorting, cataloging, scanning, fixing, choosing photos that would go along with the stories. I had tried the traditional route of getting an agent and a publisher, but they just didn't see it as a viable business decision in the current publishing world environment. ( I was a first-time author, unknown to them, number one; and number two, I wanted to have LOTS of (color) photos in my book, a very expensive proposition.) Here's what it came down to:self-published e-book or NO book. The decision was a no-brainer, emotionally - I wasn't about to quit so close to the end of the race. But that doesn't mean I made the decision lightly. Logistically, self-publishing an e-book with so many photos was a great deal more difficult and time-consuming than you might imagine, especially as the technology changes weekly. But I committed to it and I did it, and from the comments and reviews I've seen so far, I believe I made the right choice. I don't know how or when my book will transmute to physical/printed form, but I assure you I am considering all options that are financially viable while maintaining quality. Meanwhile, I hope that, if you're interested in the content of this book, you'll look past the envelope in which it's currently being delivered. Thank you for your interest and the passion of your opinions. Rosie McGee
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This looks like a good read. If it ever comes out in print form I'll buy it. Maybe if it is popular enough as an e-book some smart person will realize that there is a market for the book among a bunch of old geezers who have yet to embrace the Kindle or whatever the hell expensive e-reader is popular at the moment.Of course, I'm the same guy who once said I'd never switch to CD from vinyl and that didn't exactly work out as the years went by. And now it looks like CDs are in danger of becoming obsolete. I have bought some music downloads but immediately copied them to CD. That option is not really viable with an e-book. In any case, congratulations, Rosie McGee, on what looks like a very good book.
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Very cool the author appears and contributes to the discussion about her book. Thanks Rosie for your insight, and for sharing your stories and photos in your new book. I look forward to reading it. Thanks again
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Thanks for your good wishes. Just in case you're not aware, you don't need an "expensive e-reader" to read my book. If your wish to transfer it to CD was so you could read it on your computer, you can already do that by downloading a free Kindle e-reader app from amazon for your Mac or PC, then downloading the book into that app. Voila! Read away. If you still choose to wait until a print version comes out, I respect your choice. Thanks. Rosie
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Great writeup as usual Blair, and very interesting looking book Rosie! While I love computers and spend lots of time on them, I do also wish this was a hardcover book. That is mainly because there are so many pictures (I imagine) in it. That's the kind of book one likes to thumb through while sitting on the couch, or leave on a coffee table. But I can imagine the obstacles to getting a book published these days. For some reason, I'm having flashbacks to one of my favorite movies, "Sideways" which features a would be writer trying to get published. Good luck Rosie with the book!
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I can vouch for the fact that downloading the Kindle App and the book itself took under a minute. I guess it helps that I was already an Amazon customer, but that doesn't take long to set up either. My only criticism of the e-reader will be shared by only about 3 people--there aren't page numbers, so it's very difficult to cite in a blog or other publication. I have to say its a very different book than I expected (or should I say "feared"). It really is the story of Florence and Rosie, and the members of the Grateful Dead are just friends who wander through, along with other friends who are considerably less legendary. It's particularly interesting to find out about the inner workings of the extended Grateful Dead family and interlocking web of businesses. In many ways the most interesting set-piece is the lengthy description of how difficult it was to arrange airline tickets for a touring party of 30 back in '73 (I'd give a page citation, but of course I can't!). In the modern world, with our spreadsheets and online reservations we all do our travel planning ourselves, but the Grateful Dead adventure was far more difficult logistically than it appears today. Of course, there are lots of fascinating details: I had no idea about Jack Casady's stealth appearance on Live/Dead (did anybody?), I had no idea that Jerry had a girlfriend named Guido who lived at 710 (before MG), and who could imagine that Barry McGuire ("Eve Of Destruction") liked to hang out with the Dead in their house in LA? All in all a fascinating and well-written book, with a unique perspective that doesn't get lost while telling about a once-in-a-century epoch.
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Great that Rosie has published this! It seems from "If you still choose to wait until a print version comes out, I respect your choice." that there is in fact a print edition coming? If so, when is the likely publication date? I would very much prefer a printed edition to a download. Happy Trails
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I cannot say that there is "in fact" a print edition coming, although I certainly hope it will become possible at some point. To be clear about it, a print edition is currently a wish, not a plan. If a means to do it came about this very day, it would still be months before a physical book would be in your hands. For now, if you want to read it, you have to do so via download. I was merely expressing the strength of my wish and the understanding that some people just won't want to read it electronically. I respect that.Thanks and Happy Trails back at you!
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Your point writing about sex and drugs as part a super perspective of the scene is well thought over. Some of it needs to be written about because it was part of the scene and it happened. Some if it frankly doesn't involve anybody of import, even though it did happen, and deserves to be precluded. Different scenes had different sets of people,even though many had those who deserved to to be run away from with extreme prejudice, either from the the combination of sex and drugs or either. Some days ware just another weird day out in the Haight. Santa Cruz, Marin or Berkeley/Oakland (Bolinas, Watsonville, Pismo Beach). Others were great watching the high tide break from day to day!
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I read Dancing with the Dead the first day it was available. It was my first ebook and I realized part way through that I wasn't reading a book, I was sitting at my computer reading Rosie's photographic memoir and enjoying the hell out of it. Whether it's an ebook is the last thing that's important about it. Most of the photos are in the moment; snapshots in time of people I feel like I know, but haven't ever met. Rosie lived a life many of us might have wished for and we at least get to see her photos and read what it was like for her. I wished for a little more about this or that, but that's a little like wishing the band had played a particular song. We get what we get in life, and this "e"book gives us lots. I guess I'm responding to the discussion of wishing it were something that it's not. It is what it is, and it's a good read with a lot of great photos from a time gone by. I know you were self-compelled to put the book together, Rosie, and I'm glad. It's a good one. And Blair, the blog (and interview) is a good read, too.
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I don't like e-books. I'm old fashioned!
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"I hope my comment didn't make it seem like a paper release of the book was imminent or even likely. I think it's extremely unlikely, and I would hate for anyone to NOT buy the digital book because they were holding out (false) hope for a paper release. Time to go digital, folks. It's the new wave..." Sorry, Blair, I'm sticking with paper! I guess I'll miss out on this. I resist the change to digital for books. Yuch.
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Rosie, your book totally grew on me. I saw a perspective of the band that others had written about but none more eloquently - what they had 'stumbled' into was so freaking big it took over their lives in a way that nothing or no one else mattered. You were there for that transition - that alone makes this a must-read.
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This is really a great book,a document about life and times of Grateful Dead adventures,at least an important part,jeez!
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this is my first e-book also. the kindle app for my pc was completely free and i was able to download that and rosie's e-book all from the same spot on amazon. couldn't have been simpler,even for this techno-boob, and with the e-book being under 10 granolas - very affordable too. the pc kindle app is easy to read and doesn't hurt your eyes (my biggest concern). "behind every great man stands a tired woman". even during the greatest change in collective consciousness in this nation's history, there the women were, behind the scenes, doing it all. groceries,cooking, laundry, house cleaning,child care,running errands, supporting their guys, giving shoulder massages during band practice and even marathon j rolling! those guys were spoiled, big-time!!!!!! it's no wonder the band was able to quickly become as good as they were; all they had to do was practice due to all the help and support they received from the women. i like the fact that she does tell of things from the perspective of still being there. there is no mud-slinging or hateful bullshit here but, at the same time, no sugar-coating either. rosie's not afraid to say what she didn't like about certain people or events; she did it honestly and tastefully and it's a refreshing new perspective from a gal who helped make it all happen in those early years. who can say for sure where the band and it's future would have ended up if it wasn't for all of the efforts of these hard-working and talented (very attractive too!!!!!! damn! those guys were really, really, really spoiled!!!!!!!!!) women? (carolyn's foreword, rosie's preface and the afterword by edward bear are worth the price of admission alone, and the pics --- excellent). thanks to rosie for not giving up and for making your memoir (of my favorite era of the band) become a reality. thanks also to blair and dead.net for the interview and for shining more light on this wonderful memoir. a must have! (even in e-book form) (sorry corry corry, looks like i've got your title)
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my experience was the same as slo's. This is my first e-book too, and my hat's off to all involved for making it such a pleasant reading/viewing experience.
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were incredibly gorgeous, and since I never would have seen them if Rosie hadn't taken the photos, I really appreciate stuff like that too. What I especially like is that the photos in general have so much life in them, convey so much of the whole vibe of the moment. Especially the not-in-the-spotlight moments.
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Duplicate post caused by ambiguous website response. Happy Trails
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I don't have enough bandwidth to dowload this in Solomon Islands. But I will do so when I get to Oz in a couple of weeks. I would still very much like a print edition. I am sure it would be viable. Let's modulate some reality and get a print edition rolling! Happy Trails
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~~THX,Rosie,for all the wonderful photos and stories about the Grateful Dead,Their evolution,foundation and being part of the family..So glad you had the where withall,during those days,whooa,to document,photograph and tell the stories so well~~~~
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Not sure if some of you remeber me but wrothe a lot of wild posts during the mc cain Obama drama while i was in iraq. like to here fro johnman there girl in germany who wanted to scribe my book for my baby wish i could remember your name it will come to me, wrote a song gimmme an F related to what was going on at the time anyway nice to back free and trying navigagate areound he and als high marye. missed all of on dead.net peace out.
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Great to see you! Welcome back!
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A fascinating read indeed. And while it is mostly true that the Dead were "apolitical" during the tumultuos 1960s, Jerry Garcia did participate in the Presidential campaign of fellow Californian Richard Nixon in 1968, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yu-FBinGck8
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A fascinating read indeed. And while it is mostly true that the Dead were "apolitical" during the tumultuos 1960s, Jerry Garcia did participate in the Presidential campaign of fellow Californian Richard Nixon in 1968, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yu-FBinGck8