the dead on tour again. ---two questions:


1) who is warren haynes?

2) what cities?
128x128rhyno

Showing 2 responses by dreadhead

This group does not pretend to be the Grateful Dead. Hence the name, The Dead. No one is forcing anyone to see this band but if your like me no one has to. I started to see the band live in the early seventies, Pigpen was still alive and Keith and Donna had just joined. For me the Keith and Donna years were the most satisfying, musically and personally. I admit to losing interest in the nineties version of the band. I never felt Brent Mydland was a particularly good addition and it was obvious that Jerry's drug use was having negative effects on the bands performance.
When the band first reformed after Jerry's passing as The Other Ones you could hear the pleasure they shared in finding a new outlet to bring to life the music which we had grown to love so much. Not the Grateful Dead for sure but something viable at the least and welcomed at the most.
I was at the Other Ones shows at The Garden when it became crystal clear that this band is still the Grateful Dead, the magic had returned and everyone there had felt the new vibe including the band who changed there name to The Dead after these shows. I remember saying to my friend during the show " There back!!! This is the Grateful Dead." Now we all know without Jerry Garcia there is no Grateful Dead, he was the heart and soul, the spirit of the band.
One could look at this touring band the same way you could look at Jerry's right hand. It started out with 5 fingers but after an accident ended up with only 4. Can anyone say that Jerry or his music truly suffered from this? The band can and will and deserves to carry on missing one finger.
As long as their willing to play the songs I'm willing to go see them play them.
There is nothing like a Grateful Dead concert.
Hot Tuna's first album, Live at the Berkley House has been in rotation here since it first came out many many years ago. I have gone through endless copies and it was this album that truly inspired my guitar playing ambitions. New Song for the Morning, Hesitation Blues and particularly Mann's Fate with Jack Cassidy's bass playing going where no electric bass playing had gone before. Jack was the Starship Enterprise of bass players. It was this album that sent me to my one and only trip to the Fillmore East. It was January 1971 and I was just a kid but what a trip for just a kid. I still have the handbill. To me it is easily in the top 10 if not the top 5 of the must have records ever made.