• FivesandSevens (edited 7 years ago)
    +6

    Hehe. I am indeed. Feel free to join us over there for more Dead-related news, etc. As far as their history, here's a very rough guide to the eras of their music to help you find what appeals to you, especially with regard to live shows. It's a modified cut-and-paste from something else I wrote, so it's totally subjective and way too much information for this situation, but I think it's still good for introductory purposes. You can sample bootlegs of live shows from all eras at archive.org, sorted by year or popularity, as you read. Apologies if you know a lot of this already. If anything catches your eye/ear and you'd like recommendations based on it, let me know:

    1965-1969 - the psychedelic/blues era, when some of their most famous songs like St. Stephen, Dark Star, and China Cat Sunflower were composed and performances often got very exploratory. Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, a talented blues and R&B singer and keyboardist was their frontman during this time, keeping their performances rooted in the gritty blues numbers interspersed between the adventurous psychedelic jams. The album Live Dead is the exemplar of the period, though bootlegs exist that are arguably better reflections of their peaks during this time.

    1970-1972 - The Americana era, when their psychedelic side waned a bit and shorter, more folk- and country-influenced sounds accompanied a burst of songwriting that provided staples of their live shows for the rest of their career. Also the period in which they explored more acoustic sounds in the studio, producing the albums American Beauty and Workingman's Dead (released separately but very much of a piece) which for many Deadheads remain their crowning achievements in the studio. If you like blues, bluegrass, cowboy songs, and rock with a good dose of California psychedelia, this is your era. Pigpen died in 1972, though his blues influence could be heard for the rest of their career.

    1972-1976 - The jams era. A return to electric instruments in the studio and live and the jazz chops of their new keyboardist Keith Godchaux, who played piano almost exclusively, produced a period of electric Americana with more focus on tighter grooves from only one drummer (2nd drummer Mickey Hart took a hiatus during this time). The era also showed a return to more R&B sounds and the long jams of their psychedelic period, now with the focus and intensity of jazz instead of the anarchic/sci-fi moods of their early stuff. If you like up-tempo rockers and funky-mellow party grooves, but also some freeform jazz-influenced explorations, this may be your era. Check out the album Europe '72 for a great primer on beginnings of this sound. For the later, more developed and jazzy part of the period, a personal fav is a great bootleg of their Feb. 24, 1974 show at Winterland in San Francisco.

    1976-1979 - The Barton Hall era. This is my favorite period of the Dead, so I will try and fail to keep this short and objective. After a hiatus for much of 1975, during which the band composed and recorded the album Blues for Allah, an exploratory album full of jazz fusion and world music influences, the band returned to touring in 1976 with Mickey Hart back on second drum kit. Then, in 1977, something happened. For whatever reason, their Feb.-Jun. 1977 tour hit a sort of pinnacle of musicianship and chemistry that produced (arguably) their most varied, inspired, and consistently brilliant playing as a group. Their May 8th, 1977 show at Barton Hall in Itha...

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