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Grateful Dead

topic 40 · 9 responses
~terry Tue, Jan 13, 1998 (08:37) seed
The Grateful Dead topic. At last.
~terry Tue, Jan 13, 1998 (08:39) #1
I heard this from Wired's Steve Silberman. Phil Lesh says the surviving members of the Dead will reunite on New Year's Eve 1999, to celebrate the opening of a new interactive venue/museum called Terrapin Station. To raise money for this project, the Dead will sell a 3-CD set recorded on Phil's 50th birthday, 3/15/90, called "The Terrapin Limited." It's the whole show - even the applause before the encore, and it's available now from dead.net and 1-800-CAL-DEAD. The complete story is at Wired News: http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/7102.html
~terry Tue, Jan 13, 1998 (08:40) #2
It's $45.50, including shipping, which will take 4-6 weeks.
~terry Tue, Jan 13, 1998 (08:42) #3
http://www.dead.net
~terry Tue, Jan 13, 1998 (08:47) #4
And also: http://www.dead.net/almanac/TerrAlmanac/Pages/Entry.html which is the Terrapin web page.
~terry Sun, Jan 18, 1998 (22:41) #5
FWIW There is a new site for this See below: ----------------------------------------------- Greetings! I am happy to report that Grateful Dead Tapelists has found a new home. World Wide Impact, Inc. (http://www.wwimpact.com/) has very kindly offered their services for this project. Many thanks to them and to those of you who offered space on your personal www pages or made isp suggestions. The site is now currently up at its new address . Everything is in order as it was and the site is fully operational, with the exception of the chat room which is undergoing renovations. Please update your links and bookmarks. All tapelists saved locally on the old site have a message referring visitors to the new address. All the tapelists from the old site have been moved to the new site. When you visit the new site and click on your list you will be able to determine the new url for your tapelist. Of course, if you only submitted a link to your list, nothing has changed at all. As always, if you have any questions or comments regarding the site, please let me know. Regards, Jim Denaro (jim@demonsys.com) Curator, Grateful Dead Tapelists http://bertha.wwimpact.com/gdtapelists/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------
~terry Mon, Mar 2, 1998 (03:14) #6
This probably belongs in the media conference but the media conference hasn't attracted enough journalists and writers yet to make it hot stuff (I'm workin' on it, I'm workin' on it) so here goes. Uh, sit down, deadheads. this was apparently in the LA Times... POP EYE Weir, Lesh, Hart Bring Dead to Life By STEVE HOCHMAN What would you call a new band featuring three key members of the Grateful Dead performing three-hour sets of the old band's music? Dead Again? Half Dead? Dead Remains? Deadheads are calling it the answer to their prayers. The name is the one thing left to be determined in plans for a tour this summer by singer-guitarist Bob Weir, bassist Phil Lesh and percussionist Mickey Hart, along with auxiliary Dead keyboardist Bruce Hornsby. They will anchor a band that will headline the third annual Furthur Festival, a Dead-related tour created in the wake of Jerry Garcia's August 1995 death to keep the Deadhead community together. Hornsby is expected to handle most of the lead vocals on songs that had been sung by Garcia, while most of Garcia's lead guitar work will be turned over to jazz- oriented musician Stan Franks, though there is talk of guests joining in on some shows, with such names as Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton popping up in the Deadhead rumor mill. Dead spokesman Dennis McNally would not confirm the plans, but sources close to the band say that Lesh, who had declined similar proposals, found he was missing the experience of performing the music that had been his life for 30 years. Short of Garcia's resurrection, it's the news many Deadheads have most been hoping to hear. "They had talked about [reuniting] at the end of the millennium, but why wait?" says Toni Brown, publisher of Brooklyn-based Deadhead magazine Relix. "We were all tired of waiting." Others who were waiting for such news are concert promoters, who had missed the reliable and sizable business of a Grateful Dead tour. In the decade before Garcia's death, the San Francisco band pitched camp annually among the top-grossing tours with steady sales at both arenas and stadiums. The Furthur Festival, even with Weir and Hart each fronting bands, couldn't come close to that. Last year, with the Black Crowes headlining, the tour was only the 47th-biggest U.S. tour, averaging attendance of about 8,600 and a total box-office gross of $6.3 million for 28 dates, according to figures magazine. "It won't fill the [Dead's] hole," Gary Bongiovanni, Pollstar's editor-in-chief, says of the reunion. "But that's not to say it won't be a great touring act. And obviously with the higher profile connected to the Dead name, you'd expect it to do much better this year." Can the music live up to the Dead? "Without Jerry it's a totally different thing," Brown says. "But last year many people said the most rewarding thing was when Weir finally played Dead tunes. And having new players gives it credibility and its own voice. And who knows? It could blossom into something of its own. DEAD TIME: While they're waiting for summer, Deadheads can keep busy reliving the old days with "The Deadhead's Taping Compendium, Volume I," an in-depth guide to the vast flow of concert tapes traded freely among the most serious fans. Compiled by Michael M. Getz and John R. Dwork, the book is due in May. So detailed are its show-by-show descriptions and analyses of available tapes that its nearly 600 pages take us only through 1974. However, it does reach back way before the Dead itself came together, starting with a 1959 show by the College of San Mateo Jazz Band, which included Phil Lesh on trumpet. There are also such oddities as a 1962 recording of Jerry Garcia's folk band the Sleepy Hog Hollow Stompers at the San Carlos Jewish Community Center. It's much more information than anyone who isn't obsessed with finding the greatest-ever performance of "Dark Star" needs, but even a casual Deadhead should get some flashbacks thumbing through these pages. Copyright Los Angeles Times
~KitchenManager Sun, Mar 21, 1999 (02:31) #7
Since it's been over a year later, what happened?
~terry Mon, Mar 22, 1999 (09:31) #8
I'm not sure. Any deadheads here?
~terry Wed, Mar 30, 2005 (08:07) #9
The Grateful Dead's Mickey Hart and Particle, a pioneering electronic/jam-rock band, have come together to form HYDRA. The new group will launch a 14-date tour debuting their innovative sound nationwide, beginning April 7 in Santa Cruz, Calif. and ending on April 24 in Washington, DC. Stops include The Fillmore in San Francisco, Henry Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles, and New York's Roseland Ballroom while wrapping it's way around the country. This union marks the first time Hart has joined an existing act to create a new unit...
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