in Internet Archive, Music | November 22nd, 2012 6 Comments
Image via Wikimedia Commons
Even resolute non-Deadheads have been passing around “Deadhead,” Nick Paumgarten’s recentNew Yorker piece on “the vast recorded legacy of the Grateful Dead.” Like much of the most interesting magazine journalism, the article digs deep into and provides a primer on a subculture that goesdeep. Casual Dead listeners know there exists a large and dedicated body of fervently un-casual Dead listeners, the fans who may have followed the band around on its touring days but now collect every last one of its recorded performances, official, unofficial, or otherwise. “It was denser, feverish, otherworldly,” Paumgarten describes his first experience hearing a Dead bootleg. “If you took an interest, you’d copy a few tapes, listen to those over and over, until they began to make sense, and then copy some more. Before long, you might have a scattershot collection, with a couple of tapes from each year. It was all Grateful Dead, but because of the variability in sonic fidelity, and because the band had been at it for twenty years, there were many different flavors and moods. Even the compromised sound quality became a perverse part of the appeal. Each tape seemed to have its own particular note of decay, like the taste of the barnyard in a wine or a cheese.”
Do you aspire to join those Paumgarten calls “the tapeheads, the geeks, the throngs of workaday Phil Schaaps, who approach the band’s body of work with the intensity and the attention to detail that one might bring to birding, baseball, or the Talmud”? If so, the internet, and specifically the Internet Archive’s Grateful Dead collection, has cranked the barrier to entry way down. Its 11,215 free Grateful Dead recordings should keep you busy for some time. “You can browse the recordings by year, so if you click on, say, 1973 you will see links to two hundred and ninety-four recordings, beginning with four versions of a February 9th concert at Stanford and ending with several versions of December 19th in Tampa,” writes Paumgarten. “Most users merely stream the music; it’s a hundred cassette trays, in the Cloud.” If you need a break from these concerts, in all their variable-fidelity glory, listen to Paumgarten talk matters Dead with music critic Sasha Frere-Jones on the New Yorker Out Loudpodcast (listen here). And if you find the Dead not quite to your taste — guitarist Jerry Garcia famously compared their dedicated niche audience to “people who like licorice” — why not move on to the Fugazi archive?
Related content:
Bob Dylan and The Grateful Dead Rehearse Together in Summer 1987. Listen to 74 Tracks.
UC Santa Cruz Opens a Deadhead’s Delight: The Grateful Dead Archive is Now Online
Colin Marshall hosts and producesNotebook on Cities and Culture. Follow him on Twitter at@colinmarshall.
by Colin Marshall | Permalink | Comments (6) |
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Comments (6)
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Richard Poggi says:
July 6, 2013 at 7:09 pm
I’m looking for good grateful dead music. back in 1983 i started going to shows and was hooked for ever
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tommy lipka says:
March 22, 2014 at 3:51 pm
providence R.I. feb(?) 1971–any recordings?
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Libby Bryant says:
February 25, 2016 at 2:34 pm
I knew them as my neighbors in the early seventies… Have a lot of really great memories on a personal note and of course I love the music…
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Tony says:
February 5, 2019 at 11:49 am
Check out the station archived shows and tune in to Dallas’s KNON for the longest running Dead show in the free World at 35-ish years uninterrupted.. have heard RI shows there on Fridays for sure! Check it & Share it like a good dancing Bear, it’s pretty awesome and the volunteer DJ has been on it for like, 20 years or so.
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Stu Brown says:
February 18, 2021 at 8:18 pm
What am I supposed to write ???
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olly says:
April 1, 2022 at 2:31 pm
Live at Red Rocks is Grateful Dead at their staggeringly best.
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