Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
--
Rich
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
--
Rich
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
--
Rich
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
Is there anything about the Gdead's MUSIC that males it psychedelic? It's always sounded like folk to me.
The guys in the Dead were into drugs. But are there any 'Tomorrow Never Knows' or
'Lucy in the Skies' or 'Day in the Lifes' in their catalog?
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/why-jerry-garcia-preferred-john-lennon-over-the-beatles/
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
--
Rich
On November 22, RJKe...@yahoo.com wrote:
Did any group member ever mention Grateful Dead,
in an interview?
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
Is there anything about the Gdead's MUSIC that males it psychedelic? It's always sounded like folk to me.After 1972, that's mostly true. Though they developed their own style of
folk - often cowboy - distinct from Bob Dylan / Joan Baez.
The guys in the Dead were into drugs. But are there any 'Tomorrow Never Knows' orEarlier, they were strongly psychedelic; "Saint Steven", "Dark Star". Lots of space jams.
'Lucy in the Skies' or 'Day in the Lifes' in their catalog?
Check "The other one", of heavy LSD influence, but not dreamy feelgood like "Lucy",
rather dark and gritty.
Hard to imagine the Beatles writing any of these.
"Unbroken Chain" might fit on Revolver - with different voicing, of course -
--
Rich
Rubber Soul and Revolver were psychedelic, and the
boys were surely aware of the SanFran sound, where it
originated. And GDead was the leading proponent of that genre.
The Dead were big Beatles fans, that's known - though it's
hard to think of a Jerry Garcia song which might have been
composed by Lennon, or vice versa -
Is there anything about the Gdead's MUSIC that males it psychedelic?
It's always sounded like folk to me.
After 1972, that's mostly true. Though they developed their own style of
folk - often cowboy - distinct from Bob Dylan / Joan Baez.
The guys in the Dead were into drugs. But are there any 'Tomorrow Never Knows' or
'Lucy in the Skies' or 'Day in the Lifes' in their catalog? >
Earlier, they were strongly psychedelic; "Saint Steven", "Dark Star".
Check "The other one", of heavy LSD influence, but not dreamy feelgood like "Lucy",
rather dark and gritty.
Hard to imagine the Beatles writing any of these.
"Unbroken Chain" might fit on Revolver - with different voicing, of course -
Thanks for the reply, Rich. I listened to those tunes. They're alright.
I mean, they sound like the Dead I know.
Most if their tunes project a happy vibe, right?
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