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What
do Phish share with the Dead?
The Grateful Dead pioneered freewheeling
two-set shows and developed the stereotypical
travelling fan community, both of which
are also in evidence at Phish shows.
Common aspects of the music include... (though note also how the
music differs.)
Common aspects of the community include colorful clothing, public
drug use, relative
affluence, and geographic diversity irrespective
of any given performance's actual location.
However, the Grateful
Dead did not pioneer group improvisation
(jazz did), fan taping and trading
of performances (bluegrass did), drug use,
or other things that happen to be common to both groups. Phish and
the Dead draw on common elements, and the Dead combined a subset
of those before Phish - but the two actually differ
quite a bit.
"The Dead
are the Dead. They were the forerunners,
and are. They were on a certain level probably the most influential
band on this era of music, the p.g.e.,
post-grunge era. ... They crossed it [jazz, as in Miles Davis'
A Tribute to Jack Johnson] over
to rock, in terms of experimentation on stage, and lifestyle,
and music as a community, and all
kinds of stuff."
-- Trey Anastasio to Addicted to Noise c.6/95
This page last updated January 26, 2007. All contents © 1992-2007 Ellis Godard. All rights reserved.
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