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  1. Jan 13, 2016 · The Grateful Dead welcomed many guests over the course of their lengthy and illustrious career ranging from Santana to Clarence Clemons to Janis Joplin to Bob Dylan to Duane Allman to the...

  2. This playlist compiles all known tapes of The Grateful Dead performing with select guest sit-ins and Jams during their shows. From David Crosby, Duane...

    • The Allman Brothers and Peter Green. Fillmore East, New York City. February 11th, 1970. With Duane Allman and Fleetwood Mac’s original guitar wizard Peter Green sitting in alongside Garcia and Weir, the Dead’s journeys were epic this night.
    • Branford Marsalis. Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, New York. March 29th, 1990. Saxophonist Branford Marsalis joined the band for its second set, and right off the bat, beginning on “Eyes of the World,” everything clicks.
    • Bob Dylan. JFK Stadium, Philadelphia. July 10th, 1987. Neither Dylan nor the Dead were at their best for this summit tour, and the resulting live LP (1989’s Dylan & the Dead) was a punt.
    • Janis Joplin. Fillmore West, San Francisco. June 7th, 1969. On this historic night, the Dead premiered “Dire Wolf,” a peek at the acoustic country-folk left turn they’d take the following year on Workingman’s Dead.
  3. Other projects: Rhythm Devils, The Other Ones, The Dead, Mickey Hart Band, Dead & Company. Tom Constanten; Active: November 23, 1968 – January 30, 1970 (touring musician September 1967 – November 1968) Instruments: Keyboards. Keith Godchaux; Active: September 1971 – February 17, 1979 Instruments: Keyboards, backing vocals

    Timespan
    Members, Instruments
    June 1965 – September 1967
    Jerry Garcia – lead guitar, vocals Bob ...
    September 1967 – November 1968
    Jerry Garcia – lead guitar, vocals Bob ...
    November 1968 – January 1970
    Jerry Garcia – lead guitar, vocals Bob ...
    January 1970 – February 1971
    Jerry Garcia – lead guitar, vocals Bob ...
    • John Belushi
    • The Beach Boys
    • Etta James
    • Bob Dylan
    • Neil Young
    • Janis Joplin
    • Pete Townshend
    • The Allman Brothers and Peter Green
    • Carlos Santana

    A slightly left-field choice (hey, this is the Dead, after all), but the appearance of John Belushi at one of the band’s famous shows in New York will always capture our attention as it put the mellow vibes of the group on a head to head collision course with Belushi’s anarchic style. It also makes our list as it may be one of the only occasions wh...

    At the Fillmore East in New York, Grateful Dead would welcome pop-rock behemoths The Beach Boys to the stage for a special jam session. It was an everyday occurrence for fans of the Dead, picking up special guests with the ease of wind picking up grains of sand; the band were experts in welcoming stars to their stage. Even by 1971, with the band st...

    Etta James is one of the most powerful singers of all time and should rightly be considered a pillar of strength for the entirety of the music spectrum. She joined the band on New Year’s Eve in 1982 for a serious performance that would never be forgetting. Bringing the local band Tower of Power, a horn group that helped to provide the backing for J...

    Of course, for Bob Dylan, there are many occurrences we could point to as some of his finer moments with the Grateful Dead, largely because he had so many of them. Joining the band in 1987 as part of the ‘Dylan and The Dead’ tour helped reinvigorate the singer’s entire live show with one single rehearsal session. In Dylan’s autobiography, he recall...

    Following the tragic death of concert promoter Bill Graham, a gathering of musical acts and music fans assembled in Golden State Park to pay tribute to his life and legacy. Among the acts were the Grateful Dead and Neil Young, who delivered a touching performance of Bob Dylan song ‘Forever Young’. Young was in attendance as part of the Crosby, Stil...

    Two of the everlasting idols of the sixties spirit, Janis Joplin and The Grateful Dead, didn’t cross paths too many times but, on one special occasion, they delivered quite possibly the finest jam session in either of their respective careers. Two acts that were born out of San Francisco’s vibrant hippie culture were the Grateful Dead and Janis Jop...

    On March 28th, 1981, the band welcomed another guest of seriously high esteem as the principal songwriter and lead guitarist of The Who, Pete Townshend, meets the band on stage for a three-song set that had enough power to bring the entire house down. Grateful Dead were on tour (shockingly) in Europe following a short run at the Rainbow Theatre in ...

    If you take Bob Weir, add Jerry Garcia and then add into that mix the searing talents of Duane Allman and Fleetwood Mac founder Peter Green, you have a concoction of guitar heroes capable of burning the house down. That house was the Fillmore East, a home away from home for the Grateful Dead, and it saw the group of performers deliver one of the gr...

    Carlos Santana is arguably one of the greatest guitarists of all time, but he saw the brilliance of Jerry Garcia and claimed him as the greatest axeman he had ever seen. It seems fitting then that the two Bay Area icons would sit in on a few sessions with the Dead, but this performance at the Sam Boyd Silver Bowl, the University of Las Vegas, back ...

  4. Grateful Dead was an American rock band formed in 1965 in Palo Alto, California. The Grateful Dead is known for its eclectic style, which fused elements of rock, blues, jazz, folk, country, bluegrass, rock and roll, gospel, reggae, and world music with psychedelia.

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  6. The main artists on the album are Daniel Kobialka (fiddle) and David Grisman (mandolin, guitar). Also on the album are Norton Buffalo, Enrique Corea, Monroe Grisman, Rob Ickes, Jim Kerwin, Edgar Meyer, Scott Nygaard, Tony Trischka, Heather Garcia Katz, Lisa Kobialka, and Semyon Kobialka. Constanten, Tom.