From the category archives:

Videos & DVDs

Grateful Dead: A Step-by-step Breakdown of Grateful Dead’s Guitar Styles and Techniques

Videos & DVDs

Learn the note-for-note riffs and solos of Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir – the legendary guitarists of San Francisco’s ultimate jam band – via in-depth analysis of: Casey Jones, China Cat Sunflower, Friend of the Devil, Shakedown Street, Sugar Magnolia, Touch of Grey, Truckin’, Uncle John’s Band. Running time: 2 hours!

Check it out →

Grateful Dead:Tie-Died – Rock ‘n Roll’s Most Deadicated Fans

Videos & DVDs

Chronicles the lives of “Deadheads” during the 1994 summer tour of the Grateful Dead. Interactive Menus, Scene Access, Production Credits

Check it out →

Movie [VHS]

Videos & DVDs

The only Grateful Dead video to have received a theatrical release (in the mid-’70s), this film is a real time capsule. See Keith and Donna Godcheaux as integral parts of the band! See the Wall of Sound! See the trippy animation! See Jerry with all-black hair! The photography and sound are crude and not on par with those in some of the more recent Dead videos, notably Ticket to New Year’s or Downhill from Here, but its earnestness, and its focus on an era in the Band’s history with little other video documentation, more than make up for the lack of polish. There’s some above-average music, too, especially “Eyes of the World” and the ever-irresistible “U.S. Blues.” –Anne Hurley

Check it out →

Grateful Dead – Truckin’ Up to Buffalo: July 4, 1989

Videos & DVDs

Starring: The Grateful Dead Directed By: Len Dell’Amico Description: Rich Stadium, Orchard Park, N.Y. July 4, 1989 The entire band is in peak musical form, making “Grateful Dead: Truckin’ Up To Buffalo” one of the very best concerts. Arguably considered to be the Grateful Dead’s best tour of their last 15 years of touring, this complete concert at Buffalo’s Rich Stadium on July 4, 1989, features the quintessential Fourth of July song, “U.S. Blues.” With the picture taken from the master 1″ video tape, shot with six cameras, and featuring an outstanding new 5.1 and stereo mix produced from the master multi-track tapes, this nearly three hour concert features such staples as “Touch of Grey,” “Morning Dew,” “All Along The Watchtower,” “Deal,” “Terrapin Station,” and is sure to be a collector’s favorite! Set One Bertha Greatest Story Ever Told Cold Rain and Snow Walkin’ Blues Row Jimmy When I Paint My Masterpiece Stagger Lee Looks Like Rain Deal Set Two Touch Of Grey Man Smart, Woman Smarter Ship Of Fools Playing In The Band Terrapin Station Drums Space I Will Take You Home All Along The Watchtower Morning Dew Not Fade Away Encore U.S. Blues DVD Extras: Visible Lyrics Option, Digitally Remastered (picture taken from the master 1″ videotape, shot with six cameras), outstanding new 5.1 and stereo mix produced from the master multi-track tapes

Check it out →

Grateful Dead – View From the Vault

Videos & DVDs

Since 1994, Grateful Dead Productions has answered Deadheads’ demands for full, live concerts, releasing a series of shows (blemishes and all) on CD entitled Dick’s Picks. So it was only a matter of time before the company dug into the video footage archives. Critics may find the idea of releasing Grateful Dead concert videos amusing. After all, the staunchest Deadhead likely would admit that even on their best nights the boys weren’t visually all that exciting a bunch to watch. That said, this full-length show from July 8, 1990 (a mere 16 days before keyboardist Brent Mydland died of a speedball overdose) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, offers an intimate look at the dynamics that few could notice when attending a stadium show. For instance, there’s the wonderful interplay between guitarist Jerry Garcia and Mydland–each shooting smiles and knowing winks–at each other during “Greatest Story Ever Told.” But, really, let’s forget the philosophizing and get to the point: Deadheads really want to know the highlights of a particular show. There are several here, including a beautiful, lilting “Eyes of the World,” a head-spinning “Let It Grow,” Garcia’s poignant delivery of the morbid “Black Peter,” and, perhaps best of all, an improvisational, untitled jam that emerges from “He’s Gone” (this is bonus material from a show two nights before in Louisville, Kentucky). While the entire show is by no means a peak performance by the Dead (though it features a terrific sound mix), it’s still a great start to a series that one hopes will continue to evolve. –Dave McCoy

Check it out →

Festival Express

Videos & DVDs

Studio: New Line Home Video Release Date: 09/27/2005 Run time: 89 minutes

Check it out →

The Grateful Dead: The End of the Road – The Final Tour ’95

Videos & DVDs

Studio: Monterey Home Video Release Date: 07/05/2005 Run time: 85 minutes

Check it out →

Classic Albums – The Grateful Dead: Anthem to Beauty

Videos & DVDs

This installment of the Classic Albums series follows the making of two Grateful Dead albums, the fiercely experimental Anthem of the Sun and the understated masterwork American Beauty, which spawned melodic gems like “Sugar Magnolia” and “Ripple.” Between the archival scenes and contemporary interviews with band members, the DVD shows a band making seismic inroads in pop music–and five young guys coming to terms with artistry, mortality, and, yes, the pursuit of happiness. There is priceless footage of Neal Cassady driving Ken Kesey’s bus and of the Dead, surrounded by martini-sipping hipsters, on Playboy After Dark. The best scenes involve band members talking about specific songs (you will never hear Phil Lesh’s “Box of Rain” again without thinking of it as a gift to his dying father) or deconstructing a tune by playing each track separately. Intimate and surprisingly cohesive, Anthem to Beauty is a rare glimpse into how the Dead’s magic was made. –Anne Hurley

Check it out →

The Grateful Dead – Downhill From Here

Videos & DVDs

Made for hard-core Deadheads only, this two-and-a-half-hour-long concert video (released after the death of leader Jerry Garcia) captures an entire live show by the psychedelic pioneers. Shot in the summer of 1989 at Alpine Valley Music Theater in East Troy, Wisconsin, the Dead are caught during one of their latter-day musical peaks. Appearing jovial (Garcia actually moves during several tunes!), the band provides numerous patented extended jams during a two-set, 23-song performance. Lively highlights include Garcia’s blistering solos during “Deal” and “China Cat Sunflower/I Know You Rider”; the spacey pairing of “Uncle John’s Band” with “Playing in the Band”; and the tender ballad “Standing on the Moon.” The motionless Dead were never a visually compelling live act, so viewers shouldn’t expect anything more than close-ups of the sextet’s faces and hands. However, such a conventional approach is preferred over the cheesy kaleidoscope of video effects that mar numerous songs here. –Dave McCoy

Check it out →

Grateful Dead – View from the Vault III

Videos & DVDs

Tweet This Post

Check it out →