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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (July 2, 2015)
for me, I need it every week. It’s a special thing we know we have and it goes beyond the music. The music is the medium in which we can bring people together.” Steinhorn says the band pays close attention to its Eugene shows, because of the people and history here. “Eugene does have its own quality of Heads down there that’s different than a lot of places,” Steinhorn says. “It is a deep-rooted Grateful Dead community. The expectations are higher in playing Eugene than other places.” THE MUSIC NEVER STOPPED THE CROWD AT THE GRATEFUL DEAD’S AUTZEN STADIUM SHOW IN 1993 THE GRATEFUL DEAD PERFORM AT MCARTHUR COURT AUG. 16, 1981 While the Fare Thee Well concerts have been wildly popular with Grateful Dead fans, some have mixed feelings. Sunshine Kesey will be attending the shows in Chicago, but has expressed some qualms. “What would it be like if somebody has been divorced for the past 20 years, and they decide to get together for one final thing because it will make some good money and it will be a fun party?” Sunshine Kesey says. “But they’re not going to stay together after that. It’s kind of odd.” Despite her reservations, Kesey says she is excited to attend the shows and reconnect with her Grateful Dead family. “I’m sure Jerry would be thrilled that they’re still making music. It’s what he lived for, you know?” Kesey says. “I’m proud of everybody for pulling it together.” Eugene businessman Jason Johnson is the former executive director of Eugene’s Furthur Down The Road Foundation, an organization dedicated to restoring Ken Kesey’s Furthur bus and educating kids about the author. Johnson is also an army officer turned Deadhead who, like many before him, migrated from a fast-paced life in California to a simpler one in Oregon. Johnson speaks with a Tennessee drawl and can’t stop smiling when talking about the Dead and scoring tickets to the Soldier Field shows. “The ripples from the Grateful Dead and from Kesey and from Eugene have really permeated every corner of the world and the Deadheads that I’m friends with that I’m going to see in July are from all walks of life,” he says. “There’s consultants and politicians and military guys … and they all come together to speak this one common language, and they know it as the Grateful Dead.” With dedicated fans like Johnson, it seems the legacy of Grateful Dead will live on forever. “It has grown beyond everybody’s wildest dreams, and this whole selling tickets to the Fare Thee Well was a huge eye-opener for everybody,” Sunshine Kesey says. “This is not a dwindling thing.” In a way, the music of the Grateful Dead has already proven its temporal resilience through the decades. The same band that formed when my mom was 6 became the one that led her to meet her husband. And though the band hasn’t released any new music for 25 years, they still received 400,000 paper requests for tickets in 2015. “As long as Deadheads keep having kids, it’s all good,” the Garcia Birthday Band’s Steinhorn says. “I see good things ahead for many generations.” Even when the Grateful Dead are silenced, the community doesn’t die. Eugene has seen this borne out: The Dead were temporarily banned from playing Autzen Stadium in 1990 because the UO didn’t want to be seen as promoting drugs. Deadheads responded by protesting at the Wayne Morse Free Speech Plaza near the old Federal Courthouse. By letting people record their shows and post them online, fans will forever be able to relive the music. Just think, on the UO campus, people can put on some headphones and jam out to a recording of the 1969 Dead show at Mac Court as they walk by it. “There’s an enduring spirit,” says Trist of Dead Air. “It’s indescribable. When you hit the music, it’s the soundtrack of people’s lives.” The Grateful Dead are the reason I am alive, and millions more have been given spiritual life through their music. My parents eventually divorced, which for me, makes the Grateful Dead even more meaningful: They are the one thing besides my brother and me that will always connect my parents. My dad, following a Dead tour in 1987, is just a microcosm for what millions of fan’s relationship with the Dead is — in his words, “the adventure of a lifetime.” ■ PHOTOS BY STEVESCHNEIDERPHOTO.COM. eugeneweekly.com • July 2, 2015 13