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The continuous trip. An essay on Deadheads Subcultures within music often tend to be associated with a specific genre. Examples include Punk, Rockabilly and Black Metal. But it also happens that a subculture evolves around a single band. One is the culture associated with Deadheads, which were particularly dedicated fans of the Grateful Dead who followed the band from gig to gig, year after year, sometimes for several decades.
The media version of Deadheads culture didn't appear until well into the 1970s. By then thousands of people had begun to follow the Grateful Dead, and for many the band had become a lifestyle. In a YouTube clip from an American TV spot about Deadheads, a young woman is saying that after her 50th Grateful Dead show she stopped counting them. In other words, it wasn't just the band that went on tour. Much of the audience also hit the road, and whole families travelled together. Like most subcultures that are linked to music, Deadheads used several typical attributes. The skull with roses from an early concert poster was a recurring symbol printed on stickers, t-shirts and the like. Another recognisable feature that came later was the use of tie-dye clothing.
For those who want to get a glimpse of Deadheads culture, The Grateful Dead Movie is an excellent starting point. The film was shot in October 1974 when the band did five shows at Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco. At the time, Grateful Dead had played together for ten years and built up a devoted fan base. The shows featured their "wall of sound", a sound system which included a huge wall of speakers stacked on each other. A man wearing a cowboy hat, probably around 30, is at Winterland Ballroom with some friends. In the film he talks about the community that has arisen since he began to follow the Grateful Dead: "It's always a group of the same faces basically, you know. There's new people keep coming in over the years and then older people phase off, you know, advance on to different trips and you don't see their faces as much, but it's like a continuous trip." An interesting aspect of the film is that many in the audience are dancing to the music - and we're not talking about swaying gently to the beat, but real dancing where you dance with your whole body. Arms in the air. Eyes closed. Faces that burst into smiles. There's obviously joy in the audience.
In 1974 when the concert film was shot, the hippie culture around the Grateful Dead was already a relic of the Sixties. Popular culture had long since moved away from psychedelic elements, and the same year the film was made Abba had their breakthrough. But The Grateful Dead Movie clearly shows that a vital subculture had emerged. The concertgoers had created their own universe with a special spiritual community based on the love for a band. There are no doubt many similarities between the culture of the Deadheads and the rave culture that emerged primarily in Britain in the late 1980s, and became known as Acid House. Just like the Deadheads, the Acid House movement revolved around a strong emphasis on community and the pursuit of collective ecstasy.
Canadian author Douglas Coupland has written about the darker sides of the Deadheads. In Polaroids From the Dead, the reader gets to meet a number of Deadheads on the "festivals" that took place in parking lots before the actual concerts. Coupland's contempt for hippies is lacking in nuances, and the tone of the book is cynical. But whether one shares the author's idea of Deadheads or not, the book gives an insight into how the subculture around the Grateful Dead could look like.
During the late 2000s, there was a newly awakened interest in psychedelic rock and the hippie aesthetics. Fashion companies started selling clothes that previously only hippies would be wearing. Women were suddenly seen in ponchos and headbands - according to the then new boho-chic trend - and fashionable men grew beards. Psychedelic pop bands like Animal Collective caught the attention of the media. The band was the first ever allowed to sample the Grateful Dead. But the recent interest in all things psychedelic is probably a passing trend that seems to have very little in common with the Deadheads or the Sixties hippie movement. Fleet Foxes are one of the most acclaimed pop bands over the last few years. But despite their clothes and beards they are careful to distance themselves from the hippie culture: "I might look like a hippie, but I actually have much disdain for hippies", said band member Robin Pecknold in an interview for the newspaper The Stranger a few years ago. If one wants to find a contemporary example of an equivalent to the Deadheads, one shouldn't look at popular culture. Instead, similarities are found in subcultures such as the annual Burning Man Festival that takes place in the Nevada desert, which appears like a Dionysian mix of a giant rave party and a pre-party at a Grateful Dead concert. Pictures from top to bottom: © 2009-2012 The Oak Tree Review
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