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		The Grateful Dead toasts its 60th with concerts at San Francisco's 
		Golden Gate Park
		[July 30, 2025] 
		By JANIE HAR 
		SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Fans of the Grateful Dead are pouring into San 
		Francisco for three days of concerts and festivities marking the 60th 
		anniversary of the scruffy jam band that came to embody a city where 
		people wore flowers in their hair and made love, not war.
 Dead & Company, featuring original Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and 
		Mickey Hart, will play Golden Gate Park's Polo Field starting Friday 
		with an estimated 60,000 attendees each day. The last time the band 
		played that part of the park was in 1991 — a free show following the 
		death of concert promoter and longtime Deadhead Bill Graham.
 
 Certainly, times have changed.
 
 A general admissions ticket for all three days is $635 — a shock for 
		many longtime fans who remember when a joint cost more than a Dead 
		concert ticket.
 
 But Deadhead David Aberdeen is thrilled anyway.
 
 “This is the spiritual home of the Grateful Dead,” said Aberdeen, who 
		works at Amoeba Music in the bohemian, flower-powered Haight-Ashbury 
		neighborhood. “It seems very right to me that they celebrate it in this 
		way.”
 
 Formed in 1965, the Grateful Dead is synonymous with San Francisco and 
		its counterculture. Members lived in a dirt-cheap Victorian in the 
		Haight and later became a significant part of 1967’s Summer of Love.
 
		
		 
		That summer eventually soured into bad acid trips and police raids, and 
		prompted the band's move to Marin County on the other end of the Golden 
		Gate Bridge. But new Deadheads kept cropping up — even after iconic 
		guitarist and singer Jerry Garcia ’s 1995 death — aided by cover bands 
		and offshoots like Dead & Company.
 “There are 18-year-olds who were obviously not even a twinkle in 
		somebody’s eyes when Jerry died, and these 18-year-olds get the values 
		of Deadheads,” said former Grateful Dead publicist and author Dennis 
		McNally.
 
 Fitting in, feeling at home
 
 Deadheads can reel off why and how, and the moment they fell in love 
		with the music. Fans love that no two shows are the same; the band plays 
		different songs each time. They also embrace the community that comes 
		with a Dead show.
 
 Sunshine Powers didn’t have friends until age 13, when she stepped off a 
		city bus and into the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
 
 “I, all of a sudden, felt like I fit in. Or like I didn’t have to fit 
		in,” says Powers, now 45 and the owner of tie-dye emporium Love on 
		Haight. “I don’t know which one it was, but I know it was like, OK."
 
 Similarly, her friend Taylor Swope, 47, survived a tough freshman year 
		at a new school with the help of a Grateful Dead mixtape. The owner of 
		the Little Hippie gift shop is driving from Brooklyn, New York, to sell 
		merchandise, reconnect with friends and see the shows.
 
 “The sense of, ‘I found my people, I didn’t fit in anywhere else and 
		then I found this, and I felt at home.’ So that’s a big part of it,” she 
		said of the allure.
 
		
		 
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            A merchant picks up a Grateful Dead patch out his inventory for a 
			customer in San Francisco, Saturday, July 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Godofredo 
			A. Vásquez) 
            
			
			
			 Magical live shows
 Sometimes, becoming a Deadhead is a process.
 
 Thor Cromer, 60, had attended several Dead shows, but was ambivalent 
			about the hippies. That changed on March 15, 1990, in Landover, 
			Maryland.
 
 “That show, whatever it was, whatever magic hit,” he said, “it was 
			injected right into my brain.”
 
 Cromer, who worked for the U.S. Senate then, eventually took time 
			off to follow the band on tour and saw an estimated 400 shows from 
			spring 1990 until Garcia's death.
 
 Cromer now works in technology and is flying in from Boston to join 
			scores of fellow “rail riders” who dance in the rows closest to the 
			stage.
 
 Aberdeen, 62, saw his first Dead show in 1984. As the only person in 
			his college group with a driver's license, he was tapped to drive a 
			crowded VW Bug from Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, to 
			Syracuse, New York.
 
 “I thought it was pretty weird,” he said. “But I liked it.”
 
 He fell in love the following summer, when the Dead played a venue 
			near his college.
 
 Aberdeen remembers rain pouring down in the middle of the show and a 
			giant rainbow appearing over the band when they returned for their 
			second act. They played “Comes a Time,” a rarely played Garcia 
			ballad.
 
 “There is a lot of excitement, and there will be a lot of people 
			here,” Aberdeen said. “Who knows when we’ll have an opportunity to 
			get together like this again?”
 
			
			 Fans were able to see Dead & Company in Las Vegas earlier this year, 
			but no new dates have been announced. Guitarist Bob Weir is 77, and 
			drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann are 81 and 79, 
			respectively. Besides Garcia, founding members Ron “Pigpen” McKernan 
			on keyboards died in 1973 and bassist Phil Lesh died last year at 
			age 84. Multiple events planned for Dead’s 60th
 Mayor Daniel Lurie, who is not a Deadhead but counts “Sugar 
			Magnolia” as his favorite Dead song, is overjoyed at the economic 
			boost as San Francisco recovers from pandemic-related hits to its 
			tech and tourism sectors.
 
 “They are the reason why so many people know and love San 
			Francisco,” he said.
 
 The weekend features parties, shows and celebrations throughout the 
			city. Grahame Lesh & Friends will perform three nights starting 
			Thursday. Lesh is the son of Phil Lesh.
 
 On Friday, which would have been Garcia’s 83rd birthday, officials 
			will rename a street after the San Francisco native. On Saturday, 
			visitors can celebrate the city’s annual Jerry Day at the Jerry 
			Garcia Amphitheater located in a park near Garcia’s childhood home.
 
			
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