If it’s between The Beatles and The Stones, I will always argue for the Fab Four. I also admit a bias since I met Lennon as a wee girl.
But if we look at influence through a worldwide social lens, I think the longevity, songwriting, outreach, and unconventional business approach of the Grateful Dead is unparalleled in overall rock influen…
If it’s between The Beatles and The Stones, I will always argue for the Fab Four. I also admit a bias since I met Lennon as a wee girl.
But if we look at influence through a worldwide social lens, I think the longevity, songwriting, outreach, and unconventional business approach of the Grateful Dead is unparalleled in overall rock influence. The Dead created a subculture that spans generations and genres, they embrace new technology— AOL’s Dead forums coordinated nationwide vigils when Jerry died in ‘95. Dead & Co (the remaining members and new ones) just announced 18 additional shows at The Sphere because “technology has finally caught up” with their music and vibe. They ushered in 1-800 ticket sales, tape trading, parking lot merchandising, and hundreds of cover/tribute bands. Not to mention being the progenitors of the Jam Band genre and the thousands of musicians and millions of fans who are part of it.
Some argue that they aren’t the best musicians or singers, but the music, influence, and scene they’ve created over the past 60 years is unparalleled. Maybe Taylor Swift will match it in a few decades… 😉
If it’s between The Beatles and The Stones, I will always argue for the Fab Four. I also admit a bias since I met Lennon as a wee girl.
But if we look at influence through a worldwide social lens, I think the longevity, songwriting, outreach, and unconventional business approach of the Grateful Dead is unparalleled in overall rock influence. The Dead created a subculture that spans generations and genres, they embrace new technology— AOL’s Dead forums coordinated nationwide vigils when Jerry died in ‘95. Dead & Co (the remaining members and new ones) just announced 18 additional shows at The Sphere because “technology has finally caught up” with their music and vibe. They ushered in 1-800 ticket sales, tape trading, parking lot merchandising, and hundreds of cover/tribute bands. Not to mention being the progenitors of the Jam Band genre and the thousands of musicians and millions of fans who are part of it.
Some argue that they aren’t the best musicians or singers, but the music, influence, and scene they’ve created over the past 60 years is unparalleled. Maybe Taylor Swift will match it in a few decades… 😉