setlist.fm logo

  • Statistics Stats
  • You are here:
  • Grateful Dead
  • Tour Statistics
  • Song Statistics Stats
  • Tour Statistics Stats
  • Other Statistics

All Setlists

  • All setlist songs  ( 2332 )

Years on tour

  • 2015  ( 5 )
  • 1995  ( 47 )
  • 1994  ( 85 )
  • 1993  ( 82 )
  • 1992  ( 55 )
  • 1991  ( 77 )
  • 1990  ( 74 )
  • 1989  ( 73 )
  • 1988  ( 81 )
  • 1987  ( 86 )
  • 1986  ( 46 )
  • 1985  ( 71 )
  • 1984  ( 64 )
  • 1983  ( 66 )
  • 1982  ( 62 )
  • 1981  ( 85 )
  • 1980  ( 87 )
  • 1979  ( 75 )
  • 1978  ( 81 )
  • 1977  ( 60 )
  • 1976  ( 41 )
  • 1975  ( 4 )
  • 1974  ( 40 )
  • 1973  ( 72 )
  • 1972  ( 86 )
  • 1971  ( 82 )
  • 1970  ( 140 )
  • 1969  ( 137 )
  • 1968  ( 117 )
  • 1967  ( 128 )
  • 1966  ( 102 )
  • 1965  ( 21 )

Show all tours

  • Dylan & The Dead  ( 5 )
  • Europe '72  ( 22 )
  • Europe '74  ( 7 )
  • Europe '90  ( 11 )
  • Fall Tour 1987  ( 17 )
  • Fall Tour 1988  ( 20 )
  • Fall Tour 1989  ( 17 )
  • Fall Tour 1990  ( 11 )
  • Fall Tour 1991  ( 19 )
  • Fall Tour 1992  ( 9 )
  • Fall Tour 1993  ( 26 )
  • Fall Tour 1994  ( 33 )
  • Fare Thee Well  ( 5 )
  • Grateful Dead Tour  ( 11 )
  • Mardi Gras Run 1992  ( 3 )
  • New Year's Run 1987  ( 4 )
  • New Year's Run 1989  ( 4 )
  • New Year's Run 1990  ( 4 )
  • Spring Tour 1974  ( 7 )
  • Spring Tour 1986  ( 1 )
  • Spring Tour 1987  ( 23 )
  • Spring Tour 1988  ( 20 )
  • Spring Tour 1989  ( 21 )
  • Spring Tour 1990  ( 18 )
  • Spring Tour 1991  ( 27 )
  • Spring Tour 1992  ( 17 )
  • Spring Tour 1993  ( 1 )
  • Spring Tour 1994  ( 17 )
  • Spring Tour 1995  ( 15 )
  • Summer Tour 1974  ( 17 )
  • Summer Tour 1987  ( 24 )
  • Summer Tour 1988  ( 11 )
  • Summer Tour 1989  ( 19 )
  • Summer Tour 1990  ( 20 )
  • Summer Tour 1991  ( 21 )
  • Summer Tour 1992  ( 26 )
  • Summer Tour 1993  ( 20 )
  • Summer Tour 1994  ( 29 )
  • Summer Tour 1995  ( 26 )
  • Winter Tour 1995  ( 6 )
  • Winter/Spring Tour 1994  ( 6 )
  • Avg Setlist

Concert Map

  • Apr 27, 2024
  • Apr 26, 2024
  • Apr 25, 2024
  • Apr 24, 2024
  • Apr 23, 2024
  • Apr 22, 2024
  • FAQ | Help | About
  • Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices | Privacy Policy
  • Feature requests
  • Songtexte.com

grateful dead fall tour 95

"It was the tour from hell": Inside the Grateful Dead's last shows, and Jerry Garcia's final days

Jerry garcia's health was failing. the music wasn't firing. the crowds were anarchic. the final days of the dead, by blair jackson - david gans.

xcerpted from "THIS IS ALL A DREAM WE DREAMED: An Oral History of the Grateful Dead"

CAMERON SEARS, Grateful Dead manager: Once the manifestation of Jerry’s choices were becoming more and more apparent, it was forcing a conversation to happen that got a lot more attention. We did confront him. We did have a lot of meetings internally. People were genuinely concerned from a personal perspective for him and the music was not what people felt it should be, so there were a lot of things being discussed. But the X-factor in the whole thing was really Jerry’s reaction to it and what he wanted to do. Because at the end of the day it was his life to live how he chose.

Initially, he was [dismissive]. Most people in that situation are. It’s the rare person who says, “You’re right. Thank you.” It doesn’t happen that way very often, in my experience.

There were other physical problems. I had taken him to doctors, so we were aware. I took him to a hand specialist in the city and they were doing some treatments with him, to some success. His heart condition was also apparent. His approach to that, of course, was, “I’ll adjust my diet,” and he attempted to do that to some extent.

He wasn’t a fool. He knew he needed to do things, but it’s very hard for anyone—no matter who it is—to stop what you’re accustomed to doing because you have to. Nobody wants to be told they can’t do something ever again. And he had multiple sets of things where he was being told that. “You need to lose forty pounds. You can’t smoke. You can’t eat this. You have to exercise.” At a certain point you’re kind of like: “Fuck this,” which you can picture Jerry saying internally. But because he was an intelligent and thoughtful and considerate person, he did want to take those steps, but they’re huge steps. Anybody who, in the best situation, has to lose twenty pounds, it’s an enormous undertaking. We all wish we worked out more and ate better. It’s not a simple thing. And in his case it was very complicated.

JAN SIMMONS, Assistant to promoter Bill Graham and Sears: It was heartbreaking sometimes, watching Jerry being in such poor health that it was hard for him to walk up and down the stage stairs. And it was very painful to see somebody just loved that much, and respected that much, being in so much trouble. He had his good times and his bad times during the years I was with them. And it was not easy sometimes.

STEVE SILBERMAN, Writer, fan: I went on tour in the fall of ’94 and I said to myself at the end of the tour, “Something is wrong, because I just saw fifteen shows or whatever and I can only think of three or four really transcendent moments.”

ROB KORITZ (Musician): The musical quality declined over time, and I think part of that was having two drummers. There were a lot of other factors. I hate to say it, but we can’t deny what drug use did. Not just drug use, but alcohol as well, because I know some drinking also took place.

I remember one time when I was talking with Billy. He was talking about the nineties in particular, when Jerry was out on the smack again. He said, “Most of that stuff was terrible, but no matter what, even if Jerry was out of his mind, every night there was at least one song—or sometimes it was just three minutes—when the magic would happen. And even when it was bad in the nineties, those three minutes of magic every night were worth it for me to stay there.”

PHIL LESH, Grateful Dead bassist: [Dylan’s] “Visions of Jonhanna” is such a great song, and [Jerry] had such an identity with it. It’s a mystery to me why we didn’t start playing it earlier. Even without the teleprompter, he could usually remember most of it. And his guitar playing is just so moving. I just love the song, and I love his rendition of it. It’s him. It’s really him. “The ghost of electricity howls in the bones of her face.” Whew, yeah.

In 1994 there was a very tentative attempt to make a studio record.

BOB BRALOVE, Musician: Jerry was not in good form, but the band was playing really great, so they were putting down some really good tracks. Things were sounding pretty good, but nothing really gelled, so there weren’t any finished performances with vocals. The energy around it was kind of confusing, because there was this really positive energy coming from the band, but it was missing a key ingredient. He’d come late; he might be pissed off.

DENNIS McNALLY, Grateful Dead publicist: In 1994 we played a gig at this airstrip in Highgate, Vermont [Franklin County Field, July 13, 1994]. It was almost a guerrilla thing. We went in, it was comfortable, we got out. The venue had been pristine, because nobody knew about it. This time [June 15, 1995, with Bob Dylan opening] every piece of land in the immediate vicinity of the venue was rented out—you can’t tell a bunch of Yankee farmers that they can’t make a buck off the passing circus, so they didn’t—and there were nitrous tanks and camping. So all of the people that had to stay moderately sober the previous year because they had to drive back to Burlington didn’t have to stay sober.

There wasn’t a riot there; there would have been if we hadn’t opened the gates, but they made the rational decision that you’re not going to ask security guards making five dollars an hour to defend that gate with their last breath. Thousands of people [without tickets] were massed in front of the gates. They were going to come through the gates no matter what. So they opened the gates and then 10,000 more people were inside than should have been.

So, right away, that’s a bad sign [at the beginning of the tour].

Jerry was in alarming health. [Earlier] that year, Vince and Gloria [DiBiase, who were longtime assistants to Garcia] told me that his blood sugar reading, which is supposed to be in the mid to high 90s if you’re healthy, was at 200. I actually do remember saying to people in January, “If we get to Boston this fall . . .” I knew. His physical health was crumbling.

So he’s out of it in Albany [June 21–22, 1995], kids get hit by lightning at RFK [Stadium in Washington, D.C., June 24, 1995]— that’s where the “tour of doom” thing started.

When we first got to Deer Creek [for shows on July 2–3, 1995— the venue is a lovely amphitheater in Noblesville, Indiana; the band had played every year since 1989], Kenny Viola [tour director of security] takes the band into a back room, then comes out and tells me what he did: he played them tapes of threatening phone calls that the venue had received against Jerry. Threatening to kill him— if I remember correctly, because Jerry had stolen his girlfriend, metaphorically, or literally, or otherwise. Look, we’re talking about a disturbed person. And Jerry’s going, “And?” So Ken asked if they wanted to play the show, and they said, “Of course we’re going to play the show. Don’t be ridiculous.”

CAMERON SEARS: It was Jerry’s choice to play. He was pissed. He was not happy about the whole situation.

Once the fences started coming down, I had to go out and see what was happening. Deer Creek had a big hill you had to climb and a big fence all the way around it, and once they started rushing the fence, security said, “You know what, we’re out!” What could they do?

The most troubling aspect of it was the people inside cheering them on. It was a very twisted sense of entitlement. These were kids that really just didn’t give a shit what anybody said to them. You could say, “I work with Jerry, and no, Jerry doesn’t want you to tear down the fence,” and they’d say, “Fuck you!” They were anarchists, in a sense, and once people are in that place, there’s no reasoning with them. You don’t have a whole lot of alternatives in terms of how do you corral this. It’s crazy. It’s like an altered state. Some of them were these young skate punk hippie kids. A lot of them were Phish kids, too. They would go back and forth. Phish was having all the same problems as we were.

DENNIS McNALLY: It was also really creepy leaving that night. We have this insane scene; people start panicking. We had one bus there, the production bus, [but most of us] had come in vans. So we get another van to take the sound crew home. We put the women and children, whoever were their guests, in a van, and they left in the middle of the second set. [After the show] we put the band in the bus and leave. This is twenty minutes after the show, and you had to go through the parking lot a long way at Deer Creek. There’s no backdoor entrance or exit.

Then there were these people pounding on the side of the bus and there were people deliberately walking in front of the bus; it was basically a “fuck you.” It was really freaky and disconcerting. Then going on these back roads, which are really narrow, with sharp turns, the bus got stuck in a ditch, which actually broke the tension. We got out, and looking at it, all of it was so horrific, it was like it had descended into farce. And everybody sort of relaxed, and this local farmer lent us a miniature tractor. They’re trying to drag a bus out of a ditch, Ram Rod and [fellow roadie Billy] Grillo were digging at the tire, and trying to do this and that. Eventually a tow truck came and pulled us out and we went back to the hotel.

The next day, on the way in, Cameron says to me, “Draft a press release.” The cops had said, “We’ll direct traffic for you outside the venue, but we will not work inside. We’re not going to risk our lives to defend your property.”

So the band decided, “Well, we can’t do a show without the police. That’s it.” So I wrote a very strong press release [from the band to the fans] saying: “If you guys quit on us in terms of ethics, don’t forget we can quit on you,” and Jerry signed it. He was truly shaken. It was appalling.

I did think, “You know, the Grateful Dead’s karma about touring for thirty years was remarkably lucky.” There were some famous moments where their [equipment] truck almost didn’t get through. But I don’t know how many, if any, shows the Grateful Dead ever had to cancel, but surely not many, and certainly not any because of the audience.

JAN SIMMONS: It was the tour from hell, as far as we were concerned. The relationship between the entourage and the Deadheads, as far as I could tell, it was pretty good up until that time. Ticket sales were 100 percent and I really, until that last tour, maybe the last two tours, I wasn’t aware that there was that much bad activity going on.

CAMERON SEARS: I don’t think anyone saw it coming to the extent that it manifested itself. We all were aware of the fragility of the situation. Every gig was kind of like a pressure cooker. But who would predict that someone would phone in a death threat to a show? Who would predict that at a campground a porch would collapse and people would get killed? Who could have predicted a lightning strike [at RFK Stadium]? We were all kind of looking at each other and saying, “Really? Is this all happening now?” It was a culmination of a lot of little things, and in each case it had nothing to do with us.

RICHARD LOREN, Grateful Dead booking agent and manager: That last tour was the metaphor for the end. It really showed the collapse of the thing they tried to keep up for so long. The fact that [the Grateful Dead] weren’t savvy enough to not play that last year they played—they didn’t need the money and they could have served their fans another way. They could have created something, done a show somewhere, telecast it, whatever. They could have taken that collective spirit—that socio-musical spirit—and shared it with the rest of the world.

Excerpted from "This Is All a Dream We Dreamed: An Oral History of the Grateful Dead." Copyright © 2015 by Blair Jackson and David Gans. Excerpted by permission of Flatiron Books, a division of Macmillan Publishers. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Dead & Company's Nov. 7th Concert to Be Livestreamed

By Blair Jackson

By david gans, related topics ------------------------------------------, related articles.

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • Share full article

Advertisement

Supported by

Grateful Dead Canceling Tour

By The Associated Press

  • Aug. 16, 1995

Grateful Dead Canceling Tour

The Grateful Dead, devastated by the loss of their leader, Jerry Garcia, have canceled all of their fall concerts. "It's the only decision we've made," Dennis McNally, a spokesman for the rock band, said on Monday. "Everything else is still up in the air."

Mr. Garcia, father figure to hordes of nomadic fans since the psychedelic 1960's, died on Aug. 9, apparently of a heart attack, at a residential drug treatment center in Forest Knolls, Calif. He was 53.

Before his death, concerts had been scheduled from Sept. 13 to Oct. 22 in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Toronto and two cities in California (Glen Helen and Mountain View).

Plans to refund tickets are being organized. For more information, ticket holders can call (415) 457-6388 or (201) 744-7700 after Aug. 21, Mr. McNally said.

grateful dead fall tour 95

LISTEN: Corey Leiter Employs Rich Psych Tinged Acoustics On “Gone”

grateful dead fall tour 95

Manic Monday: Whores Live at Saint Vitus Bar 2024 Full Set

grateful dead fall tour 95

LISTEN: Baby Maker Offers Refreshing Minimalism Approach On “Bags Of It”

grateful dead fall tour 95

Oliver Wood Announces New Solo Album ‘Fat Cat Silhouette’ Shares First Single “Light And Sweet”

grateful dead fall tour 95

New Orleans Funk Legend John “Papa” Gros Talks Jazz Fest & Dr. John Tribute (INTERVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Multi-Faceted Singer-Songwriter Liz Brasher’s ‘Baby Damn’ Captures a Life In Motion (INTERVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Cris Jacobs Talks Baltimore, The Bridge, The Dead, Touring With Sturgil & Winwood & New Album ‘One Of These Days’ (INTERVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Jazz Detective Zev Feldman Talks About A Vast Record Store Day, Part Two: The Releases (INTERVIEW)

Album Reviews

grateful dead fall tour 95

Lawrence Rothman Lays Out Stark Gothic Country Sound on ‘The Plow That Broke The Plains’ (ALBUM REVIEW)

Show Reviews

grateful dead fall tour 95

The Recent Judas Priest Revival Stands Rabid, Fierce & Loud At Boston’s MGM Music Hall (SHOW REVIEW/PHOTOS)

Television & Film

grateful dead fall tour 95

Music World Gives Payback To An Overlooked Legend On ‘Lee Fields: Faithful Man’ (FILM REVIEW)

DVD Reviews

grateful dead fall tour 95

1982’s ‘Around The World’ Covers The Police On Their First World Tour (DVD REVIEW)

Other Reviews

grateful dead fall tour 95

Bill Janovitz Chronicles the Story of Leon Russell in ‘The Master of Space and Time’s Journey Through Rock & Roll History’ (BOOK REVIEW)

Film Reviews

grateful dead fall tour 95

‘Licorice Pizza’ Can’t Carry Weight Of Its Parts (FILM REVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

‘Loki’ Gives Us Loki vs. Loki in Episode 3 (TV REVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

All the Movie Trailers from Super Bowl LIV

Commentary Tracks

grateful dead fall tour 95

2021 Holiday Movie Preview: ‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife,’ ‘The Power of The Dog,’ ‘House of Gucci’ & More

grateful dead fall tour 95

Ten Years Ago Today -The Chris Robinson Brotherhood Released Their Album ‘Phosphorescent Harvest’

grateful dead fall tour 95

SONG PREMIERE: Portland Surf/Garage/Psych Project Trabants Unleashes Fervent Guitar Exploits Via “Mantra”

grateful dead fall tour 95

Sampha Turns Up Intimacy & Artistry Factor at Minneapolis’ 7th Avenue (PHOTOS)

grateful dead fall tour 95

John Fred Young Of Black Stone Cherry Serves Up Another Round of Candid Hard Rock Insights (INTERVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

55 Years Ago Today – Chicago Debuts With Jazz Rock Masterpiece- ‘Chicago Transit Authority’

Vinyl Lives

grateful dead fall tour 95

Portland’s Record Pub Serves Up Vinyl, Brews & Weekly Gatherings (VINYL LIVES)

These Walls

grateful dead fall tour 95

Amherst’s The Drake Is Making New Musical History In The Pioneer Valley (THESE WALLS)

Vintage Stash

grateful dead fall tour 95

The Replacements’ ‘Tim’ Let It Bleed Edition Proves Worth As Discerning & Durable Retrospective

grateful dead fall tour 95

TIME OUT TAKE FIVE: Falkner Evans, Franco Ambrosetti, Jan Hammer & More

One Track Mind

grateful dead fall tour 95

Emerging Artist J.S. Ondara Makes Voyage From Kenya to Minnesota & Astounds With ‘Tales of America’ (INTERVIEW)

Suds & Sounds

grateful dead fall tour 95

Suds & Sounds: Beale Street Brewing Co. Celebrates Memphis Music Through Craft Beer

Hidden Track

Movie Review: Louis C.K.’s ‘Tommorow Night’

grateful dead fall tour 95

SONG PREMIERE: RubyJoyful Tap Into Our Current Times with Warm Americana-grass Tune “All My Friends Got More Money Than Me”

grateful dead fall tour 95

VIDEO PREMIERE: Kyle McKearney Teams Up With Trey Hensley For High-Octane Bluegrass on “Lonesome”

grateful dead fall tour 95

SONG PREMIERE: Lynne Hanson Balances Smart Break-Up Lyrics with Cool Country-Blues On “Just A Little Bit”

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • July 9, 2020
  • B-Sides , Columns

25 Years Later: Reflecting On The Grateful Dead’s Final Show With Jerry Garcia (7/9/95)

  • By Dave Goodwich
  • 14 Comments

To say the Dead’s 1995 Summer tour was a surreal disaster-laden affair is putting it mildly. In addition to Garcia’s alarmingly poor appearance & musicianship as well as his rapidly deteriorating health & well-being, a slew of ominous incidents that occurred along the way earned this near two-month twenty-six show jaunt through the U.S. the dubious moniker “The Tour from Hell” by media & fans alike. There were repeated incidents of gate-crashing by thousands of fans at multiple venues, three patrons were struck by lightning outside the RFK show in D.C and hundreds of attendees were seriously injured, including one who was paralyzed, after a structure collapsed at a nearby campground following a July concert at the Riverport Amphitheatre near St. Louis. There was even a death threat made against Garcia that the FBI & Local police found credible enough to force the band to play with the house lights on for an entire evening. 

What little energy & magic Garcia had left prior to this summer was nearly entirely depleted by the time the band rolled into Chicago for the tour-closing pair of shows on July 8 th . While the rest of the band were still in fine form and playing with renewed energy – likely at least somewhat in response to Garcia’s dwindling musical presence – the once stalwart guitarist was clearly struggling throughout the entire evening. Forgotten lyrics are a repeated issue in nearly all of his vocal performances and several solos are either in the wrong key or omitted entirely. 

However, even in the darkest of times – and dark they were – Garcia still managed to occasionally summon up his old magical ways (often referred to as the “X Factor” among Deadheads), and tonight’s stunning version of the late-era Hunter/Garcia ballad “So Many Roads” is no exception. While Jerry often used the vocal climax at the end of the song to sink his world-weary teeth into, delivering some of the most emotional moments of his final years, there was something uniquely different about this take. Even crew members and band-insiders were taken aback by Garcia’s surprisingly emotional rendition in Chicago, leaving many to wonder if the sage guitarist perhaps had a hint of what was to come as he achingly sang “I’ve been down them roads. Lord, I’ve been walking them roads. So many, so many roads” as the song gently winds down for what was arguably the show’s only legitimate musical highlight.

The evening closes with a rare double-encore consisting of Jerry’s final lead vocal performance on a meandering version of “Black Muddy River” as well as the Phil Lesh chestnut “Box of Rain.”

After returning home and making a quick trip to old-friend David Grisman’s Bay Area studio to record a version of “Blue Yodel #9” for a Jimmie Rodgers’ tribute album being put together at the time by Bob Dylan, Garcia decided to make one more attempt at rehab by checking himself into the Betty Ford Clinic only eight days after returning from Chicago. However, that venture was short-lived as he then checked himself out after only two weeks, citing a desire to spend his 53 rd birthday, August 1st, at home. Garcia returned to another facility, Serenity Knolls , on August 8 th , where he passed away in his sleep shortly after 4:00 am on August 9 th . 

Related Content

14 responses.

There is no grateful dead without Jerry

Fare thee well was a farce

My last was Silver bowl (Vegas) . Had tix for both days. Went to first. Sat out second. Just a bad feeling something was very wrong. Dead and co has been a reprieve of sorts. Otherwise would be left w sad, lingering end w nothing looking forward. Wish heads would be more open to Johns attempts. He has never tried to be a replacement. A younger, safer version. His work w Dead members has been respectful and tributary.

I was lucky enough to be there for the July 8th show and had a similar experience. How would describe Visions of Johanna from the 8th?

I am and lifetime Deadhead

I was there at the final show as a 21 year old taking it all in. Only my 3rd show since I wasn’t going to drop everything and go on tour. Wish I had caught them in the early 90s but 94-95 it was. One thing that stood out about the show was a lively Shakedown Street. The part that goes “Don’t Tell Me This Town Ain’t Got No Heart, Just Gotta Poke Around” was extra lively and groovy! Other personal highlights for me was the rare live Unbroken Chain (2nd solo Garcia finally got the chains in gear) and a rockin Sugar Magnolia. Great Star Spangled Banner a la Hendrix style and fireworks to end the show. Little did I know it would be the last time we would see Garcia but it did feel like the end of his run. We miss you Jerry!

I went to the Pittsburgh show at 3 Rivers Stadium. Made the trip down from Buffalo, had a feeling it may be the last chance to see Jerry, glad I did.

Reading this article was a miserable experience due to all of the flying skittering ad banners and pop up crap. Glide magazine—do you really think anyone would visit you a second time???!?

It was closure, but I don’t think a farce. But you’re right… no GD without JG. I could never watch or get into any rendition. And I really appreciate continually trying to deliver the music each year as another outfit. But nobody can sit in Jerry’s space and capture any tune he was part of. Not even close. And I’m sorry, but Dead and Co is a cover band. And I’ve heard way better. Sorry but even as bad as 7/9/95 was, that So Many Roads will go down in the books. I won’t choose to remember him that way or even that night. But there’s plenty of magic he left for us that we can always go to. Sadly Jerry passed on 8/9/95, but the Dead died that final night in Chicago.

Would have been a much better article if ads weren’t constantly reformatting the text and breaking up sentences. Is this my fault or just the way Glide rolls?

Lets Not forget the Facts. Jerry didnt just die shortly after 4:00. Offically , he dued at 4:20 with a smile on hos face. Epico!

I was on this tour at 17. We were tear gassed in DC. I was in the st Louis campground accident I broke my back in the accident. One girl later died from her injuries aside from those who were paralyzed. I was lucky to have just 7 vertebra fractures. A guy from Eugene named Puppet was with me and if he didn’t fall on me when the roof fell i may have been paralyzed! He was ok. It was a crazy tour. Thank you for the memories

Was there, looking for dusty?

My memory of summer tour 95 was that it was very hot! I thought the heat was getting to Jerry, didn’t know he was dying. RFK was a blast, thunderstorm with lightning strikes along with Al and Tipper Gore. Three Rivers turned into a beautiful night with a gorgeous moon after another rain. Got home and mail ordered for fall tour and tickets arrived not long after he was gone. Only four cities fall tour 95 Boston New York Philly and Canada, alas the tour that never happened.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

New to glide.

grateful dead fall tour 95

Amon Amarth, Cannibal Corpse, and Obituary Traverse the Death Metal Spectrum at Portland’s Moda Center (SHOW REVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Lost Dog Street Band Embrace Bluegrass Roots on ‘Survived’ (ALBUM REVIEW)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Black Country, New Road Unleashes Complex Yet Inviting Performance Bravado To Philadelphia’s Union Transfer (SHOW REVIEW)

Keep up-to-date with Glide

Email Address*

We will keep fighting for all libraries - stand with us!

Internet Archive Audio

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • This Just In
  • Grateful Dead
  • Old Time Radio
  • 78 RPMs and Cylinder Recordings
  • Audio Books & Poetry
  • Computers, Technology and Science
  • Music, Arts & Culture
  • News & Public Affairs
  • Spirituality & Religion
  • Radio News Archive

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • Flickr Commons
  • Occupy Wall Street Flickr
  • NASA Images
  • Solar System Collection
  • Ames Research Center

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • All Software
  • Old School Emulation
  • MS-DOS Games
  • Historical Software
  • Classic PC Games
  • Software Library
  • Kodi Archive and Support File
  • Vintage Software
  • CD-ROM Software
  • CD-ROM Software Library
  • Software Sites
  • Tucows Software Library
  • Shareware CD-ROMs
  • Software Capsules Compilation
  • CD-ROM Images
  • ZX Spectrum
  • DOOM Level CD

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • Smithsonian Libraries
  • FEDLINK (US)
  • Lincoln Collection
  • American Libraries
  • Canadian Libraries
  • Universal Library
  • Project Gutenberg
  • Children's Library
  • Biodiversity Heritage Library
  • Books by Language
  • Additional Collections

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • Prelinger Archives
  • Democracy Now!
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • TV NSA Clip Library
  • Animation & Cartoons
  • Arts & Music
  • Computers & Technology
  • Cultural & Academic Films
  • Ephemeral Films
  • Sports Videos
  • Videogame Videos
  • Youth Media

Search the history of over 866 billion web pages on the Internet.

Mobile Apps

  • Wayback Machine (iOS)
  • Wayback Machine (Android)

Browser Extensions

Archive-it subscription.

  • Explore the Collections
  • Build Collections

Save Page Now

Capture a web page as it appears now for use as a trusted citation in the future.

Please enter a valid web address

  • Donate Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape

Grateful Dead Live at USAir Arena on 1994-10-09

Audio with external links item preview, share or embed this item, flag this item for.

  • Graphic Violence
  • Explicit Sexual Content
  • Hate Speech
  • Misinformation/Disinformation
  • Marketing/Phishing/Advertising
  • Misleading/Inaccurate/Missing Metadata

SBD ?> C4> CD> SHN via Billy Schools encoded by Peter Braverman

plus-circle Add Review comment Reviews

15,699 Views

12 Favorites

IN COLLECTIONS

Uploaded by Jonathan Aizen on May 30, 2004

SIMILAR ITEMS (based on metadata)

grateful dead fall tour 95

grateful dead fall tour 95

  • New Releases
  • Dave's Picks
  • 7" Singles Collection
  • Dead & Company
  • Accessories

Art & Home

  • Recreation & Games

grateful dead fall tour 95

Collaborations

Special edition shops.

  • St. Louis Collection
  • Shakedown Garden
  • Skull & Roses
  • Workingman's Dead
  • Astrology Collection
  • Long Strange Trip
  • Pacific Northwest '73-'74
  • Cornell 1977
  • American Beauty Collection
  • Giants Stadium
  • 50th Anniversary
  • Dead & Company

Grateful Gifts

  • Tapers Section
  • Grateful Dead Hour
  • Jam Of The Week
  • All The Years Live
  • All In The Family
  • Comix by Tim Truman
  • Greatest Stories Ever Told
  • Documenting The Dead
  • Blair's Golden Road Blog
  • SIRIUS XM - Grateful Dead Channel

Show Archive

  • Shows By Venue
  • Shows By Year

Visual Archive

  • Album Covers

Band Members

  • JERRY GARCIA
  • BILL KREUTZMANN
  • MICKEY HART
  • RON "PIGPEN" MCKERNAN
  • TOM CONSTANTEN
  • KEITH GODCHAUX
  • DONNA JEAN GODCHAUX
  • BRENT MYDLAND
  • VINCE WELNICK
  • ROBERT HUNTER
  • JOHN PERRY BARLOW

Discography

Welcome mat.

  • Welcome Back

Administration

  • Topic & Feature Suggestions
  • User Concerns
  • How To Use The Site
  • Technical Problems
  • Admin Questions & Discussions
  • Dead Store Products
  • Fall/Winter 2020 Lookbook
  • Ticket Exchange
  • Currently Listening To...
  • I'm Looking For...
  • Introductions
  • Me and My Band
  • Me and My Day Job
  • Most Life-Changing Show
  • News and Talk
  • All Around This World
  • Announcements

Grateful Dead

  • Personal Favorites
  • The Vineyard
  • Dancin' In The Street
  • Shakedown Street
  • Strangers Stopping Strangers

Dead On and Off the Net

  • Dead-Related Charities
  • Festivals & Other Tours
  • Grateful Dead Radio

Spinoffs & Similar Music

  • Bands You Shouldn't Miss
  • Best Shows by Other Bands
  • Influenced By:
  • Grateful Dead in the Media
  • Official Announcements
  • Releases We'd Like To See
  • The Grateful Dead Catalog

grateful dead fall tour 95

Next Article:

newsdefaultimage

Week of April 23, 2018

Now... where were we.

  • Jerry Garcia
  • Bill Kreutzmann
  • Mickey Hart
  • Robert Hunter
  • Ron "Pigpen" McKernan
  • Tom Constanten
  • Keith Godchaux
  • Donna Jean Godchaux
  • Brent Mydland
  • Vince Welnick
  • John Perry Barlow
  • Log in or register to post comments
  • Variants (6)

grateful dead fall tour 95

Copyright © 1995 Michael Everett, Grateful Dead

grateful dead fall tour 95

Tour Poster

Grateful dead fall tour 95 everett.

artist_img

Michael Everett

artist_img

Grateful Dead

About this poster

Created to publicize the Dead's 1995 fall tour, cancelled due to the untimely death of Jerry Garcia.

Original Untrimmed Poster Proof sheet with crop marks, color bars and handbills.

Edition Details

  • Variant: Uncut Edition
  • Designer: Michael Everett
  • Status: Official
  • Class: Tour Poster
  • Print Type: Artist Proof (AP)
  • Technique: Offset Lithograph
  • Size: 24" x 29" (60.96 x 73.66 cm)
  • Quantity: 500
  • Series: ArtRock (PCL)
  • Series ID: PCL-068
  • Markings: Signed , Numbered

Tour Details

  • Band: Grateful Dead
  • 6 Month Average:  $0 AUD 0.00 GBP 0.00 CAD 0.00 CHF 0.00 DKK 0.00 EUR 0.00 JPY 0.00 NOK 0.00 NZD 0.00 SEK 0.00
  • Average Price:  $0 AUD 0.00 GBP 0.00 CAD 0.00 CHF 0.00 DKK 0.00 EUR 0.00 JPY 0.00 NOK 0.00 NZD 0.00 SEK 0.00
  • Lowest Price:  $0 AUD 0.00 GBP 0.00 CAD 0.00 CHF 0.00 DKK 0.00 EUR 0.00 JPY 0.00 NOK 0.00 NZD 0.00 SEK 0.00
  • Highest Price:  $0 AUD 0.00 GBP 0.00 CAD 0.00 CHF 0.00 DKK 0.00 EUR 0.00 JPY 0.00 NOK 0.00 NZD 0.00 SEK 0.00
  • Original Price:  $0 AUD 0.00 GBP 0.00 CAD 0.00 CHF 0.00 DKK 0.00 EUR 0.00 JPY 0.00 NOK 0.00 NZD 0.00 SEK 0.00

Price History

Price History table is displayed upon logging in.

Already have an account? Sign in

  • No comments yet.

Recommendations

Brent mydland 24 everett - limited edition (le) - jazzy foil edition, grateful dead atlanta 95 everett - show edition (se) - foil edition, mountains' traveler 21 everett - original art (og), jerry garcia 18 everett - original art (og), grateful dead chicago 15 everett - artist proof (ap) - foil edition, grateful dead chicago 15 everett - artist proof (ap) - rainbow foil edition, grateful dead chicago 15 everett - artist proof (ap), phil lesh & friends san rafael 12 everett - artist proof (ap), phil lesh & friends san rafael 12 everett - show edition (se), furthur n5 new york 11 everett - artist proof (ap).

You can no longer add art to the collection

Add Image to Art

I'm in search of....

You can no longer add art to the wanted.

Sell Or Trade

You can no longer add art to the sell

Record a Sale

Includes Buyer's Premium

Print number can`t be 0

Artist Signed

Band Signed

Dry Mounted

Not Include In Statistics

Price History Chart

Buy or trade.

THIS ITEM HAS BEEN SOLD.

HAVE ONE TO SELL?

Image Editor

Cookie policy settings.

PosterDrops uses own and third-party cookies to improve your experience in the use of our website and products, to provide functionality, to generate statistics, to remember your preferences, for marketing purposes, including tracking of your location, to customize our advertising on social media and to personalize offers. We place cookies only when you have chosen which cookies we may use and provided us with to consent to that. However, the use of functionality cookies do not require your consent, as such cookies are necessary for the function of our website. You can withdraw your consent at any time by blocking the use o f cookies in your browser. You should be aware that some features of our website may not be available if you do not accept cookies. Further information on our use of cookies are available in our Cookie Privacy Policy page .

IMAGES

  1. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 1995 Vintage Concert Poster Switch

    grateful dead fall tour 95

  2. Grateful Dead Tour Posters

    grateful dead fall tour 95

  3. Grateful Dead Fall Tour Poster Value

    grateful dead fall tour 95

  4. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 1995 Canceled Tour Numbered

    grateful dead fall tour 95

  5. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 1995 Canceled Tour Numbered

    grateful dead fall tour 95

  6. *NEW* 1994 GRATEFUL DEAD FALL TOUR EAST COAST HARVEST

    grateful dead fall tour 95

VIDEO

  1. Bill Kreutzmann’s Billy & The Kids “Daze Of The Dead” Fall Tour (October 21st 2023) Capitol Theatre!

  2. Grateful Dead

  3. Franklin's Tower (Live from Lindley Meadows, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco 9/28/75)

  4. Grateful Dead 4-2-95 Pyramid Arena Memphis TN

  5. Grateful Dead

  6. Good Ol' Grateful Deadcast: Wake Of The Flood 50: Prelude/Tuesday Night Jam (S08 E09)

COMMENTS

  1. Grateful Dead's 1995 Concert & Tour History

    After over 30 years performing together, the Grateful Dead disbaneded in the summer of 1995, following the death of Jerry Garcia, the band's front runner, songwriter, lead guitarist, and vocalist. However, many of the members of the band continued performing under different names, such as Dead and Co and Phil Lesh and Friends.

  2. Grateful Dead Concert Map by year: 1995

    View the concert map Statistics of Grateful Dead in 1995! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow. Setlists; Artists; Festivals; Venues; Statistics Stats; News; Forum; Show Menu Hide Menu. Add ... Fall Tour 1988 (20) Fall Tour 1989 (17) Fall Tour 1990 (11) Fall Tour 1991 (19) Fall Tour 1992 (9) Fall Tour 1993 (26) Fall Tour ...

  3. Laminate

    Laminate - Fall/Winter Tour '94-'95 (Back) GD Laminate, back - Fall/Winter Tour 9/27 - 10/19/1994 & 3/17 - 4/7/1995. Artist: Mike Schulman. ... Be the first to know about the Grateful Dead's exclusive limited-edition releases, breaking news on the band, community events, and so much more. ...

  4. "It was the tour from hell": Inside the Grateful Dead's last shows, and

    CAMERON SEARS, Grateful Dead manager: ... STEVE SILBERMAN, Writer, fan: I went on tour in the fall of '94 and I said to myself at the end of the tour, "Something is wrong, ...

  5. Grateful Dead Tour-by-Tour: 1995

    Grateful Dead Tour-by-Tour: 1995. Delta Center, Salt Lake City, UT: 3 Shows 2/19/95 (Sun) 2/20/95 (Mon) 2/21/95 (Tue) Coliseum Arena, Oakland, CA: 3 Shows 2/24/95 (Fri) 2/25/95 (Sat) 2/26/95 (Sun) Spring East Coast Tour: 15 Shows. The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA 3/17/95 (Fri) 3/18/95 (Sat) 3/19/95 (Sun) Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, NC ...

  6. Grateful Dead 1995 fall tour

    Grateful Dead 1995 fall tour. Fall Tour 1995. Cities they were going to play: Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Toronto. Artist: Michael Everett.

  7. Grateful Dead Live at Soldier Field on 1995-07-09

    The rise and fall of the Grateful Dead is charted to the rise and fall of Jerry Garcia. As early as 1973, his thinning guitar style began to take on a meandering, doddling nature. The "last" shows from Winterland in Oct. 74 show the band in decline. Mainly because of Jerry.

  8. Grateful Dead Canceling Tour

    The Grateful Dead, devastated by the loss of their leader, Jerry Garcia, have canceled all of their fall concerts. "It's the only decision we've made," Dennis McNally, a spokesman for the rock ...

  9. 25 Years Later: Reflecting On The Grateful Dead's Final Show With Jerry

    To say the Dead's 1995 Summer tour was a surreal disaster-laden affair is putting it mildly. In addition to Garcia's alarmingly poor appearance & musicianship as well as his rapidly deteriorating health & well-being, a slew of ominous incidents that occurred along the way earned this near two-month twenty-six show jaunt through the U.S. the dubious moniker "The Tour from Hell" by media ...

  10. Grateful Dead cancel fall tour

    SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 15 -- The Grateful Dead have canceled their upcoming fall tour in the wake of the unexpected death last week of the group's founder, guitarist Jerry Garcia, a spokesman ...

  11. Fall Tour 1995 Tickets : r/gratefuldead

    Fall Tour 1995 Tickets. This makes me sad. I was a teenager and had tickets to one night in Charlotte in '95. All I knew of the Grateful Dead then was Touch of Grey, Casey Jones... I sold my ticket because someone offered me more than I paid for it. It wasn't until a few years later that I really discovered the magic.

  12. Grateful Dead Live at USAir Arena on 1994-10-09

    Grateful Dead Live at USAir Arena on 1994-10-09 ... From 87 to 95, they only did this tune 6 times live. With the exception of a handful of tunes in the first set, and the Comes A Time, I would say this show is pretty average in terms of performance in my opinion. ... This was one of the better shows of the Fall Tour. Comes A Time is terrific ...

  13. 1995 Fall Tour Poster : r/gratefuldead

    1995 Fall Tour Poster Michael Everett is the artist. He got the job of designing this poster because the Grateful Dead were so amazed by the decoration on his mail order ticket envelope. I found several other concert posters he did for them and other bands (The Other Ones, Phil and Friends, String Cheese) but couldn't find the actual envelope ...

  14. Soldier Field

    Soldier Field - July 9, 1995. Jerry Garcia's last show. Last non-medly, two-song encore: 11-03-91 [271] - fireworks display set to Jimi Hendrix's "Star Spangled Banner" after the show - The Band opened.

  15. The Darkness Got to Give letter to the fans from the Band, dated 7/5/95

    The Darkness Got to Give letter to the fans from the Band, dated 7/5/95. I apologize for the long post. I think this letter was the moment Jerry was completely and utterly over the behemoth of the Grateful Dead. Fall Tour 95' should have been cancelled and the band needed to seriously look at the enormity of the situation.

  16. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett

    Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett Created to publicize the Dead's 1995 fall tour, cancelled due to the untimely death of Jerry Garcia.Sold through GD Almanac as soon as fall tour was announced - approximately late July.

  17. Grateful Dead Cancelled Fall Tour 95 Everett

    Grateful Dead Cancelled Fall Tour 95 Everett - 1st. Main. Home My Page Forum Wiki Help Login Now. ... Sold through GD Almanac as soon as fall tour was announced- approximately late July. hand-numbered in ink in lower left corner: Sold: 76: Six Month Average: $250.00: Average Price: $72.62: Lowest Price:

  18. Laminate

    Official Site Of The Grateful Dead

  19. 1995

    The summer tour begins in Highgate, Vermont, with many thousand ticketless people causing problems. Down the line, two Dead Heads are struck by lightning in Washington. At Deer Creek, not only do thousands break into the show but people inside assist them by vandalizing the fence. The band sees it all and is freaked.

  20. Various Venues 9/15/95

    Scheduled to run from September 15 through October 22, the 1995 Grateful Dead Fall Tour was cancelled due to the death of Jerry Garcia on August 9. Michael Everett had already designed this beautiful poster, which was sold through Dead.net. The original poster was printed in a run of 25,000 pieces and the uncut proof sheet in a quantity of only 500 pieces. The original poster was printed on ...

  21. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett

    Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett. Created to publicize the Dead's 1995 fall tour, cancelled due to the untimely death of Jerry Garcia.By agreement, the artist signed GD/Artrocks AP XXX/500 and his XX/50. 550 sheets were left uncut and signed. The artists have decoration in pencil and each one is unique.

  22. grateful dead 1995 tour poster for sale

    Grateful Dead Fall Tour 1995 Tour Canceled 1440/25000 Dragonfly 24"x15" Everett. Opens in a new window or tab. $150.00. lp1962 (2,004) 100%. or Best Offer. ... 95.1%. 0 bids · Time left 4d 7h left (Wed, 05:58 AM) or Best Offer +$22.60 shipping. GRATEFUL DEAD 1995 SUMMER TOUR POSTER AUTHENTIC #1396 OF 25,000 ART BY BIFFLE. Opens in a new window ...

  23. Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett

    Grateful Dead Fall Tour 95 Everett Created to publicize the Dead's 1995 fall tour, cancelled due to the untimely death of Jerry Garcia.Original Untrimmed Poster Proof sheet with crop marks, color bars and handbills.