The Grateful Dead in 1970. Public domain publicity photo, source.
Despite getting a strong recommendation from Tracey Harms to check it out, it took me awhile to get to the "Dark Star" by the Grateful Dead episode in Andrew Hickey's A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs podcast. In podcast form, it's four hours and 39 minutes long. I saved myself considerable time by reading the transcript, available at the link.
Tracey mentioned that it would give me background on the California milieu of Robert Anton Wilson, and in fact Wilson is mentioned in the podcast. While the song "Dark Star" is duly covered, the podcast in fact is a long history of the band.
I am not particularly a Grateful Dead fan -- I did the bulk of my listening to the Dead when I was in high school and college, before 1980, because I had friends who listened to the records -- but I thought the podcast was very interesting, and I read the whole thing. Some fine research. I had no idea, for example, that two members of the band, Phil Lesh and Tom Constanten, had ties to modern classical music and knew Steve Reich. Even as a transcript it took quite a bit of time to get through the podcast, but I read it eagerly.
Before offering another theory on why Silicon Valley became such a technology powerhouse -- because so much defense spending was focused there -- host Andrew Hickey offers this:
"Many people who were influential on the Californian ideology, like the postmodernist science fiction writer Robert Anton Wilson, would argue that if you plotted a timeline of the most innovative people in human history, that timeline would slowly move west and slightly north, accelerating over the centuries, as the most radical thinkers followed the Sun, so in the last few centuries the greatest innovations had come from Greece, then Italy, then France, then England, then New York, and then finally the West Coast of the USA. According to Wilson and his friends like Timothy Leary, now that wave had finally reached the Pacific there was only one place left to go, and so humanity would fulfill its manifest destiny and head up into the stars."
Jerry Garcia was only 53 when he died after years of neglecting his health. The story is very sad. The band should have let him stop touring and get his life together. I plan to check out more episodes of the ongoing podcast and if you get interested in it, you can get bonus episodes by supporting Andrew Hickey on his Patreon.
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