Deer Creek: The Real Story On The Dead's Most Dangerous Night
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On July 2, 1995, a death threat against Jerry Garcia turned Deer Creek into the most dangerous night the Grateful Dead ever played — and the band answered the riot in real time, song by song.Check out our membership and get free access to the Shakedown Observatory: https://www.youtube.com/@TheShakedownArchives/joinExplore the Observatory: https://theshakedownarchives.com/observatoryListen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/033EHpFn3v6zXoMfiJsQ9sThat afternoon in Noblesville, Indiana, someone called police claiming two men with guns were coming to kill Jerry Garcia during the show. The FBI got involved. Security was pulled off the perimeter to protect the stage — which left the back fence unguarded. During Phil Lesh's "Broken Arrow," it began to buckle. During Bob Weir's "Desolation Row," it came apart, and tens of thousands of people without tickets flooded the lawn while German shepherds and tear gas met them at the gates.What almost nobody on the lawn could see was what the Grateful Dead were doing on stage under full house lights. This is the argument of the video: the Deer Creek setlist isn't a list of tunes — it's testimony. Garcia opened set one with "Dire Wolf," the same "don't murder me" joke he'd pulled at Madison Square Garden in 1979 the last time someone threatened his life. He forgot two of the three verses of "Fire on the Mountain." And in set two he deliberately called "New Speedway Boogie" — the song Robert Hunter wrote about the Altamont killing — while tear gas still hung in the air.Deer Creek was the last time the Grateful Dead ever played the venue, and thirteen of these songs were performed live for the final time. Garcia had 38 days to live. Three days later at Riverport, all six members — Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, and Vince Welnick — signed a letter to the Deadheads that asked one question: "Don't you get it?" This is the story of the night that broke Jerry Garcia's oldest conviction — that the band and its audience never needed rules.▶ Want to go deeper? Join the channel and get free access to the Shakedown Observatory — our interactive journey through 30 years of the music: https://www.youtube.com/@TheShakedownArchives/joinCHAPTERS0:00 The Soundcheck Garcia Stopped Cold1:15 The Death Threat Called Into Noblesville2:40 Security Pulled Off the Fences3:55 House Lights Up: "Don't Say the G Word"5:10 Dire Wolf and the 1979 Death-Threat Echo6:30 The Fence Falls During Broken Arrow7:50 Desolation Row and the Deadheads Inside9:05 New Speedway Boogie: From Altamont to Deer Creek10:30 Thirteen Songs, Played for the Last Time11:45 The Bus, the Ditch, and a Canceled Show12:55 "Don't You Get It?": The Letter That Broke JerrySOURCESGrateful Dead Live Music Archive (the taper recordings referenced): https://archive.org/details/GratefulDeadGrateful Dead official: https://www.dead.netDennis McNally, "A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead" (2002)Bill Kreutzmann, "Deal: My Three Decades of Drumming, Dreams, and Drugs with the Grateful Dead" (2015)Blair Jackson, "Garcia: An American Life" (1999)Robert Greenfield, "Dark Star: An Oral Biography of Jerry Garcia" (1996)Shakedown Archives tells the rise-and-fall stories of the bands and artists that defined an era — the music history nobody filed away. The music history nobody filed away.#GratefulDead #MusicHistory #RockHistory