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us Digg Reddit YahooMyWeb Google What's this? Buzz Editor's Column: Sirius Satellite radio writes new entry in Grateful Dead timeline By ALAN SHECKTER - Buzz Editor Article Launched: 09/20/2007 12:00:00 AM PDT Click photo to enlarge The Grateful Dead's Bob Weir is pictured recently in Sirius Satellite Radio's studios in New York City.(Photo courtesy of Sirius) p class='dotPhoto' All Chico E-R photos are available a href='http://chicoer.

mycapture.com/' here /a . /p 1 On Sept.

7, Sirius Satellite radio, which streams some 120 mostly commercial-free stations for a $12.95 monthly, began beaming its latest, the Grateful Dead Channel. Not surprisingly, given the band's massive live concert archive and its popularity The Dead was typically among the leaders in annual concert attendance despite a dearth of hit albums Sirius called it one of the most anticipated channel launches in its history.

Dead percussionist Mickey Hart, who is coming to Chico's Laxson Auditorium Sept. 27 with his Global Drum group, said he loves it. I trust he's getting royalties from the station, though in a phone interview he seemed unclear, and uninterested, how much that might be.

"I'm over the top with it," Hart said via phone from his Sonoma County home. "I don't sit and listen to Grateful Dead music; all I hear are the mistakes. But the other day I turned it on and started playing (drums) to it.

I had two or three hours with it and was just overjoyed, and it was so good and it gave me chills." For me personally, it's a swell development, like the day they invented something called ESPN or MTV. After attending a Grateful Dead show at the Tower Theatre near Philadelphia in 1976, I dabbled in the traveling musical carnival until it Advertisement ended with Jerry Garcia's death in 1995.

I never dropped out of society or quit my job to go on the road with The Dead. For us, we were like baseball fans following our team. And with a repertoire of a couple hundred songs, and only about 15 to 20 getting played each night, every game's (or concert's) boxscore was different.

Trading recordings of the band's live recordings can be traced back to the Free Underground Grateful Dead Tape Exchange on the early 1970s. Though it's common now for many bands' fans to record and swap shows, these audio pioneers recognized the uniqueness of each show and recorded them for posterity. Trouble was, making copies was tedious and logistically difficult.

Worse, the quality of audio cassettes, the universal medium for many years, steadily declined from copy to copy. A seventh-generation version of what was once a pristine sound board tape became a hissy mess after it had been copied from cassette to cassette. Nowadays, folks who still trade live music material do so digitally, of course, so the sound loss has been eliminated.

And sites such as www.sugarmegs.org and www.

archive.org offer giant banks of audio files. And now, when I'm in my pickup, I not only have ESPN radio, CNN radio and many cool music stations, but I have the ultimate live mix of Grateful Dead music at my fingertips.

By the way, many academic courses have been devoted to the sociology of the Grateful Dead community. And Tuesday it was announced that the University of Massachusetts in November will host the first major university conference on the enduring legacy of the Grateful Dead experience.

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Keywords: Grateful Dead, Sirius Satellite Radio, Satellite Radio, Sirius Satellite, Buzz Editor
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