Sixty years after its first jam session, the Grateful Dead’s spirit is alive and well in San Francisco — and tens of thousands are descending on the city this weekend to prove it.
Dead & Company, with original members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, will headline three sold-out shows at Golden Gate Park’s Polo Field. The scene is set for an emotional, flower-draped tribute in the band’s spiritual birthplace.
A Homecoming Six Decades in the Making
It’s been more than three decades since the band last played this part of Golden Gate Park. That was in 1991, after the passing of legendary promoter and Dead confidant Bill Graham. Now, in 2025, it’s not just nostalgia — it’s a movement.
Tickets for the three-day event aren’t cheap. General admission runs $635, jarring to older fans who once paid just a few bucks — or snuck in.
But it’s not stopping Deadheads. Far from it. Amoeba Music’s David Aberdeen summed it up simply: “It seems very right to me that they celebrate it in this way.”
The Counterculture That Never Died
The Grateful Dead didn’t just ride the Summer of Love — they helped define it. Formed in 1965, the band lived and breathed Haight-Ashbury’s psychedelic haze, turning a cheap Victorian into a cultural nucleus.
By 1967, they were the house band of an entire generation. The drugs, the communal living, the improvisational music — it was all there.
Then came the busts, the chaos, and the move across the Golden Gate Bridge to Marin County. But the music kept going.
New fans kept showing up. Jerry Garcia passed in 1995, but the Dead never really stopped playing. Not with offshoots like Dead & Company keeping the music alive.
And somehow, new generations kept showing up.
Finding Belonging in the Band’s Orbit
Ask a Deadhead how they got in, and they’ll tell you. Everyone has a story.
For Sunshine Powers, it happened at 13. One step into Haight-Ashbury and something clicked. “I felt like I fit in. Or like I didn’t have to fit in,” she says. Now 45, she owns the tie-dye shop Love on Haight.
Her friend Taylor Swope had a rougher road. A freshman year from hell got turned around thanks to a Grateful Dead mixtape. She owns Little Hippie in Brooklyn and drove cross-country just to be at this event.
“You find your people,” she said. “And then it all just makes sense.”
Their sentiment echoes across the city this weekend.
That One Show That Changed Everything
For many, becoming a Deadhead isn’t instant. It’s a process. But there’s always that one show.
For Thor Cromer, it was March 15, 1990, in Landover, Maryland. “That show, whatever it was, whatever magic hit, it was injected right into my brain.”
At the time, he worked for the U.S. Senate. He eventually left to tour with the band, racking up 400 shows in five years.
Now 60, Cromer’s flying in from Boston to meet up with his old crew of “rail riders,” those who dance right by the stage.
Then there’s Aberdeen again. First show in ’84, crammed into a VW Bug heading to Syracuse. It was weird, he said. But good weird.
The following summer, it was rain, a rainbow, and “Comes a Time.” That’s when he was all in.
Who’s Still Alive, Who’s Playing, and What’s Next?
The Dead have lost a lot of their core over the years. Jerry Garcia died in 1995. Ron “Pigpen” McKernan passed in 1973. Phil Lesh, the original bassist, died last year at 84.
Still standing:
-
Bob Weir, now 77
-
Mickey Hart, age 81
-
Bill Kreutzmann, 79, though not part of Dead & Company’s current lineup
Guitarist John Mayer has filled Garcia’s shoes with surprising grace in Dead & Company’s lineup. But no new tour dates have been announced beyond this weekend.
So yeah, this might be the last time fans see anything like this.
A Citywide Tribute—And an Economic Boost
Mayor Daniel Lurie is no Deadhead, but he gets it. “They are the reason why so many people know and love San Francisco,” he said. He’s hoping the celebration helps pull tourism back into a city still recovering from pandemic blows.
The festivities are everywhere:
-
Thursday: Grahame Lesh (Phil’s son) kicks off three nights of shows.
-
Friday: City officials will rename a street after Jerry Garcia on what would have been his 83rd birthday.
-
Saturday: Fans will gather at the Jerry Garcia Amphitheater for Jerry Day.
This isn’t just a concert weekend. It’s a cultural revival.
The Legacy Keeps Growing
Former Grateful Dead publicist Dennis McNally still sees something special in the younger fans.
“There are 18-year-olds who were obviously not even a twinkle in somebody’s eyes when Jerry died,” he said. “And these 18-year-olds get the values of Deadheads.”
The community lives on — in mixtapes, merchandise, memories, and moments like this one.
“I don’t know when we’ll have another moment like this,” Aberdeen said.
And honestly? Nobody does.