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Essay on The Grateful Dead's Effect on Counter Culture

Decent Essays

Jacqueline Smudzinski
Thinking and Writing 1302-60
Bouchard
September 29, 2013

The Grateful Dead “You’ve got to listen to the heavens, you got to try to understand. The greatness of their movement is just as small as it is grand.” Most young adults of my generation do not know who The Grateful Dead are, but they unknowingly dawn the apparels and slang created in the counterculture of the bands following the Deadheads. The band, The Grateful Dead, became popular in the 60s and carried out wide spread recognition and fame into the 80s. Their calming, peace-promoting music became popular because it ‘transported’ people, it took them away from whatever they were going through in their life and set them on a new path. Fans of the band …show more content…

In many cases, some words were adopted from Rastafarian roots. Others were words they picked up and modified throughout their travels. An example of a Rastafarian word adopted by the Deadhead culture is Raza Unida, meaning we are all in everything together. That expression was particularly popular with the Deadheads because they experienced the meaning. They all felt connected to each other through their shared experiences and desires. Some other expressions that became popular at the time included gully, meaning real good, and say-bra, meaning what’s up. Many of the Deadheads wore tie-dyed clothes, Birkenstock sandals, and dreadlocks. Supporters of the free love, psychedelic movement, easily adopted this look.
Due to the fact that the band was traveling around so much, the Deadheads spread their subculture throughout the United States. Because it was such a prominent time for hippies and peace, the way the Dead Heads lived was appealing to so many people. People who were searching from freedom from parents, government, and school happily joined the Deadheads on their journey when they passed through their town. Many people even left their families behind to join the movement. The community connected people from different places and backgrounds that wanted to experience the music and live their lives in the same way. The band took the listeners on a journey that they could all relate to, especially those living and moving with

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