BOB WEIR


'Robert Hall Weir' (born October 16, 1947) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist, most recognized as a founding member of the Grateful Dead.

Contents
Career
Personal life
Guitars
Discography
Notes
External links

Career


Weir was born in San Francisco, California and raised by his adoptive parents in the suburb of Atherton. He began playing guitar at age thirteen after less successful experimentation with the piano and the trumpet. He had trouble in school because of undiagnosed dyslexia and he was expelled from nearly every school he attended.[1] One of these was the Fountain Valley School in Colorado, where he befriended John Perry Barlow, who, along with Robert Hunter, would in time become the two main lyricists for the Grateful Dead.
On New Year's Eve, 1963, 16-year-old Weir and another underage friend were wandering the back alleys of Palo Alto, looking for a club that would admit them, when they heard banjo music. They followed the music to its source, Dana Morgan's Music Store. Here, a young Jerry Garcia, oblivious to the date, was waiting on his students to arrive. Weir and Garcia spent the night playing music together and then decided to form a band. Originally called Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions, the band was later renamed The Warlocks and eventually the Grateful Dead.
Weir played rhythm guitar and sang a portion of the lead vocals throughout the Dead's 30-year career. In the late 1970s, he began to experiment with slide guitar techniques, and to this day plays classic blues slide using his own rhythmic sensibility. His unique guitar style is strongly influenced by the hard bop pianist McCoy Tyner and he has cited artists as diverse as John Coltrane, the Rev. Gary Davis, and Igor Stravinsky as influences.[2]
Weir's first solo album, ''Ace'', was released in 1972. Although he always continued to play with the Grateful Dead, in 1975, he played in the Bay Area band Kingfish with friends Matt Kelly and Dave Torbert. Weir had a brief stint with the Bob Weir Band with Brent Mydland on keyboards and then later on he formed another side band, Bobby and the Midnites.
Shortly before Garcia's death in 1995, Weir formed yet another band, Ratdog Revue, later shortened to Ratdog. As of November 11, 2006, Weir has performed approximately 700 shows with Ratdog.
Known for his raspy, deep tone, in Ratdog, Weir sings covers by The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry, and Willie Dixon while also performing many Grateful Dead classics. In addition, Ratdog performs many of their own originals, most of which were released on the album Evening Moods.
Weir has also participated in the various reformations of the Grateful Dead's members, including 1998, 2000 and 2002 stints as The Other Ones and in 2003 and 2004 as The Dead.

Personal life


On July 15, 1999 Weir married Natascha Muenter. They have two daughters, Shala Monet Weir and Chloe Kaelia Weir. Natascha's younger sister Leilani Munter is a race car driver in the NASCAR circuit.

Guitars


Throughout his career, Weir has used a wide variety of instruments and equipment. Early pictures of The Warlocks in concert show him playing a Gretsch Duo-Jet[3], and after the Warlocks became the Grateful Dead, Weir briefly played a Rickenbacker Rickenbacker 365 as well as a Fender Telecaster before settling on his primary guitar for the following decade, the Gibson ES-335.[4] Weir usually played a cherry red 1965 ES-335 until the band's hiatus in 1974, although he did occasionally use a Gibson ES-345, distinguishable by its stop tailpiece, Varitone rotary switch, and parallelogram fretboard inlays; on even fewer occasions, Weir played a black Gibson Les Paul in 1971. Weir can also be seen playing a sunburst ES-335 in The Grateful Dead Movie, filmed in October of 1974. During the early 1970s, Weir also used a 1961 or '62 Gibson Les Paul. This guitar has the body style recognized today as the Gibson SG, and featured the infamous "sideways vibrato."
In 1974, Weir began working with Jeff Hasselberger at Ibanez to develop a custom instrument.[5] Weir began playing the Ibanez 2681 during the recording of Blues for Allah; this was a testbed instrument with sliding pickups that Hasselberger used to develop several additional 2681s for use onstage, as well as Weir's custom "Cowboy Fancy" guitar, which he played from 1979 until the mid-1980s.[6] Weir began using a Modulus Blackknife at that point, and continued to play the Blackknife, along with a hybrid Modulus/Casio guitar for the "Space" segment of Grateful Dead concerts for the rest of that band's history. Weir's acoustic guitars include several Martins, a Guild, an Ovation, and a line of Alvarez-Yairi signature models.
Post-Grateful Dead, Weir has played a Modulus G3FH custom, but primarily uses a 1956 Fender Telecaster previously owned by his late half-brother, James Parber.[7]

Discography



★ ''Ace'' - Bob Weir (1972)

★ ''Kingfish'' - Kingfish (1976)

★ ''Live 'N' Kickin''' - Kingfish (1977)

★ ''Heaven Help The Fool'' - Bob Weir (1978)

★ ''Bobby & the Midnites'' - Bobby and the Midnites (1981)

★ ''Where the Beat Meets the Street'' - Bobby and the Midnights (1984)

★ '' - Kingfish (1996)

★ ''Live'' - Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman (1998)

★ ''Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions'' - Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions (1999)

★ ''Evening Moods'' - Ratdog (2000)

★ ''Live at Roseland'' - Ratdog (2001)

★ ''Weir Here - The Best Of Bob Weir'' - compilation (2004)

Notes


1. McNally, Dennis. ''A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead.'' New York: Broadway Books, 2002. ISBN 0767911857
2. Thanks, Dennis!
3. Psychedelic News
4. Hunter, Robert, Stephen Peters, Chuck Wills, Dennis McNally. "Grateful Dead: The Illustrated Trip." DK ADULT; 1 Amer ed edition (October, 2003). ISBN 0-7894-9963-0
5. Ibanez
6. Weir Interview
7. Tele Story

External links



The Official Bob Weir & Ratdog Site

Ratdog Fan Site

Bob Weir Audio Interview

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