This past summer, Dead & Company, an American rock band formed in 2015 to preserve the infamous legacy of the Grateful Dead, commemorated the Grateful Dead’s 60th anniversary at a three-night concert series in San Francisco. Dead & Co. has gained traction among the newer generation of “Deadheads” through their residency at the ostentatious Las Vegas Sphere.
The Grateful Dead officially disbanded in 1995 after its lead guitarist, Jerry Garcia, passed away. Garcia was instrumental to the soul of the band. While he was never known for his fast playing, his playing channeled a unique and otherworldly method.
His improvisational style added an unpredictable energy, which was reciprocated by his bandmates. And while Garcia’s playing was often erratic, his relaxed, warm, and fluid composure was emblematic of the Dead’s appeal—a philosophical and graceful approach to life.
In Dead & Company, singer-songwriter and guitarist John Mayer takes on Garcia’s former role as lead guitarist. Mayer is widely known for his drab hits “Your Body Is a Wonderland” and “You’re Gonna Live Forever in Me.” While sweet, his songs lack depth.
But Mayer’s immense commitment to the band is undeniable—it is obvious that he has done his homework. Part of Garcia’s captivating tone was attributed to built-in preamps and effect loops that were custom-made for his Doug Irwin “Wolf” and “Tiger” guitars. Mayer decided to make his own “super cool” intricate guitar weapon that follows suit: the Super Eagle II. Unfortunately, Mayer does not wield his custom guitar with the same gusto that Garcia did with his.
For Garcia, his musical talent didn’t need probing or fine-tuning—it seemed to effortlessly flow from his fingertips. His playing was hypnotic, inspired, and, most of all, a reflection of his subconscious. He used melodies as a framework, but veered away from playing a song the same way twice, leaving a lasting impression on each song he touched.
Mayer has truly tried to fill this beatific presence in Dead & Co., attempting to incorporate his own style while also being mindful of songs’ original forms. While this is no easy task, and Mayer certainly does a good job of it, his presence in Dead & Co. feels inauthentic. His performances feel like those of a Garcia impersonator—they lack true Dead spirit.
Mayer’s matriculation into Dead & Co. seems like a moment of career experimentation for him. Mayer stumbled upon the Grateful Dead in 2011 while listening to random suggestions on Pandora. This kick started a hyperfixation on experimenting with folk music and incorporating jamming into his solo music. As Mayer put it in a 2016 SiriusXM Radio interview, “I’m naturally obsessive anyway, so it suited my way of life.”
Mayer’s current role in Dead & Co. is like a teenager dying their hair—it’s just a phase. He’s hesitantly dipping his toes in the water and waiting to see if American psychedelic rock is captivating enough for him. That disconnect and lack of zeal is conveyed in the music—his playing is bluesy, slow, and clunky.
This new, disingenuous feel of Dead & Co. cannot be attributed to the presence of Mayer alone. The group’s inauthentic feel is also a result of their choice of venue: the gaudy Las Vegas Sphere. The Sphere demands incredibly high ticket prices, which are inflated when the band misleadingly and repeatedly labels its tours as “farewell.”
The Dead & Co.’s residency at the Sphere and adoption of Mayer as lead guitarist are symbolic of the theatrics and pursuit of profit that have taken the soul out of rock and roll. Dead & Co. is a cash grab, not a genuine, shared love for the music.
While I think it is admirable that Dead & Co. attempts to preserve the Grateful Dead’s legacy, it has lost track of the Dead’s original message. For a band once revered for its counterculture and off-the-beaten-path nature, its commemorative band is certainly playing for the mainstream.
In a press conference from 1987, the band was already aware of heading in the wrong direction commercially.
“Has success ruined the Grateful Dead?” Garcia asked. “Yeah.”
PROHUMAN • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:58 am
The only thing agreeable about this trash article is the Money Grab part. It’s unfortunate but true.
Wizard • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:55 am
Dead & Co is nothing but a cover band, and not even a good one at that. Mayer is talented but not in the right way for a jam band. Bobby, bless his soul, is just a shell of himself at this point and seeing him on stage feels like some weekend at Bernie’s type nonsense. It’s all very sad.
The best moments from their 60th anniversary shows were when Sturgil, Billy, and Trey joined, because they are proper guitar players who have soul and know their way around a jam.
I could not imagine spending money to watch such a feeble attempt to recreate the magic with inferior musicians. If I want to see a GD cover band there are better options out there.
I’ve seen the Dead while Garcia was still alive, that time has passed, and so too should Dead & Co.
D. W. • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:48 am
Crazy is a suspectThe writer is barely old enough to have seen jerry, who was phenomenal.But was not as perfect as this.Article made it seem it seems she must have some older.Only jerry heads around her to write this article. in fact, debt and company is not the grateful dead.It’s dead in company, and it’s the continuing members’ wish to do just that continue.Doing what they love to do.Which is play music, and they’ve put together quite a good group.
Also considering Bobby and Mickey are not spring chickens, they do a pretty d*** good job. It’s unfortunate to see articles like this. Because John is one of Jerry’s biggest fans. Actually helped develop Jerry’s sound in the later 80s. And 90s as a young up and coming guitar tech.
John has grabbed this bull by the horns and attempted to do his very best to continue the legacy and crank out quality music. As the band grows together, john’s guitar work is impeccable. John is not on heroin, which was always the elephant in the room.
Will tonight be on? Will it be off? Will the lyrics get butchered with an entire half show? will the set be slow and half asleep oops… speedball, at halftime intermission , here we go, and there’s actually none of that.
And it’s really a good thing, even though a lot of jerry’s original spirit comes out of that turmoil post pig pen era. He does not have off nights anywhere near what his predecessor did and provides a very professional yet,Improvisational rich show, which embodies the grateful dead spirit of no show being the same. so, it’s still a unique experience Every time. not to mention he also put the video work together as he was the director for all of the sphere work?
He has been preserving other things from the grateful dead legacy, not tearing them down, not putting them in cold storage, but literally preserving everything. From their body of work to artwork, equipment, to properties, and that is not because he needed to, it’s because he wants to.And I think deeply, it’s out of respect. Any deadhead in this day and age owes john a big thank you.
I hope deep inside that john buys bill walton’s house as it’s for sale and should be preserved forever. another hating article from somebody who most likely wasn’t even there.
If john’s tearing it down or ruining the legacy, what are you doing with this Article?
Curr • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:45 am
The Grateful Dead have been successful for a long time. Dead and Company are probably not everyone’s favorite but they carry on the music. Obviously they make way more money than the dead ever did. Not the band The Dead but the Grateful Dead
BV • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:41 am
So grateful for what Dead & Co have been giving us, I am in heaven hearing their versions of the music we love. The jamming brings me to heights I didn’t think I would get to again after GD ended. And, being in a large space sharing that with thousands of other brothers & sisters in music is such a gift for me. Sphere not my favorite situation for all of this , but also can’t beat a weekend getaway in the 90s by the pool and awesome music each night. Hope the band can offer another run.
elycia • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:26 am
Wow, this writer is a hater. Time moves on, close your eyes at a D&C show and let the music take you. Slow or fast. I’ve been on the bus since 76 and now Mayer is Dead to me. Its been a decade already. Why choose to publish this now? Lets all just be kind. If you don’t like the music, then just don’t listen.
mkav • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:43 am
The author is clearly entitled to his opinion. but…wow…he has completely missed the point.
And to liken Mayer’s immersion into the Dead’s catalog and Garcia’s style to a teenager’s phase, just makes the author sound like no matter what Mayer does. it will be wrong.
I’ve seen D&Co 5 or 6 tomes and agree the pace is often too slow, but they’re ot trying to replicate the Dead.
One last point, I did catch a show around Sphere and I was blown away by the band (best I’ve seen them), the visuals and the sound.
FWIW, I saw original Dead maybe 20 times. starting in 1976, Legion of Mary once and Ratdog maybe 6 or 8 times, so I do have a basis of comparison.
Is Mayer Garcia? No, who is? But that’s o reason to write such a spiteful article.
Kendra • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:23 am
THANK YOU!!!!! I HAVE BEEN SAYING THIS FOR YEARS!
Dean A Maye • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:18 am
I think this guy don’t know what he’s talking about. John is a great guitar player. That being said they could’ve made a lot better choices. If serving the music was the goal. I liked the other John from dark star. Ive never warmed up to john Mayers vocals. Especially on Jerry tunes. I’m just glad they’re still around.
Mike • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:16 am
You onow I would have totally agreed with this article when Dead and Company first came out. To me then the Dead passed on when Garcia passed. Eventually I missed it I missed the shows I missed the community I missed it all. So I gave it a shot I bought tickets and I went to see Dead and Company. I realized something that day of the concert. I was wrong I missed the shows cause I was mourning the loss of Garcia. Is it the same? No but it never has been so same. The real Grateful Dead has never been the same. So many have been lost over the years. Pig pen was dead before I was alive, Brent which was my favorite also gone to soon I only saw live twice. Keep the music alive, keep the movement alive, keep thr community alive. Smile, smile, smile.
Dan • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:12 am
Worst take EVER. John Mayer has filled a void that many thought would be impossible. His guitar work is magic and his love and commitment for the music and the band is unquestionable.
I’m really fed up with the haters on John Mayer. 🤬
Ken • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:28 am
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Garcia is irreplaceable, yet Mayer makes for a perfect reasonable facsimile…he’s been great every time I’ve seen him in concert.
Christopher Shane Hart • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:10 am
I think maybe you’re the one who missed GD in the 70’s though 95. It was the whole community that made a Dead show, at 69 YO I got to take my nephew and great nephew to see Dead & Co. at the Sphere, it was incredible, the same community showed up, we had a once in a lifetime experience, I felt the same “Love” the same Deadheads (of all ages) some songs came together better than others but that was always the case. The sound quality and the comfort of the venue was perfect for the older crowd. I agree JM can’t sing Garcia, but he is a phenomenal player and really trying to capture some Garcia, he’s young by comparison given time he is getting it. I don’t think anyone walked away disappointed, If you like the Dead Go see them if they come back to the Sphere and you will NOT be disappointed.
Brian • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:12 am
Not the same in any way shape or form
Meros • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:06 am
John is a fake.
Arlo Owen • Oct 10, 2025 at 8:50 am
You are an idiot. And a sad excuse for a writer.
Do some research.
Also, who are you?
That’s exactly my point.
Nobody.
Ed Harrold • Oct 10, 2025 at 8:47 am
Nothing ever stays the same. Change is permanent. Enjoy each moment of living your life or don’t, its up to you, the individual. Comparing anyone or anything in a competitive way is a waste of precious time. We really need less of these reviews and more free flow living of our lives.
Lee M Diamond • Oct 10, 2025 at 8:40 am
A good article.
Johnathan Eric Collins • Oct 10, 2025 at 6:49 am
I feel the same way.
I was a punk rock tour kid and saw 64 shows in the 80’s and 90’s .
The death of Jerry ended the ride for me and I couldn’t listen to shows for decades afterward .
I have a black sheep uncle that lived the 60’s and 70’s to the hilt and was a biker who at some point ended up working on the beast tour and a few others .
He took me to my first show in Columbia md as a kid and I was hooked .
I play guitar and was a precocious kid who went down the whole beat writers , electric kool aid rabbit hole and dead tour was just the ne plus ultra if you were on that path .
When I started hitting shows and realized there was a place for me there , even if I was a little divergent from the older kids I loaded up the old ‘77 blazer and got the road hard .
There were plenty of weirdos just like me .
It really was an organic family that helped each other move about the country and get down .
Peak life experience for sure .
In the aftermath after ‘95 I got deeper into all the back story of the band and was a bit horrified to conclude that the rest of the fellahs kind of rode Jerry into the ground .
I know it was complicated and that the huge ‘family’ and their payroll kept them on tour longer and more often than proved wise for Jerry’s health but it’s still hard not to feel some resentment towards them .
He was definitely the linchpin and the way the rest of the band treated each other afterwards just kind of reinforced my suspicions . ( plus I find most of the side projects without Jerry unlistenable ) .
I have a bunch of friends who have stayed in it and was tempted to go to a chunk of the sphere run with them but listening to a few dead and co shows turned me off completely .
Way , waaayyyy too slow . ( I know they are old ) but it’s just insufferable to listen to for me .
No Phil , no Jerry ? No dead .
Only folks who have no understanding of how amazing it used to be could listen to it in its current form .
John Mayer and n lead guitar , wtf ?!?!? That tells you everything you need to know about where these guys heads are at .
All these kids now and their facile demand for surface level ‘experiences ‘ .
Child please , you are a deadhead in delusion only .
I wish it had lasted forever and am so grateful I got to see so many shows at the end , but if you missed it back then , too bad , it’s gone and all they are doing at this point is padding the accounts for the grandkids .
I hate to hold that against them but I also find it a lackluster simulacra .
I just feel like if you like this new look version you never understood what was great about it originally .
I tried to get into post dead jam stuff for a bit but the emotionally hollow core of phish and their ilk just can’t cut it and like most imitations ( dead and co emphatically included ) eventually just veers to self parody and downright mockery .
I know Mayer is going to ride this the rest of his days and I’m cringing already .
I used to think Jerry was so old but he died at 53 , which I’m about to turn myself in a couple months !! Egads !!!
Rest in peace mang , who could have used a bit longer but you are hardly missing shit down here .
Long live the dead ! Screw the company !!
Brian • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:15 am
Dead and Company are Muzak. They play at 3/4 speed. I won tickets years ago and was disappointed.
Id rather see DSO or JRAD.
George Elliott • Oct 10, 2025 at 1:42 am
Money, it’s a gas. Grab that cash with both hands and make a stash.
Johnathan Eric Collins • Oct 10, 2025 at 8:00 am
As an addenda , I should say that John khan , bassist for jgb , probably held the lions share of the blame for the dragon chasing .
Tho I’ve been able to finally enjoy dead base and hearing old shows again in the last few years , jgb ( who toured behind heavily as well ) shows are still painful .
Partly for the less adorned emotional sincerity and stark intimacy Jerry gets in those shows but also because of the malevolent presence playing bass .
He was the original hook up for the black tar , which he was addicted to as well and every week Jerry was off tour with the dead he was playing shows with khan somewhere to keep the dealer rich .
I know dead guys kind of looked to Jerry as the older brother and decision maker but they still just kind of stood around and watched him die for years and to my ears haven’t been able to really make it all the way up there without him .
Anyhow , I am grateful to them all ( except khan and heroin dealers ) .
They led me down the golden road .
John • Oct 10, 2025 at 1:35 am
Whoever wrote this article has obviously never listened to the Dead before. Jerry not known for his fast playing? Maybe double check your AI spotter when you’re reviewing your applicants Heights.
Not Havin' It • Oct 10, 2025 at 12:08 am
This is an insightful critique that would be spot on if it were published at the end of Mayer’s first year with the band. The truth is Mayer has grown into his unexpected role over time and helped the band (and the music) evolve. A lot. Anyone who is still hating on Mayer is entitled to their opinion, but it isn’t based on the music he’s playing.
Is the band’s current existence in service of making money? That charge implies they are are chasing profits over art with the sphere shows in Vegas. The only answer to that charge is: Duh.
I didn’t see them in Vegas so I can’t speak to them becoming an overblown production like KISS, but that claim sounds hyperbolic to me. I don’t doubt it was loud and visually bold and in your face…but that’s the whole point of a venue like the sphere, isn’t it?
Collin S • Oct 10, 2025 at 12:04 am
You get paid to write this trash? John has put his soul into the Dead & Co. project, whether you care to realize it or not. This looks like something Chat GPT wrote based on whiny Reddit posts. Journalism is dead and people like you are standing over its dying body with a bloody knife.
Collin S • Oct 10, 2025 at 12:04 am
You get paid to write this trash? John has put his soul into the Dead & Co. project, whether you care to realize it or not. This looks like something Chat GPT wrote based on whiny Reddit posts. Journalism is dead and people like you are standing over its dying body with a bloody knife.
Randy • Oct 9, 2025 at 11:35 pm
I’m a little confused on the point of this article. You start out with a slight on Mayers hits forgetting his deep meaningful songs like Daughters, Waiting on the World to change, Gravity…. You then attack his playing while also taking about the work and dedication he has while the next sentence is it’s a weekend fad like a changing hair color, or is that just a touch of grey?
From that to the point of ticket prices. Now this point I can get behind. Most of this is actually seeming like a cash grab., if you want to see the legendary members of the Dead (and here is the split) ¹continue to push boundaries with a slower take on the music (or) ²join a cover band in which they cover themselves for the amazing price of a arm and a leg this band is for you.
I think the first part of the article is you trying to play into some dumb lot kids argument of Johns playing or selling out his growth as a musician and down playing what he has done for the band, seeing how both the lot kid and the other bull sh$#er paid the price and made the effort to be there makes this nothing but a trash piece just to score points before criticizing the actual thing that needs criticizing.
I saw grow some and state what needs to be stated but realiz that Mayer is doing what no one else could do. Jerry sadly isn’t here and that’s a real huge drag. But some of “the others” are here and Mayer is giving them a way and us fans a reason to get together maybe for the last time to hear and see the guys whome wrote and played that music that means so much to us fans. It gives us a way to share with our sons and daughters and to friends that maybe not have been properly introduced to the music and our love of this music live.
If for nothing else the ability for us to gather possibly one last time, to shake hands with a stranger, to dance under the stars or in a innovative sphere and seeing has the Grateful Dead always pushed technology to the limits back in the day this whole thing here seems perfectly in line with the legacy.
Let’s absolutely talk about pricing.
But also
Let’s enjoy and cherish these last moments with the band.
Let’s give credit to John for being John.
Let’s give thanks for what Jerry gave us.
Let’s give thanks for John doing what he can as John in the band allowing us to celebrate the love of the music live.
Mantis GDF
Brian • Oct 10, 2025 at 9:11 am
Mayer is doing what others can’t. Have you heard of John Kadlecic or Jeff Mattson who played/play Jerry in Dark Star Orchestra?
MattY • Oct 9, 2025 at 10:50 pm
Couldn’t agree more. Bobby has turned the Dead into Kiss.