
Workingmans Dead (50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)
When the Grateful Dead convened to record *Workingman’s Dead* in February 1970, they were intent on change. They wanted something lighter, simpler; something closer to a folk or country record than a psychedelic one. Conveniently, they were also deep in debt to their record company and trying to extract themselves from a recent—and costly—drug bust. Their previous album, *Aoxomoxoa*, took nearly six months at the cost of more than a million dollars in today’s money; *Workingman’s Dead* was done in nine days. The band was spending more and more time on Mickey Hart’s ranch up north, shooting guns, riding horses, and generally communing with the land. They were cowboys now, singing cowboy songs: the card-game gamble of “Dire Wolf,” the rustic fever dream of “Black Peter.” Robert Hunter, the band’s lyricist, became a more prominent member and, in turn, enlarged the share of narrative in the band’s sound, creating a world that felt both contemporary and oddly ancient, in which American folk figures (the train conductor of “Casey Jones,” the miners of “Cumberland Blues”) commingled with archetypes from dreams and myths. The psychedelia of *Workingman’s Dead* didn’t lie in sound effects, but in the way it flattened time, blurring the line between 1870 and 1970, between the frontiers of the gold rush and of the counterculture, of a past that, as it turned out, could still be felt with the correct (ahem) kind of goggles. The album didn’t just chart a new course for the band, but for the counterculture in general. Tour buses had started running through Haight-Ashbury, turning hippies into a sideshow. Visionaries with the wherewithal were going back to the land, trying to hatch Utopia outside the glare of Nixon’s America. While the more experimental side of psychedelia branched into prog rock, *Workingman’s Dead*—alongside similar albums by The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Byrds—helped plant the seeds of what eventually became Americana, bridging the philosophical orientation of the hippies with folk and country, reclaiming old-fashioned music for a new generation. With *Workingman’s Dead*, they reached into the books and caught a glimpse of the future. In July 2020, the band celebrated the album’s 50th anniversary with a remaster of the original album alongside a live show from February 1971. It’s a transitional performance—somewhere between the sprawl of the late ’60s and the song-based concision (okay, relative concision) of the ’70s. It’s also one of the last times you’ll hear Pigpen sing “I’m a King Bee” and one of the first you’ll hear “Me and Bobby McGee,” which remained a staple through the mid-1970s. And while the harmonies are a little shaky (the band had seemingly only recently discovered *singing*), it’s one of the only performances of “Ripple,” as close to a summary of the band’s ethos as they ever bothered to record.
Newly reissued with bonus material for its 50th anniversary, the Dead’s fourth album returned them to their folk-blues roots and transformed the trajectory of their career in the process.