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Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”

  • Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”Photo: Jay Blakesberg
  • Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”Photo: Jay Blakesberg
  • Left to Right: Mickey Hart, Helen Meyer, John Meyer, Bob Weir, Derek FeatherstoneLeft to Right: Mickey Hart, Helen Meyer, John Meyer, Bob Weir, Derek FeatherstonePhoto: Jay Blakesberg
  • Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”Photo: Jay Blakesberg
  • Left to Right: Derek Featherstone, Michal Kacunel, Ross Harris, Matt Haasch, Sean McAdam, Cody Scott, Ryan Cornelius, Mike Bollella, Lonnie QuinnLeft to Right: Derek Featherstone, Michal Kacunel, Ross Harris, Matt Haasch, Sean McAdam, Cody Scott, Ryan Cornelius, Mike Bollella, Lonnie QuinnPhoto: Jay Blakesberg
  • Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”Photo: Jay Blakesberg
  • Left to Right: FOH Engineer Derek Featherstone with John and Helen MeyerLeft to Right: FOH Engineer Derek Featherstone with John and Helen MeyerPhoto: Jay Blakesberg
  • Dead & Company Celebrate the Summer of Love’s 50th at a “Family Gathering”Photo: Jay Blakesberg
  • Derek Featherstone - FOH Dead & CompanyDerek Featherstone - FOH Dead & CompanyPhoto: Jay Blakesberg
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June 8, 2017

The challenges of this band lie in the dynamic range of the music. Keeping the music strong and present when the band drops the level on stage involves a delicate balance as you can’t make the quiet moments loud, but you can’t have the tone fall apart at low volume. The linearity of the LEO system maintains a very consistent sound at all volume levels. Also, the throw of the LEO arrays is impressive and is a great bonus when we play larger stadiums.”

Derek FeatherstoneFOH Engineer

Featured Products

1100-LFC, 700-HP, Compass, Galileo 616, Galileo Callisto 616, JM-1P, LEO, MICA, MILO, MJF‑210, MJF-212A

San Francisco’s fabled “Summer of Love” captured the world’s imagination 50 years ago, and what better way to celebrate this golden anniversary than at a Grateful Dead concert? True, the original moniker was formally retired after the Fare Thee Well concerts of 2015, but fortunately three founding band members along with a noteworthy trio of new recruits are caravanning nationwide as Dead & Company, again filling large outdoor venues with throngs of gyrating Deadhead faithful. A recent show at Mountain View, California’s Shoreline Amphitheater became a family reunion of sorts, with Meyer Sound founders John and Helen Meyer – now celebrating fifty years of their personal relationship – joined by about 20,000 spiritual kinfolk, and with everybody undulating to the familiar Grateful Dead repertoire as carried through a Meyer Sound LEO Family large scale linear reinforcement system.

Derek Featherstone has played a pivotal role in this tradition for more than twelve years as FOH engineer for the core Grateful Dead and its various spin-off bands, including the current Dead & Company tour. He is well aware of his responsibilities in carrying on a vital musical and cultural tradition.

“It’s interesting to see the age range of the fans at the shows,” he comments. “With many older Deadheads introducing their kids to the music, we see an age range from 14 to 70 in the same musical space. Our job is to take what the band is doing on stage and make it heard, experienced and ideally appreciated on a daily basis. So yes, the ‘long strange trip’ continues!”

Featherstone also wears the hat of vice president of the tour and rental division at UltraSound, audio system provider for the current tour and a company closely associated with the Grateful Dead for more than three decades.

“Meyer Sound and UltraSound have had a strong relationship dating back to the early 1980’s, centered around the Grateful Dead and originally driven by Don Pearson and Howard Danchik,” he continues. “Over the years the two companies have been on parallel paths, developing and deploying high end sound systems. It has been a pleasure to experience the result of this collaboration in the current LEO Family systems.”

In his role as FOH engineer, Featherstone finds the strengths of the LEO Family an ideal fit to the music of Dead & Company. “The challenges of this band lie in the dynamic range of the music. Keeping the music strong and present when the band drops the level on stage involves a delicate balance as you can’t make the quiet moments loud, but you can’t have the tone fall apart at low volume. The linearity of the LEO system maintains a very consistent sound at all volume levels. Also, the throw of the LEO arrays is impressive and is a great bonus when we play larger stadiums.”

System clarity and detail are also critical factors, as Featherstone is mixing what is essentially an all-new, one-of-a-kind show every night. “I think the band has about 110 songs ready at this point, with more added all the time. So yes, it’s challenging and I have to stay engaged at all times. But it also puts me in a more creative space by not knowing what is going to happen next. I don’t think I could work with a band that played the same songs the same way every show. It might drive me crazy!”

The full Meyer Sound inventory for the tour includes 36 LEO line array loudspeakers for mains, 36 MILO line array loudspeakers for outfills, and 12 MICA loudspeakers for front fill. Heavy lifting for the low end is provided by 20 1100-LFC low-frequency control elements, supplemented by 18 700-HP subwoofers.

Exact system configuration varies depending on the venue size, layout and any hanging weight restrictions. For some stadiums, three delay towers, each with 14 LYON line array loudspeakers are deployed as well. Once rigged, the system is fine-tuned by UltraSound systems engineer Michal Kacunel and Featherstone using a Galileo loudspeaker management system (two Galileo 616 and four Galileo Callisto 616) and Compass control software.

The onstage foldback loudspeaker complement comprises 12 MJF-212A and two MJF‑210 stage monitors, two flown JM-1P loudspeakers as flown side-fill, and two 1100-LFC elements for the drummers.

For his main mixing console, Featherstone relies on a venerable Gamble EX56 analog board, with an Avid S6L digital board assigned to the complex and highly variable drum mixes. On-stage monitor mixers are Avid D-Show and Profile, each with 96 channel capacity and monitor duties are handled by Matt Haasch, a veteran in the UltraSound camp.

Dead & Company was formed in 2015 by Grateful Dead founding members Bob Weir (guitar and vocals), Bill Kreutzmann (drums) and Mickey Hart (drums and percussion), joined by John Mayer (guitar and vocals), Oteil Burbridge (bass and vocals) and Jeff Chimenti (keyboards and vocals). The band’s summer tour, with 20 concerts in 15 cities, opened on May 27 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas and wraps up with two shows at Chicago’s Wrigley Field on June 30 and July 1.

Featured Products

1100-LFC, 700-HP, Compass, Galileo 616, Galileo Callisto 616, JM-1P, LEO, MICA, MILO, MJF‑210, MJF-212A