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DEATHS ; Notable Passings; The Thread to Pay Last Respects

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Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
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5,282
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
I don't know how many Deadheads are reading the forums these days, but we lost seventies vocalist Donna Godchaux:


There were/are many, many Dead fans who never cared for her voice, but I think she was the best high-harmony vocalist they ever had... plus she brought some great feminine energy to the stage. Here's a picture I took at the Grateful Dead show in Binghamton, NY on 11/7/77:

3BG11677.JPG
 
Messages
20,002
Location
Funkytown, USA
I don't know how many Deadheads are reading the forums these days, but we lost seventies vocalist Donna Godchaux:

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There were/are many, many Dead fans who never cared for her voice, but I think she was the best high-harmony vocalist they ever had... plus she brought some great feminine energy to the stage. Here's a picture I took at the Grateful Dead show in Binghamton, NY on 11/7/77:

View attachment 744399

Never saw that version of the Dead, but she certainly added another dimension to their music. Great voice.
 

The Lost Cowboy

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,617
Location
Southeast Asia
I don't know how many Deadheads are reading the forums these days, but we lost seventies vocalist Donna Godchaux:


There were/are many, many Dead fans who never cared for her voice, but I think she was the best high-harmony vocalist they ever had... plus she brought some great feminine energy to the stage. Here's a picture I took at the Grateful Dead show in Binghamton, NY on 11/7/77:

View attachment 744399

RIP Donna. I am one of those who love that era of the Dead.

I also appreciate how much she contributed to the gospel music genre once she converted. I'm not a fan of that genre, but she continued to have a musical impact post-GD and I respect that she followed her faith.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,282
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
Oh, 1977 was a definite peak. I went to twenty-plus Dead shows between 1976 and 1993... and most of the best were in 1977. I mean, I was at Cornell... I was at Englishtown. My great picture from Cornell 5/3/77:

GD5877.JPG

The funny thing is, back at the time I was really disappointed that we'd missed out on seeing Pigpen, the Wall of Sound, and all the epic psychedelic madness of their young firebrand period.

Looking back now, I feel insanely lucky: they were in ridiculously GREAT form in the late 70s!
 
Messages
11,105
Location
My mother's basement
I don't know how many Deadheads are reading the forums these days, but we lost seventies vocalist Donna Godchaux:

[/URL][/URL]

There were/are many, many Dead fans who never cared for her voice, but I think she was the best high-harmony vocalist they ever had... plus she brought some great feminine energy to the stage. Here's a picture I took at the Grateful Dead show in Binghamton, NY on 11/7/77:

View attachment 744399
This prompted me to look into what else this woman might have done. Quite a bit, as it turns out. She sang backup vocals on the Percy Sledge recording of ”When a Man Loves a Woman,” and on Elvis Presley‘s “Suspicious Minds,” among many others. So, she’s among the many session musicians almost everyone has heard even if relatively few have ever heard her name.
 

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