Bob Weir has died

(rollingstone.com)

123 points | by asix66 11 hours ago

14 comments

  • driggs 9 hours ago
    Particularly relevant to HN is that Bobby's primary writing partner for decades was John Perry Barlow, cofounder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF):

    https://www.eff.org/john-perry-barlow

      A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace
      by John Perry Barlow
      
      Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel,
      I come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I
      ask you of the past to leave us alone. You are not welcome among us. You
      have no sovereignty where we gather.
       
      We have no elected government, nor are we likely to have one, so I address
      you with no greater authority than that with which liberty itself always
      speaks. I declare the global social space we are building to be naturally
      independent of the tyrannies you seek to impose on us.
    
    https://www.eff.org/cyberspace-independence#main-content

    Many of Bobby Weir's best-known songs had lyrics penned by Barlow. The world is a brighter place because of their partnership, and a little more grey in their absence.

    • davidwritesbugs 5 hours ago
      This always makes me laugh. Comically pretentious & naive. Like schoolboy poetry.
      • windowpains 4 hours ago
        The EFF, FOSS, Stallman, Barlow, so many things seem childish or naive now, but not back then. Maybe it’s just me. I wish I could go back.
  • dnw 9 hours ago
    Besides their music, their mail-order ticketing system and the resulting fan envelope art are quite amazing: [Apologies for the scary link]

    https://www.gdao.org/fan-art?filters[match]=all&filters[quer...

    • mistrial9 9 hours ago
      quite the flood of painted envelopes, some days!
  • toomuchtodo 11 hours ago
  • zabzonk 8 hours ago
    This made me think that, for a band known for its guitarists, what great vocalists the Dead had - Weir, Garcia, Lesh, Pigpen, particularly when doing harmonies.

    Anyway, bye-bye Bob, thanks for all the music.

  • zebomon 7 hours ago
    I saw him perform 26 times in my life, and still those were rookie numbers. Still I thought there would be so many more too. Thanks for all the music, Bobby Weir.
  • sswaner 9 hours ago
    May the four winds blow you safely home.

    It was a privilege to see him perform many times.

  • evanb 8 hours ago
    > Winter rain, now tell me why

    > Summers fade and roses die

    > The answer came, the wind and rain

    > [...]

    > Circle songs and sands of time

    > And seasons will end in tumbled rhyme

    > And little change, the wind and rain

    Fare thee well, Bob.

  • iancmceachern 8 hours ago
    As my wife said, Bobby was our Jerry. We never got to see Jerry play, but we saw Bob several times and are so grateful for it.
  • __mharrison__ 10 hours ago
    RIP.

    I wonder if Mayer will continue to carry the torch, or if the music will stop.

    • kQq9oHeAz6wLLS 9 hours ago
      The music never stops
    • matchagaucho 7 hours ago
      He would want us to be stewards of the music... and people still talking about it in 300 years.
  • SoleilAbsolu 11 hours ago
    Fare thee well Bob! What a life in music.
  • adzm 10 hours ago
    End of an era
  • user3939382 8 hours ago
    Sad. Rest in peace Bob. Thank you for your art.
  • shmoe 9 hours ago
    Truly a long, strange, trip. RIP.