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Brent Mydland

 
Artist: Brent Mydland
Brent Mydland

Followers:

John Greene

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

Grateful Dead, Greg Collier, Bob Bralove, John Batdorf, John Perry Barlow
  • Born: October 21, 1952, Munich, Germany
  • Died: 1990 07
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Keyboards, Vocals, Organ

Biography

Picking up where Keith Godchaux left off in the rotating keyboard position for the Grateful Dead, Brent Mydland by songwriting alone would no doubt have lasted the long haul of the next 16 years. Narrowly missing the Disco Dead era, Mydland started off hidden behind a band dynamic that had built up over the previous 15 years. His talents and popularity eventually evolved, but a fatal drug habit silenced his voice and his B-3, and the spot was left vacant yet again.

Born October 21, 1952, in Munich, Germany, his Army-serving father moved them to northeastern San Francisco when Mydland was a year old. Growing up in infamous '60s California, he naturally followed suit and started a high school rock band that led to his first official effort, Silver.

Along with Greg Collier (guitar, vocals) and John Batdorf (guitar, vocals), Mydland covered keyboard and vocals. The Bay Area trio released its self-titled album in 1976 for Arista, which featured cover design credited to Phil Hartman -- yes, the Phil Hartman of Saturday Night Live, Newsradio, and The Simpsons fame. Mydland wrote two songs for the ten-track effort: "Musician (It's Not an Easy Life)" and "Climbing." Silver opened for the likes of the Doobie Brothers, Seals & Crofts, and Three Dog Night.

After a stint with one of Grateful Dead singer/songwriter and guitarist Bob Weir's side projects, Mydland went on to join the Dead in 1979, taking over for booted keyboardist Keith Godchaux (who died a year later in a car accident). Early on, Mydland stayed in the background, providing both vocal and keyboard harmonies. But by the mid-'80s, he was trading verses on many songs and singing lead on others. By 1988, with a half-dozen new songs, he was finding his way. Studio work for Mydland began with 1980's Go to Heaven, which featured his "Far From Me" and "Easy to Love You," co-written with Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow. Seven years would pass before the next Dead studio album, In the Dark, which featured the defiant "Hell in a Bucket," written with Weir and Barlow, and "Tons of Steel." The Dead's final studio album, 1989's Built to Last, was dominant with Mydland-penned tunes, including "Picasso Moon" (with Weir and Bob Bralove), "Just a Little Light" (with Barlow), "Blow Away" (with Barlow), and the moving "I Will Take You Home" (written for his daughters, Jennifer and Jessica, with Barlow).

After arriving home from summer tour in 1990, Mydland, 38, was found dead in his home in Lafayette, CA, of a drug overdose. A replacement was found yet again, this time in Vince Welnick (with temporary duties given to Bruce Hornsby) who survived the fatal position until Jerry Garcia died of a heart attack in 1995, ironically enough after coming back from that summer's tour. Live recordings issued since feature Mydland and his compositions, including Without a Net, Infrared Roses, and The Arista Years. ~ Rachel Sprovtsoff-Mangus, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Brent Mydland
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Brent Mydland
Birth name Brent Mydland
Born October 21, 1952(1952-10-21)
Munich, Germany
Died July 26, 1990 (aged 37)
Lafayette, California, U.S.
Genres Rock, psychedelic rock, jam
Occupations Musician, songwriter
Instruments Keyboard instruments
Years active 1979–1990
Labels Warner Bros.
Arista
Associated acts Grateful Dead, Bobby and the Midnites

Brent Mydland (October 21, 1952 – July 26, 1990) was the fourth keyboardist to play for the American rock band the Grateful Dead. He was with the band for eleven years and, despite being often referred to as "the new guy", he was with the band for a longer time than any other keyboardist, during which time they had their highest-charting material.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Born in Munich, Germany as the child of a U.S. Army chaplain, Mydland moved to San Francisco, California with his parents at the age of one. Brent spent most of his childhood living in the San Joaquin-Sacramento/Delta's Bethel Island of California. His mother, a graveyard shift nurse, encouraged Brent's talents by insisting that he practice his music for two hours each day. He played trumpet at Oakley Elementary School; his schoolmates remember him practicing on an accordion, as well as the piano, every day after school. Brent graduated from Liberty Union High School in 1971.

Grateful Dead

In 1978, Brent Mydland had played in a Bob Weir solo project called the Bob Weir Band. In April 1979, he joined the Grateful Dead, replacing Keith Godchaux, who had left the band in February of that year. Mydland was also in another of Weir's bands, Bobby and the Midnites, in 1980 and 1981. Brent's last show with The Grateful Dead was on 23 July 1990 at The World Music Theater (now Tweeter Center) in Tinley Park, IL.

Mydland quickly became an integral part of the Dead, not least because of his songwriting contributions. Go to Heaven (1980) featured two of Mydland's songs, "Far From Me" and "Easy to Love You", the second of which had been written with frequent Weir collaborator John Perry Barlow. On the next album, In the Dark (1987), Mydland co-wrote the defiant favorite "Hell in a Bucket" with Weir and Barlow, and also penned the train song "Tons of Steel". Built to Last (1989) featured several more of Mydland's works, most notably the moody "Just a Little Light", the environmental song "We Can Run", and the poignant "I Will Take You Home", written with Barlow for Mydland's two daughters.

Mydland easily fit into the band's sound and added his own contributions. His high vocal harmonies and emotional leads added to the band's singing strength, and highlighted several old favorites like "Cassidy", "Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo", "Ramble on Rose" as well as covers like Traffic's "Dear Mr. Fantasy" and the Band's "The Weight". Mydland enjoyed the organ and several other experimental tones, whereas in concert, his predecessor had usually preferred the piano. Brent played several different electric pianos and synthesizers throughout his tenure, including a Fender Rhodes, Yamaha CP-70, and a Kurzweil Midiboard (midied to Roland MKS20). His Hammond B-3 stayed with him throughout his entire tenure.

Death

Mydland died of a drug overdose after taking a speedball at his home on "My Road" in Lafayette, California, on July 26, 1990, shortly after completing the band's summer tour. He was replaced by Vince Welnick on synthesizers and vocals, and, for a short time, temporary fill-in Bruce Hornsby on grand piano and accordion.

Discography

Grateful Dead studio and current live albums

Grateful Dead retrospective live albums

Other artists

References


 
 
Learn More
Dead Delites, Vol. 4 (2000 Album by Various Artists)
Built to Last [Bonus Tracks] (2006 Album by The Grateful Dead)
Silver (1976 Album by Silver)

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