Jerry Garcia, lead guitarist and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, died at 53. Despite the band's breakup, taping networks and online communities formed around their music. Deadheads utilized the internet from its early days, trading tapes and CDs until the rise of MP3s. Fans then digitized and organized recordings on archive.org, making rare recordings easily accessible.
The Cassette tape was great in so many ways, but let’s be honest, they never really sounded great. But because the cassette was so much cheaper and easier to use and portable, a lot of people didn't care so much about the audio quality. They just wanted to be able to use something that they could carry around with them. The cassette’s other big advantage: it was easy to record on.
We talked to Marc Masters about his new book High Bias, about the history of the cassette. One chapter about concert bootleggers covers perhaps the greatest success story of the cassette: Grateful Dead live tapes.
Long Strange Tape
Plus we're featuring a bonus story that we produced in 2016 in collaboration with Benjamen Walker's Theory of Everything about a place where cassettes were of vital importance.