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Touch of Grey, or How the Grateful Dead Became Pop Stars

Cover of Touch of Grey, or How the Grateful Dead Became Pop Stars is black and features two edited images in yellow and pink hues. The top right image shows a band of skeletons performing. The lower left image shows the Grateful Dead performing.

Book

Pages: 136

Illustrations: 13 illustrations

Release Date: August 04, 2026

Author: John Brackett

Touch of Grey, or How the Grateful Dead Became Pop Stars tells the story of how one song transformed the popular legacy of one of rock’s most iconic musical groups. John Brackett traces the history of the song “Touch of Grey,” beginning with songwriter Robert Hunter’s lyrical sketches and the Grateful Dead’s earliest live arrangements, culminating in the group’s popular renaissance following the release of “Touch of Grey” and the album In the Dark in the summer of 1987. Brackett details how particular recording technologies, notable musical characteristics, modes of attending and listening, and the mechanics of the contemporary music industry shaped this defining moment in the group’s career. Drawing on extensive archival research, Touch of Grey examines how the band and their label worked to produce a hit record, a dynamic music video, and an effective promotional campaign that would propel the Grateful Dead from a group with a devoted cult following to become a pop culture phenomenon.

Praise

"A crucial, careful, and fun look inside one of the Grateful Dead’s least-examined and least-understood periods, perhaps ironically also their commercial peak." - Jesse Jarnow, co-host of the Good Ol' Grateful Deadcast and author of Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America

"The Grateful Dead lived on the periphery of the music industry for the most part, making records but thriving on live performance. The band's conquest of the pop charts in 1987 was a huge surprise to everybody—and oddly enough, over the ensuing decades the industry has come around to the Dead's way of doing things. John Brackett offers a detailed and insightful history of how it happened and what it meant to the Dead, to the music industry, and to the fans. Brackett combines a scholar's insights with a fan's enthusiasm, to great effect." - David Gans, co-host of "Tales from the Golden Road" on Sirius XM's Grateful Dead channel

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Author/Editor Bios

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John Brackett is a writer and historian. His previous books include Live Dead: The Grateful Dead, Live Recordings, and the Ideology of Liveness, published by Duke University Press, and John Zorn: Tradition and Transgression.

Table Of Contents

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Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction: “It Must Be Getting Early . . .”  1
1. “Dawn is Breaking Everywhere”: Writing and Performing (1980–1986)
2. “There’s Really Nothing Much to It”: Recording (Winter/Spring 1987)
3. “Looks So Phony!”: Videos (Spring 1987)
4. “It’s Going to Be a Dead Summer!”
5. “LIght a Candle, Curse the Glare”: Aftermath (1988–1990)
6. “. . . But It’s Alright”: Legacy (1990–?)
Coda. “. . . Clocks Are Running Late”
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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Sales/Territorial Rights: World

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Additional Information

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Related Links Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-3889-4 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-3402-5 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-6248-6 /