Bob Weir
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Robert Hall Weir, born October 16th, 1947, was an American musician and songwriter, forever etched in history as a founding member of the Grateful Dead. Following the band's dissolution in 1995, he continued to weave his musical magic with The Other Ones, later known as The Dead, alongside fellow Grateful Dead alumni. Weir's creative spirit also sparked several other notable bands, both during and after his tenure with the Dead, including Kingfish, the Bob Weir Band, Bobby and the Midnites, Scaring the Children, RatDog, and Furthur, which he co-led with Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh. In 2015, a new chapter unfolded as Weir, alongside Grateful Dead members Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined forces with Grammy-winning artist John Mayer, bassist Oteil Burbridge, and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti to form the iconic band Dead & Company.
Throughout his illustrious career with the Grateful Dead, Weir was a master of rhythm guitar and the soulful voice behind many of the band's signature rock and roll and country and western tunes. His immense contributions were recognized in 1994 with his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Grateful Dead, and in 2024, he was honored with Kennedy Center Honors, again as a celebrated member of the legendary band.
Born in San Francisco on October 16th, 1947, Robert Weir's early life was shaped by his parents, John Parber and Phyllis Inskeep, and later by his adoptive parents, Frederic Utter and Eleanor Weir, in Atherton. His musical journey began at thirteen, after less successful forays with the piano and trumpet. Undiagnosed dyslexia presented challenges in school, leading to his expulsion from several institutions, including the Menlo School and Fountain Valley School, where he crossed paths with future Grateful Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow.
On New Year's Eve, 1963, a sixteen-year-old Weir, seeking a club that would welcome him and his friend, stumbled upon the captivating sound of a banjo emanating from Dana Morgan's Music Store in Palo Alto. There, he encountered a twenty-one-year-old Jerry Garcia, and the two spent the night immersed in music, a serendipitous encounter that would lead to the formation of a band. The Beatles, Weir noted, were a significant catalyst, transforming their jug band sound into a rock and roll force. "The Beatles were why we turned from a jug band into a rock 'n' roll band," Weir recalled. "What we saw them doing was impossibly attractive. I couldn't think of anything else more worth doing." Originally named Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions, the band evolved through various iterations, eventually becoming The Warlocks, and finally, the Grateful Dead.
For all thirty years of the Grateful Dead's career, Weir was the steady hand on rhythm guitar, and a prominent lead vocalist. In the autumn of 1968, a brief period saw the band performing without Weir and Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, billed as "Mickey and the Hartbeats." These shows were interspersed with full Grateful Dead concerts. As noted in Blair Jackson's biography of Jerry Garcia, Garcia and Lesh felt that Weir and Pigpen weren't contributing musically to their full potential, leading to band tensions. However, by the end of the year, Weir and Pigpen were reinstated.
This experience seemingly ignited a period of profound growth in Weir's guitar playing. Phil Lesh observed that when Mickey Hart temporarily departed the band in early 1971, he could hear Weir's playing with unprecedented clarity, finding himself "astonished, delighted and excited beyond measure at what Bobby was doing." Lesh described Weir's style as "quirky, whimsical and goofy," highlighting his remarkable ability to execute complex chord voicings on guitar with just four fingers, akin to a keyboardist.
The late 1970s saw Weir venturing into slide guitar techniques, incorporating them into Grateful Dead performances. His distinctive guitar style drew inspiration from hard bop pianist McCoy Tyner, and he cited a diverse range of artists, including John Coltrane, the Rev. Gary Davis, and Igor Stravinsky, as influences. Weir's first solo album, "Ace," released in 1972, featured the Grateful Dead as the backing band, though credited individually. This lineup included Keith and Donna Godchaux. A live rendition of the album's well-known track, "Playing in the Band," had already appeared on the "Skull & Roses" album the previous year. While still a member of the Grateful Dead, Weir also performed with the Bay Area band Kingfish in 1975 and 1976, alongside Matt Kelly and Dave Torbert. He later contributed to Kelly's 1987 album, "A Wing and a Prayer." In 1978, he fronted the Bob Weir Band with Brent Mydland, who would join the Grateful Dead the following year. The year 1980 marked the formation of another side project, Bobby and the Midnites.
Shortly before Jerry Garcia's passing in 1995, Weir established RatDog Revue, later shortened to RatDog. In this ensemble, Weir explored covers from artists like The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry, and Willie Dixon, alongside Grateful Dead classics and original material, much of which was featured on the album "Evening Moods." Weir also participated in various Grateful Dead member reunions, including stints as The Other Ones in 1998, 2000, and 2002, and as The Dead in 2003, 2004, and 2009. In 2008, he performed at the "Deadheads for Obama" concerts. The year 2009 saw Bob Weir and Phil Lesh unite to form Furthur, a band named in homage to Ken Kesey's iconic psychedelic bus.
In 2011, Weir founded the Tamalpais Research Institute, or TRI Studios, a state-of-the-art recording studio and virtual concert venue designed for high-definition live streaming. The following year, Weir embarked on a tour with Chris Robinson of The Black Crowes and singer-songwriter Jackie Greene as the Weir, Robinson, & Greene Acoustic Trio.
March 2013 saw the revival of RatDog. The RatDog Quartet, featuring Weir, Jay Lane, Robin Sylvester, and Jonathan Wilson, debuted on March 3rd at the Sweetwater Music Hall, with Jason Crosby as a featured guest for the initial shows. On April 25th, 2013, during a Furthur performance at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York, Weir fell onstage. Although the band completed the show, a representative announced on April 29th that Weir would be "unable to perform in any capacity for the next several weeks" due to unspecified reasons. He resumed performing that summer, making a surprise appearance at the Huichica Music Festival on June 15th.
April 23rd, 2014, marked the premiere of "The Other One: The Long Strange Trip of Bob Weir" at the Tribeca Film Festival, directed by Mike Fleiss. The Huffington Post reported on August 10th, 2014, that Weir had abruptly canceled all his upcoming appearances, including all Ratdog shows for the remainder of the year and a concert with Furthur. Jambase noted that Ratdog performed without Weir in Las Vegas in July 2014, with a venue statement citing Weir as being "under the weather."
In early July 2015, Weir reunited with the other original living members of the Grateful Dead—Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, and Phil Lesh—for three historic shows at Soldier Field in Chicago. This "Core Four" were joined by Jeff Chimenti on keys, Trey Anastasio on lead guitar and vocals, and Bruce Hornsby on piano. The reunion, held nearly twenty years to the day of the band's final concert with Jerry Garcia at the same venue, was billed as "Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead" and was presented as the original four members' last performance together. Due to overwhelming demand, two additional "Fare Thee Well" concerts were added, held in late June 2015 at Levi Stadium in California. The first show on June 27th was graced by a rainbow over the stadium, prompting one Deadhead to exclaim, "This is the band that jams with God," a sentiment that reportedly led to a massive cheer and an hour-long intermission.
October 5th, 2015, saw Weir perform with Ratdog at a special 60th birthday celebration for Steve Kimock, marking Ratdog's first performance since the 2014 tour cancellations. Later that year, Weir joined forces with former Grateful Dead bandmates Mickey Hart and Billy Kreutzmann, along with guitarist John Mayer, bassist Oteil Burbridge, and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti to form Dead & Company. The band played 22 shows, commencing in late October and concluding with a four-show New Year's run in San Francisco and Los Angeles, culminating in a three-set performance on New Year's Eve. Dead & Company concluded their final tour on July 16th, 2023, at Oracle Park in San Francisco. On January 31st, 2024, the band announced a concert residency at the Sphere in Las Vegas, Nevada, initially set for May 2024 and later extended to thirty shows, concluding in August 2024.
In May 2016, Weir was a featured speaker and performer at the second annual Einstein Gala in Toronto, Canada, an event celebrating Albert Einstein's legacy and recognizing emerging visionaries in arts and sciences. Weir spoke about the significance of science and innovation in his life, performing a solo acoustic set joined mid-performance by guitarist Dan Kanter. In the same month, he confirmed in an interview with The Guardian that he was working on a book.
2016 also saw the inclusion of a live recording of Weir performing with The National in the "Day of the Dead" release. Weir's 2012 collaboration with The National, "The Bridge Session," had paved the way for this Grateful Dead tribute. In June 2016, at the Bonnaroo Arts And Music Festival, Weir was presented with the inaugural Les Paul Spirit Award by the Les Paul Foundation. Michael Braunstein, the foundation's executive director, stated, "I cannot think of anyone more fitting to be honored with the first annual Les Paul Spirit Award than Bob Weir. Not only is he an extraordinary talent who has given us an amazing array of legendary music, but he is an innovator who understands music, technologies and the spirit of Les Paul. If Les were still alive today, I have absolutely no doubt that he and Bob would be experimenting together at TRI Studios or at Les's house and the results would be extraordinary."
Weir received the 2016 Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2016 Americana Honors & Awards in Nashville. In September 2016, he released a new album of "cowboy songs" titled "Blue Mountain," inspired by his time as a ranch hand in Wyoming at age fifteen. The album was followed by a tour that began in October 2016.
During the spring of 2018, Weir performed a series of concerts with former Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh, billed as Bobby and Phil, with guest musicians. In 2018, Weir formed the band Wolf Bros. Initially a trio featuring Weir on guitar and vocals, Don Was on upright bass, and Jay Lane on drums, the group, billed as Bob Weir & Wolf Bros, toured the US in the fall of 2018, spring of 2019, and early 2020. In late 2020 and early 2021, the band played several concerts at TRI Studios with Jeff Chimenti on keyboards and Greg Leisz on pedal steel guitar. Following these shows, a horn and string section known as the Wolfpack was added, comprising Brian Switzer on trumpet, Adam Theis on trombone, Sheldon Brown on saxophone, clarinet, and flute, Mads Tolling on violin, and Alex Kelly on cello. In the summer of 2021, this larger ensemble, now billed as Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros, performed at various venues in Colorado and California.
Following a pandemic-induced hiatus, Weir and Wolf Bros resumed touring the US in the spring of 2022, accompanied by The Wolfpack string section. This included a May 1st performance with Mickey Hart, Zakir Hussain, and a revived Planet Drum, as well as two shows at Radio City Music Hall in April celebrating the 50th anniversary of Weir's album "Ace." The fall 2022 "Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack" tour included four shows at the Kennedy Center in October. The winter 2023 tour featured three February concerts with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra at Atlanta Symphony Hall. In April 2023, the Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros Trio played four shows at the Guild Theatre in Menlo Park.
As part of the band's fall 2023 tour, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack joined Willie Nelson's Outlaw Music Festival for seven shows in September, concluding with a residency at the Capitol Theatre in New York. Weir performed at the inaugural Dead Ahead Festival in Cancún in January 2024. His other 2024 appearances included a show with The String Cheese Incident, billed as "The Bob Weir Incident," and a New Year's Eve run in Fort Lauderdale. In December, he was present as the Grateful Dead were honored at the Kennedy Center Honors.
January 2025 saw Weir return to curate the second Dead Ahead Festival at Riviera Cancún, Mexico, where he also performed alongside a lineup featuring Sturgill Simpson, Rick Mitarotonda, Oteil Burbridge, Brandi Carlile, and others. A two-month spring 2025 residency for Dead & Company was booked at the Sphere in Las Vegas. In the meantime, on January 31st, Weir, Mickey Hart, and Grateful Dead family members accepted MusiCares Person of the Year awards for their philanthropic endeavors.
In 2022, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros embarked on a series of performances with symphony orchestras, including four sold-out shows with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center. These concerts featured "sonic elaborations" of Grateful Dead classics, Weir's solo numbers, and covers. The series continued in February 2023 with three concerts in Atlanta with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. In October 2023, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros performed with the Stanford Symphony Orchestra at Frost Amphitheater. The symphony project continued with a fall 2024 tour, as Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack were backed by the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, the Chicago Philharmonic, and the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. The concert programs included "A Grateful Overture" by Giancarlo Aquilanti and music from Grateful Dead albums such as "Aoxomoxoa," "Wake of the Flood," and "Shakedown Street." The next symphony performance is scheduled for June 21st, 2025, at the Royal Albert Hall in London with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra.
In his personal life, Weir was arrested for marijuana possession along with Grateful Dead bandmate Ron "Pigpen" McKernan in 1967. He remained unmarried during his years with the Grateful Dead, though he lived with Frankie Hart from 1969 to 1975. Hart, a former go-go dancer and Apple Records employee, is rumored to have inspired the Robert Hunter-Bob Weir song "Sugar Magnolia." She adopted Weir's last name, becoming Frankie Weir, though they never married.
On July 15th, 1999, Weir married Natascha Münter in Mill Valley, California. They have two daughters. Weir's sister-in-law is Leilani Münter, a former race car driver. A long-time vegetarian and animal rights advocate, Weir was instrumental in the founding of Farm Sanctuary.
In 1991, Weir co-wrote the children's book "Panther Dream: A Story of the African Rainforest" with his sister Wendy Weir, who illustrated the book. The story follows a boy's journey into the African rainforest to find food for his family, depicting various rainforest animal species. The publisher, Hyperion, donated the book's proceeds to reforestation programs in Africa.
In February 2004, Weir received the Scripps Howard Super Sage Award for having the most accurate Super Bowl prediction. Weir served on the boards of directors for the Rex Foundation, the Furthur Foundation, and HeadCount. He was also an advisory board member of the Jerry Garcia Foundation and an honorary board member of the environmental organization Rainforest Action Network, alongside Woody Harrelson, Bonnie Raitt, and John Densmore. He was also on the honorary board of directors of Little Kids Rock, a non-profit dedicated to providing free music education to children in underserved public schools.
In the summer of 2025, Weir was diagnosed with cancer. Despite overcoming the illness, he passed away from underlying lung issues on January 10th, 2026, at the age of 78.
Weir's guitar journey began with a Gretsch Duo-Jet, transitioning to a Rickenbacker 365, a Guild Starfire IV, and a Fender Telecaster before he found his longtime favorite: a cherry red 1965 Gibson ES-335, which he played for the next decade. He was also seen playing a sunburst ES-335 in "The Grateful Dead Movie." During the early 1970s, Weir also utilized a Gibson ES-345, a 1961 or 1962 Gibson SG, and a black Gibson Les Paul.
In 1974, Weir collaborated with Ibanez to develop custom instruments, playing the Ibanez 2681 during the recording of "Blues for Allah." This led to further development of 2681 models and his iconic "Cowboy Fancy" guitar, which he played from 1976 until the mid-1980s. He then transitioned to a Modulus Blackknife, and later a hybrid Modulus/Casio guitar for Grateful Dead concerts. Weir's acoustic guitar collection includes various Martins, a Guild, an Ovation, and a line of Alvarez-Yairi signature models. Post-Grateful Dead, he played a Modulus G3FH custom, a Gibson ES-335, and a 1956 Fender Telecaster once owned by his late half-brother. In August 2016, Weir revealed that he used only a Martin acoustic guitar for his solo album "Blue Mountain." From 2017 onwards, Weir partnered with D'Angelico Guitars, releasing signature models like the Premier semi-hollow guitar in 2017 and the Deluxe Bedford solid body guitar in 2020. In 2024, D'Angelico introduced the Deluxe Bobby Weir 3 semi-hollow electric guitar.
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Robert Hall Weir ( WEER; né Parber; October 16, 1947 – January 10, 2026) was an American musician and songwriter best known as a founding member of the Grateful Dead. After the group disbanded in 1995, he performed with the Other Ones, later known as the Dead, together with other former members of the Grateful Dead. Weir also founded and played in several other bands during and after his career with the Grateful Dead, including Kingfish, the Bob Weir Band, Bobby and the Midnites, Scaring the Children, RatDog, and Furthur, which he co-led with former Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh. In 2015, Weir, along with former Grateful Dead members Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, joined with Grammy-winning singer/guitarist John Mayer, bassist Oteil Burbridge, and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti to form the band Dead & Company.
During his career with the Grateful Dead, Weir played mostly rhythm guitar and sang many of the band's rock & roll and country & western songs. In 1994, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Grateful Dead. In 2024, he was awarded Kennedy Center Honors as a member of the Grateful Dead.
== Early life ==
Weir was born in San Francisco on October 16, 1947, to John (Jack) Parber (1925–2015), who was of Italian and German ancestry and fellow college student, Phyllis Inskeep (1924–1997), who was of German, Irish, and English ancestry and who later gave him up for adoption. He grew up with adoptive parents Frederic Utter Weir and Eleanor (née Cramer) Weir in Atherton. Weir began playing guitar at age 13 after less successful efforts with the piano and the trumpet. He experienced difficulties in school because of undiagnosed dyslexia and was expelled from nearly every school he attended, including Menlo School in Atherton and Fountain Valley School in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he met future Grateful Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow.
== Career ==
On New Year's Eve 1963, an underaged 16-year-old Weir and his friend were wandering the back alleys of Palo Alto, looking for a club that would admit them, when they heard banjo music. They followed the music to its source, Dana Morgan's Music Store. They encountered a 21-year-old Jerry Garcia, oblivious to the date, waiting for his students to arrive. Weir and Garcia spent the night playing music together and then decided to form a band. The Beatles significantly influenced the band's musical direction. "The Beatles were why we turned from a jug band into a rock 'n' roll band", said Weir. "What we saw them doing was impossibly attractive. I couldn't think of anything else more worth doing." Originally called Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions, the band was later renamed The Warlocks and eventually the Grateful Dead.
Weir played rhythm guitar and sang a large portion of the lead vocals through all of the Dead's 30-year career. In the fall of 1968, the Dead played some concerts without Weir and Ron "Pigpen" McKernan. These shows, with the band billed as "Mickey and the Hartbeats", were intermixed with full-lineup Grateful Dead concerts. In his biography of Jerry Garcia, Blair Jackson notes, "Garcia and Lesh determined that Weir and Pigpen were not pulling their weight musically in the band... Most of the band fights at this time were about Bobby's guitar playing." Late in the year, the band relented and reinstated Weir and Pigpen back in full-time.
The incident apparently led to a period of significant growth in Weir's guitar playing. Phil Lesh said that when drummer Mickey Hart left the band temporarily in early 1971, he was able to hear Weir's playing more clearly than ever and "I found myself astonished, delighted and excited beyond measure at what Bobby was doing." Lesh described Weir's playing as "quirky, whimsical and goofy" and noted his ability to play chord voicings on the guitar (with only four fingers) that one would normally hear from a keyboard (with up to ten fingers).
In the late 1970s, Weir began to experiment with slide guitar techniques and perform certain songs during Dead shows using the slide. His unique guitar style is strongly influenced by the hard bop pianist McCoy Tyner, and he has cited artists as diverse as John Coltrane, the Rev. Gary Davis, and Igor Stravinsky as influences. Weir's first solo album Ace appeared in 1972, with the Grateful Dead performing as the band on the album, though credited individually. This lineup included Keith Godchaux and his wife Donna, both of whom would be in the band by the time of the album's release. A live version of the album's best-known song, "Playing in the Band", had been issued on the Skull & Roses album of the previous year. While continuing to perform as a member of the Grateful Dead, in 1975 and 1976, Weir played in the Bay Area band Kingfish with friends Matt Kelly and Dave Torbert. He later contributed to Kelly's 1987 album A Wing and a Prayer, on Relix Records. In 1978 he fronted the Bob Weir Band with Brent Mydland, who joined the Grateful Dead the following year. In 1980 he formed another side band, Bobby and the Midnites.
Shortly before Garcia's death in 1995, Weir formed another band, RatDog Revue, later shortened to RatDog. In RatDog, Weir performed covers of songs by various artists, including The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry, and Willie Dixon while also performing many Grateful Dead songs. In addition, Ratdog performed many of their own originals, most of which were released on the album Evening Moods. Weir has participated in the various reformations of the Grateful Dead's members, including 1998, 2000, and 2002 stints as the Other Ones and in 2003, 2004 and 2009 as The Dead. In 2008 he performed in the two Deadheads for Obama concerts. In 2009 Bob Weir and Phil Lesh formed a new band called Furthur—so-named in honor of Ken Kesey's famous psychedelically painted bus.
In 2011, Weir founded the Tamalpais Research Institute, also known as TRI Studios. TRI is a high-tech recording studio and virtual music venue, used to stream live concerts over the internet in high-definition.
In 2012, Weir toured with Chris Robinson of the Black Crowes and singer/songwriter Jackie Greene as the Weir, Robinson, & Greene Acoustic Trio.
Weir revived RatDog in March 2013. The RatDog Quartet, featuring Weir, Jay Lane, Robin Sylvester, and Jonathan Wilson debuted on March 3, at the Sweetwater Music Hall. Jason Crosby was their featured guest at the first two shows. On April 25, 2013, Weir fell down onstage during a Furthur performance at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York. The band finished the show without him. He performed with the band two days later in Atlantic City, but on April 29 a representative announced that Weir would be "unable to perform in any capacity for the next several weeks" for unspecified reasons. Weir resumed performing that summer. Six weeks after his fall, he made a surprise appearance at the small Huichica Music Festival on June 15.
On April 23, 2014, The Other One: The Long Strange Trip of Bob Weir premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival directed by Mike Fleiss husband of Miss America 2012, Laura Kaeppeler. On August 10, 2014, Weir abruptly canceled all of his upcoming appearances, according to The Huffington Post, "The cancellations include all shows for the rest of the year with his band Ratdog, as well as a concert with Furthur". According to Jambase, Ratdog performed without Weir in Las Vegas in July 2014. "A statement from the venue said Weir was 'under the weather'."
In early July 2015, Weir joined the other original living members of the Grateful Dead —Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, and Phil Lesh — for three shows at Soldier Field in Chicago. These four surviving members (known as the "Core Four") were joined by Jeff Chimenti on keys and Phish's Trey Anastasio on lead guitar and shared vocals, and Bruce Hornsby on piano. The reunion was 20 years nearly to the day since the band's final concert with Jerry Garcia at the same venue in 1995. "Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead" was billed as the original four members' last performance together. Based on demand, two additional Fare Thee Well concerts were added to the series, performed in late June 2015 at Levi Stadium in California. The first show was on June 27, and featured a rainbow that appeared in the sky over the stadium. Billboard noted that one longtime Deadhead in attendance exclaimed, "This is the band that jams with God." The website said, "the sentiment prompted massive cheers which led to an hour-long intermission." Billboard had previously reported that one insider claimed the production paid US$50,000 for the effect, but an update said that further investigation revealed that "this band really does jam with God."
On October 5, 2015, Weir performed with Ratdog at a special celebratory 60th Birthday Bash for Steve Kimock. It was the first time Ratdog had performed since the cancellations of his 2014 summer tour. In late 2015, Weir teamed up with former Grateful Dead bandmates Mickey Hart and Billy Kreutzmann as well as guitarist John Mayer, bassist Oteil Burbridge and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti to form Dead & Company. They played 22 shows starting at the end of October, concluding with a four show New Year's run including two shows each in San Francisco and Los Angeles, ending with a three set show on New Year's Eve. The band concluded its final tour on July 16, 2023, at Oracle Park in San Francisco. On January 31, 2024 the band announced a concert residency at Sphere in Las Vegas, Nevada, to begin in May 2024. While eighteen shows were announced initially, the residency was extended to thirty shows, ending in August 2024.
In May 2016, Weir was a guest speaker and performer for the second annual Einstein Gala, in Toronto, Canada, an event honoring the legacy of Albert Einstein and new visionaries in the arts and sciences. Weir spoke about what science and innovation had meant to him. Weir performed a solo acoustic set, and was joined mid-set by guitarist Dan Kanter. In the same month, Weir also confirmed, in an interview with The Guardian, that he was writing a book.
In 2016, a live recording of Weir performing with The National was included in the Day of the Dead release. Weir's 2012 collaboration with members of The National as part of The Bridge Session helped pave the way for the Grateful Dead tribute. In June 2016, at the Bonnaroo Arts And Music Festival, Weir received the first ever Les Paul Spirit Award, from the Les Paul Foundation. Michael Braunstein, the foundation's executive director, said:
I cannot think of anyone more fitting to be honored with the first annual Les Paul Spirit Award than Bob Weir. Not only is he an extraordinary talent who has given us an amazing array of legendary music, but he is an innovator who understands music, technologies and the spirit of Les Paul. If Les were still alive today, I have absolutely no doubt that he and Bob would be experimenting together at TRI Studios or at Les's house and the results would be extraordinary.
Weir received the 2016 Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2016 Americana Honors & Awards in Nashville. In September 2016, Weir released a new album of "cowboy songs" titled Blue Mountain. The release was followed by a tour beginning in October 2016. The album was inspired by his time working as a ranch hand in Wyoming when he was fifteen years old.
During the spring of 2018, Weir performed a series of concerts with former Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh. The duo, with guest musicians, was billed as Bobby and Phil. In 2018, Weir formed a band called Wolf Bros. Billed as Bob Weir & Wolf Bros, the group initially was a trio, with Weir on guitar and vocals, Don Was on upright bass, and Jay Lane on drums. They toured the US in the fall of 2018, the spring of 2019, and in early 2020. In late 2020 and early 2021, the band played several concerts at TRI Studios with Jeff Chimenti on keyboards and Greg Leisz on pedal steel guitar. After the first of these shows the band also added a horn and string section called the Wolfpack, comprising Brian Switzer on trumpet, Adam Theis on trombone, Sheldon Brown on saxophone, clarinet, and flute, Mads Tolling on violin, and Alex Kelly on cello. In the summer of 2021 this larger ensemble, now billed as Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros, played several concerts in Colorado and California.
In 2022, after the pandemic put a temporary stop to touring, Weir and Wolf Bros resumed playing shows, touring the US in the spring with The Wolfpack string section. Included was a May 1, 2022 show with Mickey Hart, Zakir Hussain and a revived Planet Drum and a pair of shows at Radio City Music Hall in April marking the 50th anniversary of Weir's album Ace. The fall 2022 "Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack" tour included four shows at the Kennedy Center in October. The 2023 winter tour included three February concerts with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra at Atlanta Symphony Hall. In April 2023, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros Trio played four shows at the Guild Theatre in Menlo Park.
As part of the band's fall 2023 run, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack joined Willie Nelson's Outlaw Music Festival for seven shows in September. The band's tour ended with a residency at the Capitol Theatre in New York. Weir performed at the first Dead Ahead Festival in Cancún in January 2024. Weir's other 2024 appearances included a show with the String Cheese Incident, billed as "The Bob Weir Incident", and a New Year's Eve run in Fort Lauderdale. In December he was present as the Grateful Dead were inducted at the Kennedy Center Honors.
In January 2025, Weir returned to curate the second Dead Ahead Festival at Riviera Cancún, Mexico, where he also performed along with a lineup that included Sturgill Simpson, Rick Mitarotonda, Oteil Burbridge, Brandi Carlile and others. A two-month spring 2025 residency was booked for Dead & Company at the Sphere in Las Vegas. In the meantime, on January 31, Weir, Mickey Hart and Grateful Dead family members accepted MusiCares Persons of the Year awards for their philanthropic work.
== Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros symphony project ==
In 2022, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros launched a series of performances with symphony orchestras, with four sold-out shows with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center. The concerts feature "sonic elaborations" of Grateful Dead classics, Weir solo numbers, and covers.
The series resumed in February 2023, with three concerts in Atlanta with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. In October 2023, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros performed with the Stanford Symphony Orchestra at Frost Amphitheater. The series picked up with a fall 2024 tour, as Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros featuring The Wolfpack were backed by the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra in Cincinnati, the Chicago Philharmonic in Chicago, and the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra in New Orleans, for a total of five shows. The concert programs included "A Grateful Overture" by Giancarlo Aquilanti and music from Grateful Dead albums including Aoxomoxoa, Wake of the Flood and Shakedown Street.
The next symphony show took place June 21, 2025, at the Royal Albert Hall in London with the Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra.
== Personal life and death ==
Along with fellow Grateful Dead bandmate Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, Weir was arrested for possession of marijuana in a raid which occurred at the band's communal home on October 2, 1967. He remained unmarried throughout his years with the Grateful Dead, although he lived for several years (1969–1975) with Frankie Hart. Hart had been a go-go dancer at the Peppermint Lounge in New York, had worked in Apple Records American marketing department, for Apple Records in London, and had performed on the TV shows Hullabaloo and Shindig!. She was allegedly the inspiration for the Robert Hunter-Bob Weir song "Sugar Magnolia". Weir made her acquaintance through Mickey Hart, who dated her briefly. He met her following her first Grateful Dead show in New York in 1968. Her real name at that time was Frankie Azzara (from a previous marriage), but used the stage name "Frankie Hart" (after apparently "borrowing" Hart's last name). Although she and Weir never married, she adopted his last name after moving in with him and was subsequently known as Frankie Weir.
On July 15, 1999, Weir and Natascha Münter married in Mill Valley, California. Together, they had two daughters. Weir's sister-in law is Leilani Münter, a former race car driver in the ARCA Racing Series circuit. Weir was a long-term vegetarian and advocate for animal rights who was influential in the founding of Farm Sanctuary.
In 1991, Weir co-wrote a children's book called Panther Dream: A Story of the African Rainforest with his sister Wendy Weir, who illustrated the book with her acrylic paintings. It is the story of a boy who ventures into the African rainforest in search of food for his hungry family, and it describes
and illustrates many rainforest animal species. The publisher, Hyperion, donated the proceeds from the sale of the book to reforestation programs in Africa.
In February 2004, Weir captured the Scripps Howard Super Sage Award as his Super Bowl prediction of New England beating Carolina, 33-24, was closest to the actual 32-29 score. Weir's prediction was the most accurate out of 148 celebrities who participated in Scripps Howard's Celebrity Super Bowl Poll. Weir was on the board of directors of the Rex Foundation, the Furthur Foundation, and HeadCount. He was also a member of the advisory board of the Jerry Garcia Foundation along with Peter Shapiro and Seth Rogin. Weir was an honorary member of the board of directors of the environmental organization Rainforest Action Network, along with Woody Harrelson, Bonnie Raitt, and John Densmore. He was also on the honorary board of directors of Little Kids Rock, a non-profit organization that provides free musical instruments and instruction to children in under-served public schools throughout the U.S.
In the summer of 2025, Weir was diagnosed with cancer. Despite beating the cancer, he died from underlying lung issues on January 10, 2026, at the age of 78.
== Guitars ==
Early pictures of The Warlocks in concert show him playing a Gretsch Duo-Jet, and after the Warlocks became the Grateful Dead, Weir briefly played a Rickenbacker 365, a Guild Starfire IV semi-hollowbody (with Garcia playing an identical cherry red Starfire IV, which appears very similar to the Gibson ES-335) as well as a Fender Telecaster before settling on a cherry red 1965 Gibson ES-335 as his primary guitar for the following decade. Weir can also be seen playing a sunburst ES-335 in The Grateful Dead Movie, filmed in October 1974. During the early 1970s, Weir also used a Gibson ES-345, a 1961 or 1962 Gibson SG and a black Gibson Les Paul of indeterminate age in 1971.
In 1974, Weir began working with Jeff Hasselberger at Ibanez to develop a custom instrument. Weir began playing the Ibanez 2681 during the recording of Blues for Allah; this was a testbed instrument with sliding pickups that Hasselberger used to develop several additional 2681s for use onstage, as well as Weir's custom "Cowboy Fancy" guitar, which he played from 1976 until the mid-1980s. Weir began using a Modulus Blackknife at that point, and continued to play the Blackknife, along with a hybrid Modulus/Casio guitar for the "Space" segment of Grateful Dead concerts for the rest of that band's history. Weir's acoustic guitars include several Martins, a Guild, an Ovation, and a line of Alvarez-Yairi signature models.
With his post-Grateful Dead bands, Weir has played a Modulus G3FH custom, a Gibson ES-335, and a 1956 Fender Telecaster previously owned by James Louis Parber, his late half-brother. In August 2016, during a preview of Weir's solo album, Blue Mountain, Weir stated that the only instrument he used during the recording of the album was a Martin acoustic guitar.
From 2017 onwards, Weir collaborated with D'Angelico Guitars based in Manhattan, New York, to produce several signature model instruments. The Premier, a semi-hollow guitar, was released in 2017, and the Deluxe Bedford, a solid body guitar, was released in 2020. In 2024 Weir and D'Angelico introduced the Deluxe Bobby Weir 3, a semi-hollow electric guitar.
== Discography ==
Grateful Dead and related bands
Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions – Mother McCree's Uptown Jug Champions (1999)
The Strange Remain – The Other Ones (1999)
Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of the Grateful Dead – Fare Thee Well (2015)
Solo albums
Ace (1972)
Heaven Help the Fool (1978)
Weir Here – The Best of Bob Weir (2004) – compilation
Blue Mountain (2016)
Kingfish
Kingfish (1976)
Live 'n' Kickin' (1977)
Kingfish in Concert: King Biscuit Flower Hour (1996)
Bobby and the Midnites
Bobby and the Midnites (1981)
Where the Beat Meets the Street (1984)
Bob Weir and Rob Wasserman
Live (1998)
Fall 1989: The Long Island Sound (2013) – also Jerry Garcia Band
RatDog
Evening Moods (2000)
Live at Roseland (2001)
Wolf Bros
Live in Colorado (2022)
Live in Colorado Vol. 2 (2022)
With other artists
Gathering – Josh Ritter (2017)
Bear's Sonic Journals: Dawn of the New Riders of the Purple Sage – New Riders of the Purple Sage (2020)
Bear's Sonic Journals: Sing Out! – various artists (2024)
Videos
Move Me Brightly (2013)
The Other One: The Long, Strange Trip of Bob Weir (2015)
== See also ==
== Notes ==
== References ==
== External links ==
Bob Weir collection at the Internet Archive's live music archive
Bob Weir on the Grateful Dead's Official Site
Bob Weir discography at Discogs
Bob Weir at IMDb
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