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Dead & Company Announce Final Tour: See the Full List of Dates

The 2023 tour kicks off on May 19 at Los Angeles' Kia Forum.

By Rania Aniftos

Rania Aniftos

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Dead & Company

Dead & Company ‘s upcoming summer tour will be their final run.

John Mayer , who has been part of the the modern incarnation of the  Grateful Dead  since it was created in 2015, shared the band statement to his Instagram on Friday (Sept. 23). “As we put the finishing touches on booking venues, and understanding that word travels fast, we wanted to be the first to let you know that Dead & Company will be hitting the road next summer for what will be our final tour,” he wrote alongside the rose-adorned promotional tour poster for the upcoming summer stint. “Stay tuned for a full list of dates for what will surely be an exciting, celebratory, and heartfelt last run of shows.”

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The band revealed the full list of tour dates on Thursday (Oct. 6), beginning on May 19, 2023, in Los Angeles at the Kia Forum and stretching through July 15, when the tour ends in San Francisco at Oracle Park.

See below, and check out ticket and pre-sale information here.

05/19 – Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum 05/20 – Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum 05/23 – Phoenix, AZ @ Ak-Chin Pavilion 05/26 – Dallas, TX @ Dos Equis Pavilion 05/28 – Atlanta, GA @ Lakewood Amphitheatre 05/30 – Charlotte, NC @ PNC Music Pavilion 06/01 – Raleigh, NC @ Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek 06/03 – Bristow, VA @ Jiffy Lube Live 06/05 – Burgettstown, PA @ The Pavilion at Star Lake 06/07 – St. Louis, MO @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheater 06/09 – Chicago, IL @ Wrigley Field 06/10 – Chicago, IL @ Wrigley Field 06/13 – Cincinnati, OH @ Riverbend Music Center 06/15 – Philadelphia, PA @ Citizen’s Bank Park 06/17 – Saratoga Springs, NY @ Saratoga Performing Arts Center 06/18 – Saratoga Springs, NY @ Saratoga Performing Arts Center 06/21 – New York, NY @ Citi Field 06/22 – New York, NY @ Citi Field 06/25 – Boston, MA @ Fenway Park 06/27 – Noblesville, IN @ Ruoff Music Center 07/01 – Boulder, CO @ Folsom Field 07/02 – Boulder, CO @ Folsom Field 07/03 – Boulder, CO @ Folsom Field 07/07 – George, WA @ The Gorge 07/08 – George, WA @ The Gorge 07/14 – San Francisco, CA @ Oracle Park 07/15 – San Francisco, CA @ Oracle Park

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Published: 2023/07/19 by Hana Gustafson

Dead & Company Break Down Final Tour by Numbers, John Mayer Shares Comment on Band’s Future

Dead & Company Break Down Final Tour by Numbers, John Mayer Shares Comment on Band’s Future

Photo Credit: Jay Blakesberg

On Sunday, July 16, Dead & Company concluded their 2023 Final Tour with three sold-out concerts at Oracle Park in San Francisco, drawing a crowd of 120,000 fans. Their final tour was the most successful in the band’s eight-year history, bringing 840,000 attendees out during the cross-country trek. To mark their triumphant finale, the group shared their record-setting numbers. 

Since the band’s 2015 debut, Dead & Company has completed 10 tours and performed in front of more than 4 million fans. During the Final Tour, they ran through 112 songs, including “Drums” > “Space” and the newly formed “Dark Star on the Big River Jam.” Since the band’s inception, they have delivered 145 unique songs during their 235 show history. 

john mayer final tour

Beginning with Folsom Field in Boulder, Colo., the group shared that their three-night stand sold 130,000 tickets. Dead & Company currently holds the record number of performances at the venue, with 13 shows. The previous record for most shows played at Folsom by a single artist was three, held by both the Grateful Dead and The Rolling Stones. 

john mayer final tour

Pertaining to their Wrigley Field dates, Dead & Company is the all-time leader in the number of shows played at the famed ballpark, with 10 performances across five tours (2017, 2019, 2021, 2022 and 2023), as well as the all-time leader in overall paid attendance with 360,000 tickets sold across these shows. Additionally, they reign on top for single-show paid attendance when they set the record in 2017 with more than 40,000 tickets sold.

The band also holds the record for number of performances at Citi Field in Queens, N.Y., with 11 shows. In 2023 Dead & Company returned to Citi Field to perform for almost 74,000 fans during two sold-out concerts. The band also broke Boston’s (Fenway Park) all-time attendance record for the most tickets sold in a single night, previously held by Aerosmith.

john mayer final tour

In addition, Dead & Company also shared that its charitable initiatives since 2015 have raised more than $13 million to support nonprofits, environmental and social causes such as Parks Conservation Association, The Jerry Garcia Foundation, Heart And Armor Foundation, Gorilla Doctors, Seva.org , OXFAM, MusiCares, Surfrider Foundation, WhyHunger, iGiveTrees, Positive Legacy, Further Foundation, Conscious Alliance, Rainforest Action Network, Last Prisoner Project, HAPA, SPLC, and dozens of local and regional nonprofit groups.

Participation Row auctions, in partnership with nonpartisan and nonprofit voter registration organization HeadCount, surpassed $2,033,000 raised for charity during this year’s Final Tour. The count includes $355,000 from the Mickey Hart fine art auctions held in NYC and over the three nights at Oracle Park. 

Moreover, their positive impact has resulted in 25,000 fans registering to vote. On the topic of sustainability, Dead & Company continued their work with longtime partner REVERB to reduce the tour’s environmental footprint and encourage fans to take action, resulting in 1.6+ million dedicated to greenhouse gas reductions and climate justice projects, 51,000 tonnes of CO2e neutralized and more positive change. 

John Mayer summarized his time with the group, leaving room for the future, and noting:  “@deadandcompany is still a band – we just don’t know what the next show will be. I speak for us all when I say that I look forward to being shown the next shaft of light… I know we will all move towards it together.” Click here to read the guitarist’s full post via Instagram.

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Dead & Company Detail Final Tour With 2023 Concert Dates

By Matthew Strauss

Dead  Company

Dead & Company have revealed the details of the concerts that will comprise their final tour . The U.S. shows take place in May, June, and July 2023. Take a look at the band’s schedule below.

Dead & Company played their first shows in 2015. The lineup for the final tour includes Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, John Mayer, and Bob Weir (with Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chimenti).

Read the 2017 feature “ The Grateful Dead: A Guide to Their Essential Live Songs .”

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Dead & Company: The Final Tour

Dead & Company:

05-19 Inglewood, CA - Kia Forum 05-20 Inglewood, CA - Kia Forum 05-23 Phoenix, AZ - Ak-Chin Pavilion 05-26 Dallas, TX - Dos Equis Pavilion 05-28 Atlanta, GA - Lakewood Amphitheatre 05-30 Charlotte, NC - PNC Music Pavilion 06-01 Raleigh, NC - Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek 06-03 Bristow, VA - Jiffy Lube Live 06-05 Burgettstown, PA - The Pavilion at Star Lake 06-07 St. Louis, MO - Hollywood Casino Amphitheater 06-09 Chicago, IL - Wrigley Field 06-10 Chicago, IL - Wrigley Field 06-13 Cincinnati, OH - Riverbend Music Center 06-15 Philadelphia, PA - Citizen’s Bank Park 06-17 Saratoga Springs, NY - Saratoga Performing Arts Center 06-18 Saratoga Springs, NY - Saratoga Performing Arts Center 06-21 Queens, NY - Citi Field 06-22 Queens, NY - Citi Field 06-25 Boston, MA - Fenway Park 06-27 Noblesville, IN - Ruoff Music Center 07-01 Boulder, CO - Folsom Field 07-02 Boulder, CO - Folsom Field 07-03 Boulder, CO - Folsom Field 07-07 George, WA - The Gorge 07-08 George, WA - The Gorge 07-14 San Francisco, CA - Oracle Park 07-15 San Fransisco, CA - Oracle Park

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The Shows May Be Over. But John Mayer’s ‘Guitar Face’ Lives On.

For some fans of Dead & Company, which just finished its Final Tour, the faces made by John Mayer while performing are almost as memorable as the music.

Images of John Mayer performing with his eyes closed and lips pursed; with his eyes closed and his lips open and slightly puckered; with his eyes slightly open and his mouth wide open; and with his eyes closed and his lips puckered.

By Alex Beggs

Alex Beggs reported this article during the last leg of Dead & Company’s Final Tour, including at the final show in San Francisco.

During the final show of Dead & Company’s so-called Final Tour on Sunday night, the crowd at Oracle Park in San Francisco swayed and bobbed like the current of a turning river.

People in flower crowns grooved through the shimmying mass on the stadium’s field. A man in cowboy regalia cupped his hands around his ears and two-stepped to the beat. A woman in face glitter who gave her name as Honey Bee regaled strangers with the tale of how she came with a man she had met two days before, who happened to have an extra ticket. Other fans, who were not as lucky, danced on the sidewalk outside of the park.

And onstage, the band’s lead guitarist, John Mayer, leaned back, sucked his lips inside his mouth and scrunched his eyes closed as he wailed on a guitar while playing the song “Althea.” Shortly after his impassioned solo , footage of it started spreading on Twitter.

Mr. Mayer has been a member of Dead & Company, an offshoot of the Grateful Dead , since it formed in 2015. Though he is not the band’s face, the faces he has made while performing — which can cover the full spectrum of human emotion, from despair to sweet relief to sublime pleasure — have for some been almost as unforgettable as the music itself.

Fans have made YouTube compilations , photo collages , a meme with a giant slug and niche Instagram accounts dedicated to Mr. Mayer’s expressive “guitar face,” which is not exactly an anomaly in the world of rock ’n’ roll. “I feel a little bit uncomfortable with people thinking that I made up the guitar face,” he told Rolling Stone in 2017. “God, wouldn’t it be great to go to the jungles of Borneo and give a tribe Fender Stratocasters and have them listen to Jimi Hendrix — but not show them Jimi Hendrix — and come back five years later and see if there’s any guitar face? I have a feeling there would be.”

Mr. Mayer, through a representative, declined to comment for this article. The faces he made during the last leg of the Final Tour appeared to reflect the mood of its tie-dye-wearing fans, which alternated between grief and ecstasy as the music that seemingly would never stop finally did. ( Dead & Company members have said the tour would be its last , but have not ruled out the possibility of a future for the band.)

“The thing I love about him is he’s fully enjoying it — he’s in the music,” Tony Seigh, from Valparaiso, Ind., said of Mr. Mayer. “For those three, four hours, that guy is just in a different zone. And haters beware, he’s going to be making some very strange faces.”

Mr. Seigh, 33, runs Holy Moly Mischief , which sells Dead-themed T-shirts, fanny packs and a bumper sticker that reads: “KEEP HONKING! I’m on my way to see JOHN MAYER and what’s left of the GRATEFUL DEAD.” Mr. Seigh, who used to work for Tesla, said he had seen Dead & Company 86 times, and he described Mr. Mayer’s faces using a word many others did: orgasmic.

“It’s like a close-up of his face in an adult film,” he said. “There are moments where it’s like, Oh my gosh, something is happening to him. Like, is a ghost … massaging him?”

Mr. Seigh, who was wearing a yellow “Always Grateful” hat that matched his yellow-painted toenails, added that Mr. Mayer’s expressions were one of many visual elements of live performances by Dead & Company, whose members have included Bob Weir, Oteil Burbridge, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Jeff Chimenti and Jay Lane.

“Bob looks like a gray werewolf, and Oteil has, like, pro-wrestler face paint on, and Mickey looks like ET playing some drum thing,” he said. “And then you look at John, and he looks like pictures of old Catholic saints when they’re getting visited by an angel.”

Clif Edwards, 60, a graphic designer from Sacramento whose hair was styled into a long gray ponytail, said that as a guitarist himself, he knew how playing could be a full-body experience. Of Mr. Mayer’s facial expressions, he said, “I approve.”

“But it’s odd to watch,” added Mr. Edwards, who said he had seen the original Grateful Dead play some 340 times.

A man in a tie-dye bucket hat who was standing near Mr. Edwards chimed in: “You know you’re in the thick of the jam when he’s got the face going.”

Susan Marston, 58, a program manager from Boise, Idaho, said that unlike some longtime Dead fans who were skeptical when Mr. Mayer joined Dead & Company, she knew from the very beginning that he would bring something unique to the spinoff band.

“There’s a lot of crusty people who said, ‘Oh, I can’t see John Mayer,’” Ms. Marston said. “But if you knew anything about John Mayer prior to joining Dead & Company, then you knew the guy could freaking rip the blues.”

“Sometimes his eyes are rolling back in his head,” added Ms. Marston, who was wearing a black top covered with photos of Mr. Mayer. “It elevates everybody because he’s so into what we’re into — it’s our synchronization with the band.” As she spoke, a man with a fake scarlet begonia tucked into his hat interrupted her to show off a sticker that featured Mr. Mayer’s face flashing a particularly euphoric expression and surrounded by a highly suggestive lyric from the song “The Weight.”

A few Dead & Company fans said they had never noticed Mr. Mayer’s expressions. Kim Holzem, 52, from Three Rivers, Calif., scoffed in disbelief when her husband, Tim, mentioned that he had never registered the guitarist’s faces before.

“Sometimes he looks like he’s in pain, other times he looks like he’s blissed out,” said Ms. Holzem, who saw Dead & Company three times last weekend in San Francisco with her husband and two teenage sons.

Mr. Mayer, she added, “makes some weird-ass faces, but he’s still adorable.”

Skyler McKinley, 31, a bar owner from Denver who was standing not far from the stage at the last show of the tour, said Mr. Mayer’s face was “inescapable” at live performances, in part because it is often “blown up, to skyscraper size” on massive screens. He added that Mr. Mayer had the “sex energy of a rock star” while performing, and compared his facial expressions to the dance moves of Mick Jagger.

“At first I thought it was absurd, these lewd faces,” Mr. McKinley said. “But this is his aspect of communing with Grateful Dead music, the same way we all do, in a religious sense.”

“I have no idea what my face looks like when I’m at one of these shows,” he added, “but I bet I look pretty ridiculous, too.”

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John Mayer Announces Dead & Company’s Final Tour For 2023

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Dead & Company - The Final Tour

Dead & Company

Tickets On Sale Starting Friday, October 14th at 10AM Local.

Static Digital Homepagecarousel 1920x1080 Deadandco Finaltour 2023 Nationalasset (1)

DEAD & COMPANY is launching its 2023 summer tour on Friday, May 19th and Saturday, May 20th in Los Angeles at the Kia Forum with dates running through Friday, July 14th and Saturday, July 15th when the tour ends in San Francisco at Oracle Park.  The band - Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, John Mayer, and Bob Weir, with Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chimenti – will perform two sets of music drawing from the Grateful Dead’s historic catalog of songs. Tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, October 14th @ 10 AM local venue time through deadandcompany.com . 

The highly-anticipated 2023 summer tour, produced by Live Nation, will be the band’s final tour since forming in 2015. Highlights include the tour-opening back-to-back concerts at the KIA FORUM in Los Angeles (Friday, May 19th & Saturday, May 20th), as well as doubleheaders at WRIGLEY FIELD in Chicago (Friday, June 9th & Saturday, June 10th); SARATOGA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER in Saratoga Springs, NY (Saturday, June 17th & Sunday, June 18th); CITI FIELD in NYC (Wednesday, June 21st & Thursday, June 22nd); and THE GORGE in George, WA (Friday, July 7th & Saturday, July 8th); an epic return to FENWAY PARK in Boston, MA (Sunday, June 25th); the band’s first-ever three-night stand at FOLSOM FIELD in Boulder, CO (Saturday, July 1st, Sunday, July 2nd, & Monday, July 3rd); and the tour finale - a two-night debut at ORACLE PARK in San Francisco (Friday, July 14th & Saturday, July 15th). A full listing of the 2023 tour dates can be found below.

To ensure that tickets get directly into the hands of fans, advance presale registration is now available HERE powered by Seated. The Artist Presale begins Wednesday, October 12th at noon local venue time and runs through Thursday, October 13th at 10 PM local venue time. Advance registration does not guarantee tickets. Supplies are limited. 

Guests who prefer an enhanced experience for this memorable Dead & Company tour can purchase a variety of VIP and Travel Packages. Packages include seamless venue access, early GA entry, pre-show lounge with food and a cash bar, exclusive merchandise, or travel packages for multi-night runs in various cities. Packages from 100X Hospitality will go on sale October 12th at noon local venue time. For full details, click HERE .

Dead & Company and Activist will continue their work with longtime sustainability partner REVERB to reduce the summer tour’s environmental footprint and engage fans to take action for people and the planet. More details at REVERB.org .

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A Requiem for the Dead

Dead and Company—the most successful and longest-running post-Jerry configuration of Grateful Dead members—has purportedly given up the road. We took one last trip to Shakedown Street to make sense of what it all meant and what it means if they’re done.

john mayer final tour

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The Grateful Dead have died many times. Depending on whom you ask, their first death came only a few years after their 1965 formation, as the raunchy organ jams and all-night raves of their psychedelic days gave way to statelier songwriting and more sophisticated playing. The transition was punctuated by the 1973 death of Ron “Pigpen” McKernan, the harmonica player and vocalist whose ability to command a room and yelp out blues ad-libs for half an hour on “Turn on Your Lovelight” made him an intensely personable figure; at one point, he was so recognizable, the band’s label ran a Pigpen look-alike contest. But as the Grateful Dead’s exploratory ethos inevitably led them to new territory and better drugs, Pigpen was left behind. He avoided psychedelics, drank bottle after bottle of wine, and stopped touring a few months before his death. Though Jerry Garcia was already the band’s intellectual center, Pigpen had been its major draw and frontman, until he wasn’t. His final show, at the Hollywood Bowl in 1972, marked the last time a truly charismatic singer performed Grateful Dead music with any of the band’s original members.

Until October 29, 2015. That was when Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir and drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann took the stage at Times Union Center in Albany, New York, for the first gig with their new guitarist and co-vocalist: John Mayer. The surviving members of the Grateful Dead have reconfigured themselves several times since Garcia’s 1995 death, playing under a variety of names both together (the Other Ones, Furthur, the Dead) and solo (Phil Lesh and Friends, Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros., RatDog). Plenty of guitarists have been put in the unenviable position of stepping into Garcia’s role as the band’s primary musical force, to varying degrees of success. But with all due respect to Warren Haynes, there has never been anyone quite like Mayer involved with this music before.

The Dead and Company lineup didn’t make immediate musical sense in 2015 and was, quite frankly, very funny for people who didn’t care about Mayer or the Dead. Enlisting Mayer, with his bankable face and blandly virtuosic blues-scorching style, seemed like an extraordinarily obvious cash grab and an artistically suspect decision; it seemed equally impossible to imagine Mayer fans wooking out to the red-eyed reggae of “Estimated Prophet” and crusty Deadheads savoring slicked-back versions of old Pigpen songs.

But over the course of eight years and 235 shows, Dead and Company performed several miracles. They lasted longer than any post-Garcia configuration of Grateful Dead members—a genuine feat considering the level of animosity and manipulation among those surviving players—and consistently played to crowds that rivaled those the Dead drew in the heady gate-crashing days of the late 1980s and early 1990s, when they were the biggest touring act in the country. Those bigger crowds in turn rekindled the parking-lot scene that has been part of Dead culture since the late 1970s at a scale not seen since the days of Garcia. Though they fastidiously refused to expand it, Dead and Company developed a genuinely new way of performing and presenting what is almost certainly the greatest and most dynamic songbook any American rock band has ever produced.

But perhaps most important, they maintained and ultimately solidified the legacy of the Grateful Dead—not so much as a band but as the originators of a distinct form. Though it may seem unlikely when artists of their generation are selling off their catalogs for nine digits, no rock band of any era will be remembered as fondly as them. Most musicians understand their primary medium to be the studio recording, which makes sense—you can maintain control in the studio, and the songs are placed on a gallery wall and can be admired like paintings. They are, essentially, finished. But by understanding their music as something that should be made fresh night after night for new fans, year after year and decade after decade, the Grateful Dead suggested that their songs are never complete. There is no final version; there’s not even a definitive live version.

john mayer final tour

In 2023, even the most proficient Beatles tribute acts are working the college-bar circuit, and it’s impossible to imagine anyone daring to take up the mantle of the Lennon-McCartney catalog with any credibility once Sir Paul calls it quits. But in 100 years, there will still be bands who are able to tour the country playing Grateful Dead music in new and inventive ways, bringing the old corpses to life once again, and there will be crowds eager to hear them do it. But I’m getting ahead of myself. These are all solidified thoughts, intellectual end points, and even if they’re where we’ll end up, there’s no telling how we’ll get there.

Which is, as you’ve probably heard, the whole point. I set out to see as many Dead and Company shows as I could this summer, ultimately catching 10 concerts in four states, from the warm-up at Jazz Fest to the three-night finale in San Francisco. I wasn’t in search of the true meaning of America or after any of the other very literary reasons people often give for going on the road; we have more than enough writing from white people who are trying to figure out why they don’t feel at home here. I am a Deadhead. I sigh as I say so, for I see the paisley-patterned connotations that spill out of that word the moment I type it. I was 9 years old when Garcia died, and my natural taste runs between slippery jazz and blackened death metal. But the music of the Grateful Dead has a hold on me that I cannot explain. I wanted to figure out why I’m not the only one.

The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival has run nearly every year since 1970, and it has almost always had terrible weather. There is really no good time to stage an outdoor festival in New Orleans, or at least not one that spans seven days of on-site performances over two weeks. For hours leading up to Dead and Company’s set on May 6, it rains hard—pelting, driving, tropical rain, the kind that obviates any rain gear—and, perversely for New Orleans at this time of year, it’s cold . I clutch my link of boudin and shiver, resigned to being physically miserable in a way that is at least novel, while my battle-hardened local friends and warm-blooded midwestern spouse laugh and place bets on what the band will open with. A shirtless guy in a crumbling cowboy hat wanders past selling enamel pins of the Steal Your Face skull and lightning bolt logo (a.k.a. the Stealie), the Terrapin Station turtles, and Garcia’s Wolf logo. I mention to him that I’d seen him at the Hollywood Bowl in the past and ask whether he still has any of his “Gayer for Mayer” pins. He shakes his head and tells me he’s out of “Queer for Weir,” too.

john mayer final tour

Then, finally, with very little fanfare, Dead and Company wander onto the stage. Drummer Jay Lane, a one-time member of Primus and frequent Weir collaborator, has replaced Bill Kreutzmann. Decked in an Ancient Aliens T-shirt, he takes his place behind the kit as Weir and Mayer play a few tentative sideways notes. They resolve into “Truckin’,” and the clouds part, and the rain stops, and the sun shines. I know how unlikely that sounds; all I can tell you is that it’s true.

“Truckin’” is the final song on 1970’s American Beauty , which is, alongside the same year’s Workingman’s Dead , the Grateful Dead’s high-water mark as a studio band. Both albums are filled with country tunes with deceptively complex chord changes, stacked harmonies that defy the individual singers’ occasionally pitchy individual performances, and a rustic charm that feels more attainable than, say, the baroque folk-pop of their friends in Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. Every song on both albums feels like it could have been written in the 19th century.

Dead and Company play “Cumberland Blues” at Jazz Fest. They play it again in Phoenix a few weeks later, and again in Bristow, Virginia, and at Wrigley Field. They cannot stop playing “Cumberland Blues” on this tour. It’s fairly straightforward, at least for a Dead song: a two-stepping shuffle that moves a touch faster than the rhythm seems to be comfortable with. The music is a nice mirror of the narrator’s exhaustion after being kept up all hours of the night by his beloved Melinda, who seems not to respect the physical and emotional rigors of his life in the mine. The narrator pointedly does not want to dance—or whatever else Melinda’s trying to get him into. But the song doesn’t care, and throughout the summer, the band seems to side more and more with Melinda. Dead and Company long ago developed a reputation in the wider Deadhead community for their slackened tempo—Dead and Slow, they’re called—but all tour, they play the song at a blistering pace that they’ve never even tried before. Mayer reels off lines in the breaks, getting notes out like he’s bailing out a boat. By the time they get to San Francisco in mid-July, “Cumberland Blues” has transformed from a lovely bit of electric bluegrass into a country dervish, a spinning, hyper-rotating hurricane of a song. This early performance in New Orleans is the first indication that—whether because of the addition of Lane or the stakes of the tour itself—the band is finding new life in the material.

If you consider yourself a discerning music person, the kind who has to call themselves a “music person” instead of a “fan,” it’s easy to get into Workingman’s Dead and American Beauty . All you need is a general appreciation for sturdy songs and a willingness not to think too much about how much Marcus Mumford probably likes them. But to get into the band’s live tapes—and thus into the essence not only of the Grateful Dead but of Dead and Company, as well—is much more difficult. You have to listen to a lot of 1950s rock covers. You have to listen to a lot of George Jones songs sung by someone who isn’t George Jones. You have to be able to look at a track list, see a 12:57 version of “Dancing in the Streets,” and have faith that whatever’s on the other side of the first two and a half minutes will be worth hearing Weir sing a disco version of a soul song.

I came to the Dead as a music person. I was going to pop-up record sales and buying rare Brazilian vinyl. I had a granular understanding of the modal differences between East African and West African music; I could typically tell whether a song had been recorded in Mali. I was “not really interested in the guitar anymore.” Most important, I was listening to a lot of Herbie Hancock and a lot of Can. In the mid-1970s, the jazz heavyweight and the free-spirited German weirdos were both pursuing a form of funk music that rippled with grooves and dissolved into space. You could dance to it, but it could also catch you up the way driving through the mountains sometimes does: You keep moving, but your mind is suddenly still.

At the same historical moment, the Grateful Dead were in pursuit of the same kind of sound. There are versions of “Dancing in the Streets” and especially Weir’s “Playing in the Band” from the mid-’70s that pulse and shimmer, where all sense of the original melody and tone has been completely scraped away and the band is intently exploring the foundation on which it was built. Kreutzmann liked to say that his goal as a drummer wasn’t to keep time but to keep mood, and once you begin to tune in to the mood that’s being cultivated by any form of the Dead, their ability to find new ways of expressing it becomes astonishing. The jam that leads “Scarlet Begonias” into “Fire on the Mountain” on the May 8, 1977, tape—probably the band’s most famous jam—is mind-boggling at a technical level; there are moments in which all five musicians seem to be playing both songs at once. But it’s no less admirable for the way it sustains a feeling of buoyancy, of pleasant surprise, of a seemingly unlimited number of happily beguiling opportunities around every corner.

You have enough moments like this, and you eventually find yourself through the looking glass. You become someone who appreciates how the zapping laser of Garcia’s guitar gooses Weir’s vocal in “Dancing in the Streets,” who dreams about cracking open a few cold ones and listening to “El Paso.” You might completely forget that the thing that got you into this music was the wild-eyed, experimental nature of it. When you sing along in full throat to “U.S. Blues” with tens of thousands of people who aren’t aware or don’t care that the original band was being ironic when it sang the “wave that flag” chorus, you’ve come a long way toward being cured of the need to use music as a way to differentiate yourself. The appeal becomes simple: It feels good to drink beers in the daytime and sing songs with your spouse and your friends and fall in love with a band. And then you watch them spend 15 minutes turning “Bird Song” inside out until it feels like tissue-paper-soft jazz, and you look around and go, My God, there are 40,000 people at Mayer’s experimental music concert .

L.A.! The Fabulous Forum! Where Magic and Kareem went back-to-back! Where Nicholson was always courtside! Where Harry Styles went on a run of 15 sold-out shows, as the only banner hanging from the rafters proclaims! Outside, half the city of Los Angeles is crammed into the narrow channel of Shakedown Street, the vendor market that runs through the parking lot and is as ubiquitous a sight at Dead shows as tie-dye. (It is, in fact, the source of much of that tie-dye.) And onstage, Mayer is making his guitar twinkle and hum; he’s going textural and pursuing blue moods. Yes, he’s ripping a few mondo solos and making the faces as he does so. You can only redeem so much of a man.

john mayer final tour

Dead and Company would not be playing to this many people this often if Mayer weren’t onstage. But his celebrity doesn’t solely account for the group’s swelling popularity. In 2016, the first full Dead and Company trek made $29.4 million, according to industry standard keeper Pollstar, good for only the 59th-highest-grossing tour worldwide. By 2021, they took in $50.2 million and finished fifth, one spot below the Eagles and two above Guns N’ Roses—even though they didn’t even leave the United States. Were Mayer’s name the driving force behind ticket sales, you’d expect them to have been higher at the outset, before the novelty of seeing a superstar slumming it with wooks had worn off.

Instead, his image allowed the band to more easily capitalize on the momentum created by the 2015 Fare Thee Well concerts, in which Weir, Hart, and Kreutzmann performed for the last time with bassist Phil Lesh. Dead and Company entered the world as both a curiosity and an excuse to keep the party going, but the strong performances—and the response from aging Gen X Deadheads starved for the massive stakes of the Grateful Dead’s late ’80s and early ’90s run—instantly made them into something bigger.

When the band was put together in early 2015, Mayer was only a couple of years removed from the lowest days of his career. In 2010, he’d given an interview to Playboy in which he called his ex-girlfriend Jessica Simpson “crack cocaine,” used the n-word, and compared his penis to David Duke. (His heart, though? “Benetton.”) In 2011, he was swimming in his pool and heard the knotty, questioning, guarded opening riff of the Grateful Dead’s “Althea” on Pandora. As he tells it, he sprinted into the house sopping wet to find out what he was hearing.

“Althea” didn’t cure Mayer—the next year he’d give another infamous interview, this one to Rolling Stone , in which his claim to be able to hold his breath for four minutes and 17 seconds was probably the least noteworthy tidbit—but it did set him on a new path. In that same piece, Eric Clapton called Mayer a “bedroom” guitarist and said, “I wasn’t sure if John was aware of the power of playing with other people.” Perhaps aware he was supposed to be burnishing the younger player’s image, he added, “Though I think he is now.” The power of playing with other people is central to what makes the music of the Grateful Dead work. Garcia knew this intuitively. Though he possessed the skills to shred, he rarely did. His playing was rarely showy. Rather than draw attention to himself, he stoked the flames of what his bandmates were doing, hinting at directions they might take together or else allowing himself to soak in the mood they had collectively created. Every line seemed to end in a question mark; he didn’t make assertions, he made suggestions.

john mayer final tour

This is only part of the reason Garcia became an icon to many. Despite the Grateful Dead’s sunshine-daydream image in the popular mind, their music is deeply suffused with pain and confusion. Robert Hunter’s lyrics feint toward salvation without being able to offer it, and they’re deeply informed by the fact that each individual is ultimately responsible for navigating the fog of life. “If I knew the way, I would take you home,” goes the band’s defining statement, from “Ripple.” The scholar Brent Wood surveyed the band’s lyrics and discovered that about three-fourths of the songs Garcia sang are about suffering, and a full half of those songs are about death. Garcia played guitar in a way that perpetuated these feelings—the persistent reality of pain and the desire to find a little happiness anyway are both present in so much of what he did. With Dead and Company, Weir allows the songs to move more slowly, until the jams begin to take on an almost painterly quality. When it works, the jam becomes as much a part of the story as the lyrics, a sigh of emotion spontaneously exhaled by the six guys onstage.

It took Mayer a moment to understand how he fit into the music; witness him trying to play roadhouse blues in the twilit silence of a “Space” jam in 2015. But as he found his footing, and particularly as he developed his musical relationship with keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, his ability to meet the songs on their own terms deepened. “I’ve always said that if I’m doing my job right, I bring the crowd closer to the music they love while disappearing from the equation a little bit,” he wrote on Instagram a few days before the Forum shows. Indeed, it’s a minor miracle that his star power vanishes the moment he steps onstage, where he appears to be just some dude in an expensive-looking T-shirt and with very bad tattoos. While the jokes about 17-minute versions of “Your Body Is a Wonderland” never subside from some corners of the Dead world, by the time the 2023 tour arrived, Mayer was fully integrated into the cosmos. There have been “John Mayer Is Dead to Me” shirts on the lot for years. In San Francisco, I see one that says, simply and provocatively and sincerely, “He is my Jerry.”

Onstage at the Forum, he’s restrained and tasteful. He plays “Althea” as if he, too, is awed by the oracle at the song’s center, and by the oracle the song has been for him. It’s not hard to understand why. The titular character functions as a mirror for the narrator, telling him he’s been “honest to the point of recklessness” and “self-centered in the extreme.” He says he’s “lacking in some direction,” that “treachery” is “tearing me limb from limb.” “Ain’t nobody messing with you but you,” Althea tells him, and the truth cools his head.

The most commonly asked question on tour: “Where is Shakedown Street?” Named for the Dead’s disco-funk song, it’s ostensibly a tailgate, but that descriptor is wildly insufficient. The most common answer, also taken from the song: “You just gotta poke around.”

john mayer final tour

This is probably true in some places. In New York, at Citi Field, you do not have to poke around. Shakedown Street pokes you. It is impossible to miss, taking over a fenced-in parking lot under the elevated train tracks across the street from the stadium. Dozens of people are pushing through the narrow gate at all times, and instantly they’re surrounded by people with ice chests selling domestics, microbrews, White Claws, you name it for $5 a can. Grills hiss in the distance. Nitrous tanks hiss nearby. Balloons pop constantly. “Mushrooms, K, acid” is whispered loudly by dudes making conspicuous eye contact. A sign advertises BULK FEMINIZED SEEDS in bold type. There’s a booth selling Jerry rolls, which seem to be some kind of sandwich and not a drug. Everyone has their own version of grilled cheese: vegan cheese, gluten-free bread, but no sight of the guy from 2022 who promised “bacon in every motherfucking bite.” From every direction, tapes of old Dead shows—both Grateful Dead and Dead and Company—blast from portable stereos and car sound systems.

People started selling things in the parking lots at Grateful Dead shows as early as 1973, author Jesse Jarnow reports in Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America , around the same time they started following the band on tour. It makes sense: sell a few limp burritos, make enough money to get to the next show. By the 1980s, Shakedown became its own attraction, as its cheery lawlessness drew in crowds of college students anxious to party, runaways escaping the latchkey lifestyle, white kids with dreads claiming their parents still lived in Babylon, and genuine Deadheads, too. The psychologist Joseph Campbell, who lived next door to Weir, once took in the parking-lot scene in Oakland and declared it an “antidote for the atom bomb.” By 1989, it had expanded so much it made the Dead unwelcome in places they’d played for years, with riots and general mayhem leading the band to prohibit vending outside gigs. Did it work? Come on.

john mayer final tour

There is much to buy on Shakedown Street. Not just drugs, though definitely drugs. There are crystal sellers whose wares have gone dusty from years of exactly this, and those who are selling fragile $1,000 specimens that should probably not be out on a folding table with this many wasted people around. There are head-shop-quality patches and pins tacked to a corkboard. A guy calling himself Grateful Fred is selling metallic plaques of Dead iconography you can put on your trunk to make it look like Toyota is offering up a limited-edition Wookmobile; he has the hatchback door of a brand-new Volkswagen set up in his booth so that you can see how they look in situ.

But mostly there is versioning. In the same way that a dub producer takes the elements of a traditional reggae track and reframes it into something more wigged out, artists have been fucking with the iconography of the Grateful Dead and selling it back to Deadheads for decades. A pre-fame Keith Haring sold shirts on the lot in 1977, his characteristic line work already apparent in the doodles that fill the blank space in the Stealie. A guy calling himself New Springfield Boogie exclusively makes merch that references both the Dead and The Simpsons , and with the charisma of Lyle Lanley selling Springfield on the Monorail , he gleefully shares the names of his creations. Homer disappearing into the roses of the band’s Bertha skeleton is given the “St. Stephen”–referencing title “In and Out of the Garden He Goes.”

Anything worn onstage by Mayer gets a boost. In 2022, an official shirt designed by bootlegger Jeremy Dean with a dancing bear face and the word “California” in a straightforward script was sold out before the end of the first set at the first show of the tour. When I ask one vendor how many of his $80 sweatshirts (which have a BMW logo in the Stealie) he sold after John wore one in June, he demurs, telling me only, “A lot.” I ask another vendor whether he’s concerned the band will force him to stop selling his shirts, which violate the only enforced rule of vending by having the words “Dead and Company” on them. He laughs and tells me he’ll just text Mayer and have him sort it out.

This is commerce, plain and simple, and there are obvious points to be made about the co-opting of the counterculture and the frenzy of consumerism. Dead and Company themselves certainly aren’t shy about accruing capital. But in the moment, as the beers flow and the trips come on, it feels like a convincing illusion of everything Heads project onto the band: freedom, joy, bright abandon. Unlike at a sporting event, there is no sense of aggression because there is no opponent. Unlike at a mass church gathering, there is no sense of propriety or even reverence; the enthusiasm is ungated. At least until the sun goes down and the chemicals start to curdle, it is a bright, warm—druggy, paranoid—dream, the California ideal appearing like a mirage in the heart of New York City.

We spend two days at the Gorge, mostly sitting in a scrap of shade beneath what must be the only row of trees in all of eastern Washington, and the view never begins to seem real. Maybe you’ve seen pictures of the scenic natural amphitheater on the other side of the Cascades from Seattle and wondered what it’s like to see a show there. It is beyond picturesque. It is difficult—genuinely difficult—to take it all in. The stage is placed perfectly, right in a crook of the Columbia River, and for the first set of both nights, before the sun goes down, it is more or less impossible to pay attention to the band onstage. The rugged cliff faces and soft turns in the landscape are the only things around that look older and more weathered than Weir.

john mayer final tour

Other than the surprisingly robust cell service, there is nothing convenient about the Gorge. It’s literally in the middle of nowhere, equally remote from Seattle and Spokane. Getting in Thursday night takes three hours owing to increased security. The campsites, where thousands of Deadheads are posted up from Thursday night through Sunday morning, are a rugged mile or so trek from the entrance to the amphitheater itself. Even though the venue is nearly 40 years old, there are no permanent bathrooms.

The heat is so bad on Night 1, the band seems to check itself. They cut their tempo and ease their way through the songs, whether to discourage ecstatic dance in the crowd or to ensure they make it through the evening themselves. We are near the end of the road now, a week from the end of the tour, and everyone seems to be slightly distracted by that knowledge. Weed smoke clings to the ground as the sun pours into the amphitheater.

After the show, Shakedown stays open late. There are multiple bands playing in the campground, one of them working on a pacy jam that sounds like it’s on its way toward a Talking Heads song. In the morning, there are what appear to be Hare Krishnas playing a trance remix of chant music with live finger-cymbal accompaniment. I wander into Shakedown in search of iced coffee and find two kids in their 20s playing guitar, working their way through the Dead’s “Estimated Prophet” with no vocals, just wavering in the heat vision of one of Weir’s best songs. Someone is advertising a yoga retreat “for Deadheads ONLY” in Costa Rica. Another guy is hawking some kind of Dead-adjacent red wine despite the temperature. “What a long, strange trip it’s been for these grapes,” he cries. “But they’re here now, and so are you.”

So are we. “At this point, two and a half months in[to the tour], I’m exhausted,” Michael Koppinger Jr. tells me the next weekend in San Francisco. Koppinger is a vendor in his early 20s who went to his first show in Raleigh in 2018, was given LSD by a friendly beer salesperson before he even made it to Shakedown, and never looked back. “It blew my mind,” he says. “I was raised Catholic and in this strict upbringing and culture. If people did drugs, it was like, you were bad. So to just be in a space where you could do whatever and it was normalized, it kinda blew my shit.” He printed up his first shirt in 2021, with plans to sell a hundred or so over a weekend run, then come home. Instead, he pulled out of a plan to buy a house with his (now ex-)girlfriend, put everything he owned in his parents’ attic, and split. “I’ve been on the road pretty much since,” he tells me.

Besides the profound bodily exhaustion, the biggest struggle of being a touring Deadhead in 2023 is scraping together gas money. “Once you get to Shakedown, you can make things work,” Koppinger says. “You can get into the show, you can get fed, you can get a drink. The community takes care of itself. But getting show to show, spot to spot, it’s rough.” As they cross the country, Heads panhandle for gas money, pile into the backs of buses and sleep in piles, and do what it takes to get to the next show. “I don’t live in this amount of love and community in everyday life,” Koppinger says. “In 2023 America, alienated, atomized, no one does.”

john mayer final tour

It is easy to get caught up in this. Even as I roast away in Washington, I’m clinging to what remains of this tour, of the fiction that you can simply zone out of everyday life in the name of having a good time and bring the people you love with you. Nobody knows where this energy will go next summer, whether to jam upstarts Goose or to bluegrass hero Billy Strings or, as it did in ’95, back to Phish. What’s certain is that it won’t be destroyed, even if it transmutes. Even if it lies dormant.

Nobody believes that what happens on tour or at a Dead show is a truly sustainable lifestyle. Like the music itself, it’s ephemeral, being created and destroyed in the same moment. It takes up space in real life, but it exists outside it, in the carnivalesque. The trick, when it all finally ends, is to remember that and not get rolled up in the tent when the circus leaves town.

But first, we have to go to San Francisco.

There are many rumors. The obvious ones involve the last living members of the Grateful Dead who aren’t in Dead and Company: Lesh is going to sit in. Background vocalist Donna-Jean Godchaux will step in to sing. Kreutzmann will join in for “Drums” (Billy himself stokes the last one by tweeting, “You know what would be cool …” a week before the final show; he never elaborates). Bob Dylan toured with the Grateful Dead in 1987 and has been covering “Brokedown Palace” lately, plus he has a break in his tour. Neil Young is in the area and has a conspicuous hole in his itinerary, too. Some people shoot for the stars and insist Paul McCartney will come out for the twinned covers of Traffic’s “Dear Mr. Fantasy” and “Hey Jude.”

In the end, none of this happens. Dead and Company set up in center field at Oracle Park and play six sets over three nights, about 10 hours of music, with no repeats. When they launch into “Bertha” to open Night 3, there is a prickling in the air. Bassist Oteil Burbridge’s wife has painted Garcia’s famous four-fingered handprint onto her husband’s face, and when the cameras focus on him during a cover of the Rascals’ “Good Lovin’,” the roar from the crowd is staggering. There have been so many big-time Dead shows in stadiums like this, and in the fresh daylight and cool early-evening San Francisco breeze, time collapses, and it feels like we’re inside each and every one of those shows; I’m fully conscious of the fact that for something to be timeless, it has to exit time, it has to die.

john mayer final tour

Weir was 16 when he joined the Grateful Dead. He grew up in Garcia’s shadow and never grew out of it. Garcia gained a kind of gravitas as he aged, even as heroin and diabetes ravaged his body and made him look 20 years older than he was. Weir courted silliness, wearing polo shirts tucked tidily into very small jean shorts. The Spinners, a religious movement that sprung up around the band and gained enough traction to warrant serious anthropological study, took as dogma what many fans felt: “Jerry Garcia is sacred and Bobby Weir is profane,” as Jarnow sums it up in Heads .

Another thing: “Bobby Weir makes me weep,” Jarnow tells me over Zoom one afternoon. He makes me weep, too. Somehow, in his old age, Weir has become a stately presence, a figure of poise. He carries with him the entire history of the counterculture, and he seems to feel its weight. When he sings Marty Robbins’s “El Paso” or Merle Haggard’s “Mama Tried,” he inhabits the weariness of longing and guilt. There are Garcia songs that, thanks to age and wisdom or maybe just sheer repetition, Weir sings better than Jerry ever did: Witness him reel off the names of Billy Sunday and Jack the Ripper in “Ramble on Rose.” He sings with a far-off focus, as powerful and distant as a spaceship cruising through the cosmos. On Night 2 in San Francisco, he sings the postapocalyptic “Morning Dew” drenched in green light, his voice ragged and heartbroken as he surveys what’s left of the world after it ends.

Weir didn’t write the majority of the Grateful Dead’s best songs. “Ripple,” “Eyes of the World,” “Terrapin Station,” “Brokedown Palace,” “Sugaree,” “Althea”—they’re all Garcia’s. But over the 30 years they played together, Weir gained a better understanding of how those songs worked than anyone else possibly could. When he plays them, it’s hard to argue that they’re not in some way his.

The Grateful Dead keep dying. And regardless of whether Dead and Company are truly done right now, they will die one day, too. (Mayer set off a firestorm online by saying Dead and Company is “still a band—we just don’t know what the next show will be” a couple of days after the last show at Oracle Park; theories abound.) But written into the music is the notion that songs themselves don’t need their creators to live. This is hardly revolutionary in the world of jazz, where standards frequently outlive the people who wrote them, or in classical music, where most composers are incapable of performing their own works in the first place. But in rock ’n’ roll, where the cult of authenticity insists that meaning comes mostly in creation, rarely in interpretation, the music and ethos of the Dead are an anomaly. Dead and Company are far from the only group keeping this music alive, but Weir, convinced of the power of the songs as forms of expression and not simply vehicles for dancing or virtuosity or even experimentation, frames his band’s catalog with the dignity it deserves.

It is but one way of keeping the Dead alive. There are so many ways to express yourself, so many paths into and out of this music. Everyone has the right to desire their own expansion, to test their edges and see what else they might be able to contain. I see so many people on Dead tours who can’t possibly dress this way in their everyday lives. On tour, or at the one show they can afford to hit, or watching the livestream at home, or catching some local Dead band struggle through the “Slipknot!” changes, Deadheads enact the answer to a simple problem. The alienation we all feel is real and unavoidable. What if we learned to understand it as good?

Sadie Sartini Garner has written music criticism for Pitchfork , The A.V. Club , The Outline , and many other places. She lives in Long Beach, California, with her partner Rachelle.

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Dead and Company, months after final tour, reunites for residency at Las Vegas Sphere

 John Mayer on guitar, Bill Kreutzmann on drums and Bob Weir on guitar playing on a stage

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Rock band Dead and Company will reunite for more performances later this year, despite completing its “final tour” in 2023.

The group will be the latest music act to take over the Las Vegas Sphere, with a lineup of 18 shows starting in May. The residency news came down in a joint Instagram announcemen t shared by Dead and Company and Sphere.

“In 2023, Dead & Company played their final tour,” reads white text against a black, speckled background. “But there are other ways to make sure the music never stops.”

A large round display of the earth over the Las Vegas strip against stormy clouds

Sample in a Sphere? Phish is the latest music act set to take over Las Vegas orb

Phish will bring its music to the Las Vegas Sphere in 2024, the band announced Thursday. The band called the venue a ‘breathtaking canvas.’

Nov. 30, 2023

In the Instagram clip, audio of Dead and Company delivering the opening lines of Grateful Dead’s take on “Not Fade Away” scores video of the band’s technicolor logo filling the Sphere’s exterior LED screens. The band and Sphere announced the dates for the upcoming residency in a s econd Instagram post Thursday morning.

“Picture a bright blue ball just spinning, spinning free. Dizzy with eternity,” read the caption, a nod to Grateful Dead’s “Throwing Stones.”

The band — singer John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge, Jeff Chimenti and the Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir and Mickey Hart — will kick off a string of Sphere shows on May 16. They follow Phish, which last year announced four April shows .

Presale registration for the Dead and Company shows is now available. General ticket sales begin Feb. 9 at 10 a.m. Pacific.

LAS VEGAS, NV - AUGUST 23: The Sphere pictured from Westchester Dr. in Las Vegas, Nevada on August 23, 2023. (Sinna Nasseri / For The Times)

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Sept. 13, 2023

The Sphere, located behind the Venetian resort and casino, made its debut as a flashy music and arts venue in September, coinciding with the start of U2’s equally flashy residency . The arena cost $2.3 billion to build and seats nearly 18,000 people.

Mayer announced in September 2022 that Dead and Company would set off on its final tour in the summer of 2023. Before the group started touring with a pair of shows in Los Angeles, Dead and Company revealed in April 2023 that founding member and Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann would not join the tour.

“After many long discussions and some good old-fashioned soul searching, we are letting you know that our brother Bill Kreutzmann will not be joining us on our final summer tour,” the group said in a Facebook statement. “Bill wants you to know that he is in good spirits, good health and he is not retiring.”

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - SEPTEMBER 29: (Exclusive Coverage) Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton and Bram van den Berg of U2 perform during opening night of U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere on September 29, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation)

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On opening night at the $2.3-billion Sphere concert hall, the visuals projected onto the high-def walls behind and above U2 were a show unto themselves.

Sept. 30, 2023

Dead and Company clarified that it would carry out its final tour “with Bill’s full endorsement and support.” The band’s tour ended in July with several shows in San Francisco. It’s unclear whether Kreutzmann will reunite with the group for this year’s residency.

A representative for Dead and Company did not respond to The Times’ request for confirmation.

During the final tour, Hart reflected on the end of the group’s touring career, telling ABC Audio , “we’re just turning the page.”

“We never said we’ll never play again, but we’ll never tour again,” he said. “Some things, good things, they come to an end and it’s really good to put a period on it and then move on.”

With three months left before taking over Sphere, Dead and Company promised good times ahead for its audience: “It’s gonna be a ball.”

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john mayer final tour

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John Mayer Finds New Life In Solo Tour Finale At Kia Forum In Inglewood [Review/Photos/Videos]

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Pulling off a one-person show on any size stage is no small feat. The bigger the stage gets, the bigger that feat becomes. How big of a feat, then, should we consider John Mayer ’s solo tour, which sold out arenas across America, like, say, the 18,000-seat Kia Forum in Inglewood, California?

The seven-time Grammy winner has always had a charm and confidence on stage, and has never shied away from sharing his inner monologue and having his own repartee with the audience. But here, during the final stop of his latest tour at the Forum, he commanded the large and legendary room with an ease that belied his usual neuroses in an improv show for the ages.

Throughout the two-hour finale, John took turns cracking jokes and pouring his heart out while playing (and doing) “whatever comes to mind.” He sprinkled Def Leppard into a winding medley of “Love on the Weekend” and “Split Screen Sadness”, blended a Joni Mitchell -style version of “Last Train Home” into “Something Like Olivia”, teased Simon & Garfunkel ’s “Homeward Bound” at the end of “Stop This Train”, played “3 by 5” by audience request, and shouted out Jon Bon Jovi (who, apparently, was in the building) with a riff from “Dead or Alive” en route to “If I Ever Get Around to Living” and “No Such Thing”.

Mayer spent most of the show plucking away at his acoustic guitar, with occasional sojourns onto his resonator guitar and piano. At one point, after a run on the keys that included “New Light”, “You’re Gonna Live Forever In Me”, “I Will Be Found”, and “Changing”, he channeled his inner James Blake by recording a piano loop over which he then played a ripping guitar solo.

Along the way, he sprinkled in silly quips, heartfelt messages to his fans, and video clips that hearkened back to his early days as a burgeoning musical talent with a signature smart aleck charisma. For all the throwbacks to classics, though, it was the freshness of the affair that made it so special. Sure, John’s new, unreleased track, “Drifting”, was a nice touch, though there was certainly something else about John’s attitude and approach that proved pervasive.

“This is the truest tour I have ever played in my life,” he told the audience, during one of many heart-to-heart moments. “This tour has changed everything for me.”

John also confessed that he had been considering what he would do next. Retirement, he claimed, wasn’t in the offing, though mentioning it at all seemed to suggest that maybe, just maybe, stepping away for a time (or even for good) had been on his mind at some point.

Now, instead, John Mayer seems refreshed, renewed, and ready for the next phase of his career and his life. This may be his greatest feat of all. At the age of 45, after 25 years in the music business, with eight albums and multiple reinventions—from semi-reluctant pop star to precocious blues phenom, from country twanger to Grateful Dead acolyte (including a drop of “Friend of the Devil” at the Forum)—he still seems to have so much more to give.

There’s already plenty more to come on his calendar, as well. After wrapping up his prodigious run with Dead & Company this summer , John will resume the domestic leg of his solo acoustic tour in late September before continuing on to Europe in spring of 2024, with yet another stop at the Forum along the way.

Click below to view fan-shot videos and photo galleries of John Mayer and support act Alec Benjamin courtesy of photographer Matthew Rea .

John Mayer – “Love on the Weekend” (With “Split Screen Sadness” Snippet & “Hysteria” By Def Leppard Snippet) – 4/14/23

[Video: Obvslyme09 ]

John Mayer – “Free Fallin'” – 4/14/23

[Video: Sevy Smith ]

John Mayer – “Edge of Desire” – 4/14/23

[Video: eddie rubio ]

John Mayer – “Changing” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “Your Body is a Wonderland” – 4/14/23

[Video: Sutton Sabinash ]

John Mayer – “Stop This Train” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “In Your Atmosphere” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “XO” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “3×5” – 4/14/23

[Video: MrB & Me ]

John Mayer – “Born and Raised” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “Covered in Rain” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – “New Light” > “You’re Gonna Live Forever in Me” – 4/14/23

John Mayer – Tour Final Thoughts & “Drifting” – 4/14/23

Setlist : John Mayer | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 4/14/23

Acoustic: Slow Dancing in a Burning Room, Heartbreak Warfare, Love on the Weekend (with ‘Split Screen Sadness’ snippet and ‘Hysteria’ by Def Leppard snippet), XO, January 16, 2002: “Room for Squares” Interview, Neon, On the Way Home (Snippet/request) > Who Says, Last Train Home, Something Like Olivia, Driftin’, In Your Atmosphere (With ‘Wherever I Go’ outro)

Piano: New Light (First verse & chorus only) > You’re Gonna Live Forever in Me, I Will Be Found (Lost at Sea) > Changing, Acoustic, “Continuum” Interview, Stop This Train (With ‘Homeward Bound’ by Simon & Garfunkel outro), The Age of Worry, Covered in Rain > Your Body Is a Wonderland, 3×5, Walt Grace’s Submarine Test, January 1967

Double-Neck Acoustic: Friend of the Devil (Grateful Dead), If I Ever Get Around to Living (With ‘Wanted Dead or Alive’ by Bon Jovi intro), Edge of Desire

Encore: Born and Raised, Free Fallin’ (Tom Petty)

John Mayer | Kia Forum | Inglewood, CA | 4/14/23 | Photos: Matthew Rea

Alec benjamin | kia forum | inglewood, ca | 4/14/23 | photos: matthew rea.

john mayer final tour

Dead & Company final tour dates include 2 Upstate NY concerts

  • Updated: Oct. 06, 2022, 3:14 p.m. |
  • Published: Oct. 06, 2022, 1:15 p.m.

Dead & Company

John Mayer, Bill Kreutzmann, Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, from left, of Dead & Company play during a concert at Madison Square Garden on Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015, in New York. (Photo by Robert Altman /Invision/AP) Robert Altman/Invision/AP

The Grateful Dead members are going on tour with John Mayer one last time next summer.

Dead & Company announced its final tour dates Thursday, including two Upstate New York concerts. The band will perform at Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) in Saratoga Springs on Saturday, June 17, 2023, and Sunday, June 18, 2023; both shows begin at 7 p.m.

Tickets will go on sale Friday, Oct. 14 at 10 a.m. through Live Nation . Prices may fluctuate based on demand.

Advance presale registration is available at deadandcompany.com . A limited number of artist presale tickets will go on sale Wednesday, Oct. 12 at noon.

According to a press release, Dead & Company — Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, John Mayer, and Bob Weir, with Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chimenti — will perform two sets of music drawing from the Grateful Dead’s historic catalog of songs. The band formed in 2015 when Grateful Dead members Hart, Kreutzmann, and Weir joined forces with Mayer, Burbridge and Chimenti.

“As we put the finishing touches on booking venues, and understanding that word travels fast, we wanted to be the first to let you know that Dead & Company will be hitting the road next summer for what will be our final tour,” Dead & Co. said last month, promising an “exciting, celebratory, and heartfelt last run of shows.”

Dead & Company canceled a performance at SPAC this past summer at the last minute when Mayer’s father suffered a medical emergency and was taken to the hospital. Tickets were refunded at the original point of sale, according to the band.

“He is now fairly stable and will continue to undergo some procedures, but as you can understand, I have to stay in NYC and can’t play tonight’s show in Saratoga Springs,” Mayer told fans on Instagram hours before the show was scheduled to begin.

Dead & Company 2023 Tour Dates

Sat May 20 Los Angeles, CA Kia Forum

Tue May 23 Phoenix, AZ Ak-Chin Pavilion

Fri May 26 Dallas, TX Dos Equis Pavilion

Sun May 28 Atlanta, GA Lakewood Amphitheatre

Tue May 30 Charlotte, NC PNC Music Pavilion

Thu Jun 01 Raleigh, NC Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek

Sat Jun 03 Bristow, VA Jiffy Lube Live

Mon Jun 05 Burgettstown, PA The Pavilion at Star Lake

Wed Jun 07 St. Louis, MO Hollywood Casino Amphitheater

Fri Jun 09 Chicago, IL Wrigley Field

Sat Jun 10 Chicago, IL Wrigley Field

Tue Jun 13 Cincinnati, OH Riverbend Music Center

Thu Jun 15 Philadelphia, PA Citizen’s Bank Park

Sat Jun 17 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center

Sun Jun 18 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center

Wed Jun 21 New York, NY Citi Field

Thu Jun 22 New York, NY Citi Field

Sun Jun 25 Boston, MA Fenway Park

Tue Jun 27 Noblesville, IN Ruoff Music Center

Sat Jul 01 Boulder, CO Folsom Field

Sun Jul 02 Boulder, CO Folsom Field

Mon Jul 03 Boulder, CO Folsom Field

Fri Jul 07 George, WA The Gorge

Sat Jul 08 George, WA The Gorge

Fri Jul 14 San Francisco, CA Oracle Park

Sat Jul 15 San Francisco, CA Oracle Park

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John Mayer tour dates 2024

John Mayer is currently touring across 1 country and has 24 upcoming concerts.

Their next tour date is at Sphere in Las Vegas, after that they'll be at Sphere again in Las Vegas.

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It was his birthday and his band played Happy Birthday To You for him after the first song, Belief!

After the intermission, he covered Tougher Than The Rest by Bruce Springsteen, saying that it was one of his favourite songs of all time.

It was a good setlist: he played some songs that he doesn't usually play, like Waitin' On The Day, Born And Raised or In Your Atmosphere.

Before playing Changing, he said that to finish the song he thought about Irish people in a pub singing it together, and that every time he sings it he thinks about Ireland.

He and all the band were really great.

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WHAT A MAGICAL EVENING OF PURE MUSIC & ART!

The Viejas Arena at the SDSU campus is simply a fabuous venue- and on a perfect cool night in San Diego, the sold out show was an artistic masterpiece- the setlists were spot on. The artsy colorful 3D Backdrop, that I believe Mayer himself was a key designer in its creation, blended beautifully with the video montages displayed above it.

Speaking of the video special effects- subtle, colorful, real-time gems, shadow effects in a stacatto pattern of the guitar neck, I've never seen anything like it in 40 years of concert outings. The crowd was captivated- a long 30 minute intermission appeared relatively early in the show.

I've been going to John Mayer shows since 2002 and though I am obviously a biased super-fan, I can honestly state that this production is-- far and away-- much more amazing than what I saw at the Forum just two years ago.

JM is continuously expanding horizons, getting more creative-- and has the crowd in stitches laughing when he chats up his latest insights & specific San Diego references... I just wish I had the whole show on video so I could watch it again and catch every little thing I missed!

mpatwalsh’s profile image

My Husband and I were blown away at the complete show. John is a master of master's at playing the guitar. I still can't get over how amazing it was to watch him get into playing and what we heard. It made so much of a great difference seeing him in person play. His band is extremely talented with the gifts they brought to the stage too. This year we've seen 4 concerts so far and John Mayer was the best! I hope he continues to perform for many years because we'll see him every time if he comes to Phoenix or Tucson (where we live). John spoke to the crowd and made us laugh during the show. They even dropped confetti on the main floor during their encore - it was so cool!! No other band this year we saw live did as much for the crowd entertainment as John Mayer.

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“This is the Super Bowl of trips for the lifelong Dead Heads”: John Mayer and Dead & Company are officially returning for a 6-week residency at the MSG Sphere

Mayer help will lead a Grateful Dead-honoring residency at the world's most futuristic venue in Las Vegas this summer, months after the supergroup's farewell tour

Dead & Ccompany MSH Sphere Residency 2024

John Mayer quoted the Grateful Dead’s track Throwing Stones as he announced that Dead & Company will return to the stage for a six-week residency at the MSG Sphere in Las Vegas. 

A total of 18 shows between May 16 and June 22 will see John Mayer and former Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart return to the stage. The news, which will be a delightful shock to many, comes despite the band having previously stated that 2023's extensive run of dates would be their last.

“Picture a bright blue ball just spinning, spinning free. Dizzy with eternity,” Mayer's post begins, announcing the residency at the ultra-futuristic, 18,600-capacity arena. The band follows in the steps of U2, who called the venue home for a 40-show residency celebrating Achtung Baby last year.

Reacting to the post, once commenter claimed: “This is the Super Bowl of trips for the lifelong Dead Heads.” 

The Grateful Dead offshoot had made its 'final' show a major spectacle last year, with a 22-song set including classics Truckin' and Brokedown Palace , as well as a passionate performance of Buddy Holly's Not Fade Away . Under the immersive 360-degree experience of the MSG Sphere, which is the largest spherical structure on the planet, the band will surely leave that extravaganza paling in comparison.

A post shared by John Mayer (@johnmayer) A photo posted by on

John Mayer formed Dead & Company back in 2015, with the band’s touring line-up completed by Oteil Burbridge, Jay Lane, and Jeff Chimenti.  Mayer had become obsessed with the Grateful Dead back in 2011 after discovering the song Althea on Pandora. His 2012 album, Born and Raised carried that obsession, with a "subtle but abundant" array of 'Dead influences.

After just shy of a decade of success, the band had supposedly played its swan song at that San Francisco date last summer, which capped off a tour that entertained 840,000 Grateful Dead and Mayer fans.

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As such, it's shaping up to be another busy year for Mayer, who had an especially action-packed 2023. Last year saw the guitarist embark on an acoustic tour , which saw him test-drive new material, and reprise his blues power trio for the first time in six years. 

The MSG Sphere, meanwhile, is doing its best to become the eighth wonder of the modern world. Officially opened in September 2023 after a four-year construction, beneath its dome fans are treated to an immersive 16k experience delivered by its wraparound LED screens, space-age audio tech and 4D physical effects.

Screenings of Director Darren Aronofsky's docu-film, Postcard from Earth , followed U2's grand opening residency, for which the Edge revealed he'd ditched tube amps . Instead, he opted for Universal Audio amp emulator pedals, with the chosen trio replicating the characteristics of a ‘55 Fender 5E3 Deluxe Tweed, Vox AC30 and AC30 Top Boost, and ‘65 Fender Deluxe Reverb.

Advance presale registration for the Dead & Company residency is now available. Tickets go on general sale February 9 at 10am PT.  

For more information, head to DeadandCompany.com .

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Phil Weller

A freelance writer with a penchant for music that gets weird, Phil is a regular contributor to Prog , Guitar World , and Total Guitar magazines and is especially keen on shining a light on unknown artists. Outside of the journalism realm, you can find him writing angular riffs in progressive metal band, Prognosis , in which he slings an 8-string Strandberg Boden Original, churning that low string through a variety of tunings. He's also a published author and is currently penning his debut novel which chucks fantasy, mythology and humanity into a great big melting pot.

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Andy Cohen Denies Love Affair With John Mayer Despite Mountains of Evidence, According To Fans

  • Andy Cohen and John Mayer addressed rumors of a romantic relationship in a recent interview, confirming they are just best friends.
  • Fans have speculated on the close friendship between the TV exec and the musician due to their public displays of affection.
  • Mayer defended their relationship, emphasizing that rock stars and gays can be friends without a sexual component.

Andy Cohen is drawing a line in the sand about where he stands with best friend John Mayer . After years of speculation, the two recently shared their views on each other, the rumors, and their relationship. For whatever reason, fans of the "Daddy of Bravo" and the "Your Body is a Wonderland" singer can't help but speculate that there's more beneath the surface of their friendship than they're letting on.

The Hollywood Reporter shared that Cohen has been with the mega network for the past 20 years. And while Mayer is a world-renowned musician , he too is a Bravo fan who has shown his support for Cohen's reality TV legacy despite recent workplace allegations from former Bravo stars. Between the flirty interviews and public displays of affection, we're taking a look at how their relationship began , what's been said, and where they stand today.

Andy Cohen Denied Hes In A Romantic Relationship With John Mayer

In a May 8 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Andy Cohen set the record straight on his romantic relationship with John Mayer . When it was noted that fans had a hard time believing that Cohen and Mayer were just friends, Cohen shouted, "Let them speculate!"

I honestly love John Mayer, and he loves me. But because were so affectionate toward each other, people dont know what box to put that in. They assume were sleeping with each other, which we are most definitely not.

Because the two are seemingly always spotted out and about together, and on each other's social media feeds, it's been presumed that the pair were more than friends. However, after years of speculation and rumors, the two admit they're solely best friends . They're so close that Mayer inducted Cohen into the Hollywood Walk of Fame and spends time with his parents.

The One Interview That Ruined John Mayer's Career

Considering Andy Cohen and John Mayer are currently single, fans of both have a hard time believing Cohen after mountains of evidence over the years. A las, fans must wait to see if sparks eventually fly between the two.

  • It should be noted that Cohen's dating history has been incredibly private and not much is known about his exes.

John Mayer Defended His Friendship With Andy Cohen

After Andy Cohen's interview with The Hollywood Reporter came out, John Mayer stunned his fans when he wrote a letter to the journalist who interviewed Cohen. Mayer shared that he was "intrigued" by the reporter's line of questioning and wanted to circle back to the notion of rock stars befriending a "gay TV personality."

Andy Cohen Might Get Credit For Real Housewives' Success, But It Wasn't His Idea

Mayer felt the wording of the reporter's question insinuated that fans of the two weren't open-minded enough to understand that rock stars and gays can be friends.

Mayer said, Id like to think theyre sophisticated enough to see a relationship like ours without assuming it must include a sexual component.

Mayer ended his letter to The Hollywood Reporter respectfully by closing with, "Reinforcing the idea that any gay/straight relationship needs qualification that it’s not sexual devoids everyone involved of their dignity."

Now that both Mayer and Cohen denied a romantic relationship and are a united front in regards to their friendship, there's nothing left for spectators to wonder. However, that doesn't mean that fans wouldn't love to see these two best friends become a couple! Their banter, good looks, and talent make them an unstoppable pair.

  • In 2023, John Mayer told the "Call Her Daddy" podcast that he is no longer dating because of the special is has become in the public eye.

Andy Cohen Has Denied Romance Rumors With John Mayer In The Past

The 2024 Hollywood Reporter interview with Andy Cohen (and John Mayer's response) isn't the first time that Cohen has denied a romantic relationship with the famed singer. The way he described their friendship, however, made fans believe there was something more to their friendship.

When radio talk show host Howard Stern mentioned Andy Cohen's friendship with John Mayer, Cohen didn't hold back when describing his strong feelings.

"I am in love with John Mayer. We are in love with each other," the Bravo exec exclaimed.

Headlines went wild when Cohen made this confession, which was followed by a declaration of friendship. However, fans' minds were in a pretzel yet again when Mayer made a loving speech for Cohen's Hollywood Walk of Fame. He happily shared "I love Andy more than I can tell you."

Between their kind words to one another, adventures around New York, and loving moments shared in Cohen's many books, Cohen and Mayer's outright denial slowly squash the mountains of evidence behind a romantic relationship.

How Did John Mayer And Andy Cohen Meet?

In an episode of Andy Cohen's radio show "Radio Andy," Cohen explained how he met John Mayer and what led to a long-lasting friendship. A mutual friend introduced the two in the early 2000s, but Cohen had no idea it was Mayer he was walking around with in New York City.

Has John Mayer Been Dating Someone Under The Radar?

After quickly meeting and shopping around New York, Cohen slowly noticed paparazzi following them. The herds of photographers made Cohen realize who he was with.

"I turn to (my friend) Ricky and I go, 'Is this John Mayer that we're with right now?' I didn't recognize that it was you because as you know, I'm really bad with faces and this and that and (Ricky) goes, 'Yeah.' I was like, 'Oh, wow, this is John Mayer. OK.' That's how we met." he said.

Cohen and Mayer's friendship went to new heights after a road trip to see the Grateful Dead's final tour. Cohen told Entertainment Weekly, "John Mayer and I have what some would consider an unlikely friendship. He's one of our greatest living guitarists, and I'm regarded as the dude that stirs the s--t on late-night TV."

The two are so confident in their friendship that Mayer has been Cohen's wingman when out at bars.

Seeing as Andy Cohen and John Mayer have denied the idea of them being romantically involved on numerous occasions, fans can finally rest in knowing that the probability of these two taking their friendship to the next level is incredibly low. Despite the mountains of evidence of Cohen and Mayer dating, these two are nothing more than best friends.

Andy Cohen Denies Love Affair With John Mayer Despite Mountains of Evidence, According To Fans

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Irked john mayer weighs in on viral andy cohen dating speculation.

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Looks like he’s waiting on the world to change.

Just one day after Andy Cohen’s viral interview about his friendship with John Mayer, the musician has weighed in on the discourse himself.

The “Slow Dancing in a Burning Room” hitmaker, 46, has long been friends with the Bravo honcho, who is openly gay, but their friendship prompted much speculation in recent years.

John Mayer and Andy Cohen posing together in an Instagram photo

Now, the singer has chimed in to set the record straight on the nature of their friendship and slammed The Hollywood Reporter for posing the “deeply flawed” question.

Addressing the publication’s co-editor-in-chief Maer Roshan, who conducted the interview with Cohen, Mayer criticized Roshan for bringing up the question in the first place.

“I read your interview with Andy Cohen, and was intrigued by your line of questioning regarding our friendship,” the guitarist began.

“You posited that ‘your friendship with Mayer has been a subject of intense speculation. People seem dubious that a straight rock star can have a close platonic relationship with a gay TV personality.’ I think this is somewhat of a specious premise.”

“First, there is a long and storied history of “rock stars” (not mocking, just won’t refer to myself as one) befriending gay icons and artists,” he continued.

Television host Andy Cohen and musician John Mayer posing for a photo on the set of 'Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen.'

“Second, I think that to suggest that people are dubious of a friendship like mine and Andy’s is to undermine the public’s ability to accept and understand diversity in all facets of culture, be it in art or in real life.”

Mayer said he hopes the public is “sophisticated enough” to accept the fact that the pair’s friendship is strictly platonic.

“That turns the concept of being gay into an ignorantly two-dimensional one, which I know you know it’s not. I don’t question that at all,” he noted, adding that he loves “intelligent discourse.”

“But I bristle at your selectively flimsy logic meant to coax an answer, when the premise itself is so deeply flawed — and quite possibly not even quantitatively true,” he went on.

“Quite simply, if someone is dubious of a platonic relationship between a straight man and a gay man, I don’t think that shallow a view deserves clarification by anyone with self respect, be it Andy or your publication.”

“Reinforcing the idea that any gay/straight relationship needs qualification that it’s not sexual devoids everyone involved of their dignity,” the “New Light” hitmaker concluded.

Instagram photo of Andy Cohen and John Mayer in a car, highlighting their platonic friendship

In a wide-ranging cover story with THR, Cohen, 55, was quizzed on the “intense speculation” surrounding his friendship with the 7-time Grammy winner.

“Let them speculate,” he joked.

Cohen has often faced rumors that he’s involved with Mayer. 

In 2018, Cohen denied the pair were dating after Mayer serenaded him with an acoustic version of  Diana Ross ‘ “It’s My House.”

Instagram photo of Andy Cohen and John Mayer taking a selfie in front of a crowd at Coachella 2019

Cohen thanked him with a hug and a kiss on the lips. 

“But because we’re so affectionate toward each other, people don’t know what box to put that in. They assume we’re sleeping with each other, which we are most definitely not,” he told the outlet.

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John Mayer has scathing response to Andy Cohen dating questions

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John Mayer is fed up with questions about the nature of his relationship with longtime pal Andy Cohen.

Earlier this week, the Hollywood Reporter asked the Bravo exec about the “intense speculation” surrounding his friendship with the Grammy winner — and the latter was not pleased.

Mayer began in a letter to journalist Maer Roshan, which the Hollywood Reporter published Thursday, “I read your interview with Andy Cohen, and was intrigued by your line of questioning regarding our friendship.”

John Mayer and Andy Cohen.

Mayer, 46, then called out how the award-winning editor, 56, presented the topic by telling Cohen, 55, “Your friendship with Mayer has been the subject of intense speculation.

“People seem dubious that a straight rock star can have a close, platonic relationship with a gay TV personality.”

The “Gravity” singer hit back, “I think this is somewhat of a specious premise.”

Andy Cohen and John Mayer in a car together.

“First, there is a long and storied history of ‘rock stars’ (not mocking, just won’t refer to myself as one) befriending gay icons and artists,” he explained.

“Second, I think that to suggest that people are dubious of a friendship like mine and Andy’s is to undermine the public’s ability to accept and understand diversity in all facets of culture, be it in art or in real life.”

Mayer pointed out that he believes the audience is “sophisticated enough” to understand his relationship with Cohen “without assuming it must include a sexual component.”

“That turns the concept of being gay into an ignorantly two-dimensional one, which I know you know it’s not,” the “Your Body Is a Wonderland” singer added. “I don’t question that at all.”

John Mayer holding Andy Cohen.

Mayer noted that he loves “intelligent discourse” but then jabbed at Roshan, “I bristle at your selectively flimsy logic meant to coax an answer, when the premise itself is so deeply flawed, and quite possibly not even quantitatively true.”

The “Free Fallin'” crooner concluded his pointed letter by saying that he doesn’t think “that shallow a view deserves clarification by anyone with self respect, be it Andy or your publication.”

He added, “Reinforcing the idea that any gay/straight relationship needs qualification that it’s not sexual devoids everyone involved of their dignity,” and signed off, “Respectfully, John Mayer.”

Maer Roshan.

Roshan tells Page Six exclusively, however, that while he appreciates Mayer’s “thoughtful comments” about his interview, he “stand[s] by [his] question.”

“The media has spent years scrutinizing and coyly speculating about Andy’s relationship with John Mayer,” the renowned reporter explains.

“I wanted to know why Andy thought that even now, in 2024, there was so much skepticism about the idea that a gay guy and a straight guy can have a close platonic friendship. The fact that this tiny snippet in my 5,000-word interview generated such massive media attention kind of proves my point.”

Roshan points out that as the co-editor-in-chief of the Hollywood Reporter, it was his decision to run Mayer’s letter because he’s “a big boy who can withstand a little criticism.”

He adds, “I thought John raised some interesting points about this issue that deserved a hearing. I’m pretty sure my boyfriends can vouch that I’m far from a homophobe, just a journalist doing his job.”

Maer Roshan.

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Roshan concludes, “John Mayer and I actually had a nice email exchange after I received his letter, and I’m looking forward to seeing him perform at the Sphere next month.”

Roshan’s line of questioning did not come completely out of left field. Mayer and Cohen’s close bond has sparked public interest ever since the latter said the two were in love with each other.

“I am in love with John Mayer. We are in love with each other,” the “Most Talkative” author told Howard Stern in June 2023.

Andy Cohen and John Mayer.

The renowned radio host asked even in that moment, “Swear on your children’s lives that there has never been anything sexual between you and John Mayer,” prompting Cohen to reply, “Yes. I do. I swear.”

The “Daddy Diaries” author then further clarified to Roshan via the Hollywood Reporter on Wednesday, “I honestly love John Mayer, and he loves me.

“But because we are so affectionate to each other, people don’t know what box to put that in. They assume we are sleeping with each other, which we are most definitely not.”

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John Mayer and Andy Cohen.

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Elton John marks '52 years of pure joy' with final tour performance: See photos

john mayer final tour

Elton John closed a musical era Saturday with his final planned tour performance in Stockholm nearly 52 years to the day the 76-year-old first performed there, he told the crowd , calling that period "52 years of pure joy."

The British superstar said the night was "magical."

"I'm trying to process it, and I don't think it will sink in for a while yet that I've finally finished touring," John said in a statement shared with USA TODAY Monday. "I can't tell you how much I'm going to miss the fans and how much their support has humbled me — it will stay with me forever."

The Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour began nearly five years ago in 2018 . His last show Saturday in Sweden happened around two years later than the singer intended it to, thanks to a hip injury that forced him to rearrange his schedule.

"When we set off on my final tour in 2018, I couldn't have foreseen in my wildest dreams the twists and turns and the highs and lows this tour — and the whole world — would have experienced in the next five years," John said. "And every step of the way, my fans have been there. They have stuck with me, they have supported me, they have been patient, and they have kept turning out for every single last show."

Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

The "Tiny Dancer" singer bid America farewell in November, with his final U.S. performance at Dodger Stadium — the famed setting for John's 1975 breakout stadium concerts. 

Take a look at John's final tour performance Saturday in photos.

See the best photos of Elton John at his final tour performance

John took the stage in a dazzling outfit — one of many the singer has donned over the years that have gone hand in hand with his electrifying performances.

Fans who packed the stadium were able to see John not only on the stage but in a larger-than-live iteration on a massive screen.

In heart-shaped, pink-tinted sunnies, John looked out toward the crowd as he sat at his piano on stage.

The crowd took video with some moments from his performance and later shared them to social media, including his final song and speech of the final show , for which he sang "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road."

The stage was adorned with a gold border with "Farewell Yellow Brick Road" embossed across the stage-framing feature. As he sang, some throwback photos and videos splayed across the big screen during his "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" recital.

'Be kind to each other': Emotional Elton John bids America farewell from Dodger Stadium

Contributing: Bryan Alexander

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Donald glover announces first childish gambino world tour since 2019.

The rapper is heading back on the road in support of the newly released reworked version of his 2020 album, now titled 'Atavista.'

By Tatiana Tenreyro

Tatiana Tenreyro

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Donald Glover

Donald Glover is heading out on a world tour in support of his reworked version of his 2020 Childish Gambino album 3.15.20 , now titled Atavista .

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Donald glover announces final two albums under childish gambino moniker, donald glover and maya erskine on real-life marriage, professional divorce and when to walk away.

The world tour announcement coincides with the surprise release of Atavista on Monday, after previously teasing that the updated album was coming . Glover announced Atavista ‘s release on social media at midnight, writing, “ATAVISTA is streaming now. This album is the finished version of ‘3.15.20’, the album i put out 4 years ago.”

In addition to announcing the LP, Glover wrote that there’s a “special vinyl” coming soon with “visuals for each song.”

The rapper also shared a video for “Little Foot, Big Foot,” his collaborative track with Young Nudy for the album.

In the video, Quinta Brunson plays a jazz club owner who advises Glover’s fictional doo-wop trio Johnny and the Pipes to not make eye contact with the front row, “as they will take it as a challenge.” The 1920s-inspired clip turns to present day for Young Nudy’s part, as the rapper sits beside a miniature set of the jazz club under a starry sky.

More than a month before Atavista ‘s release, Glover shared the tracklist for the album on an Instagram Story, introducing the names of the previously untitled songs. The record includes collaborations with Ariana Grande, 21 Savage and Summer Walker, among others.

During an Instagram Gilga Radio livestream back in April, Glover shared that the rerelease of 3.15.20 as Atavista (which was the title he originally wanted for the 2020 record) would be one of two final albums under the moniker of Childish Gambino .

The other album underway is Bando Stone & the New World , which will serve as the soundtrack for Glover’s film of the same name. Though he hasn’t given an official date for the final LP, he mentioned during the livestream and the Atavista release announcement that Bando Stone & the New World is slated to arrive this summer.

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‘9-1-1’ crew member dies in car accident following 14-hour overnight shift, glaad media awards: jennifer lawrence roasts mike pence, drag activist protests inside ceremony, david sanborn, renowned jazz saxophonist, dies at 78, judge judy sues for defamation over story alleging she tried to help menendez brothers get a retrial, janelle monáe on being “othered” for her “nonbinary way of looking at music” ahead of i made rock ‘n’ roll festival, dissident iranian filmmaker rasoulof flees country: “with a heavy heart, i chose exile”.

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