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{{Short description|American keyboardist,
{{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians -->
songwriter and singer (1952–1990)}}
| name = Brent Mydland
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2022}}
| image = BrentMydland1989.png
{{Infobox musical artist
| caption = Brent Mydland preforms with the [[Grateful Dead]] on 7/7/1989 at [[JFK Stadium]].
| name = Brent Mydland
| image_size =
| caption = Brent Mydland in 1987
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| birth_name = Brent Mydland
| image = Brent Mydland.jpg
| birth_name =
| alias = Clifton Hanger
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1952|10|21|mf=y}}<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1PBQlmVT3NMC|title=Grateful Dead: What a Long, Strange Trip It's Been|first=Michele|last=Hollow|publisher=Enslow Publishers, Inc|year=2009|page=33|isbn=978-0-7660-3028-2}}</ref>
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1952|10|21|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Munich]], [[Germany]]
| birth_place = [[Munich]], West Germany
| origin = [[Concord, California]], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1990|7|26|1952|10|21}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1990|7|26|1952|10|21}}<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DykffzkFALoC|title=Rock Obituaries – Knocking on Heaven's Door|page=454|first=Nick|last=Talevski|publisher=Omnibus Press|year=2010|isbn=978-0-85712-117-2}}</ref>
| death_place = [[Lafayette, California]]
| death_place = [[Lafayette, California]], U.S.
| instrument = [[Keyboard instrument]]s
| instrument = Keyboards, vocals
| genre = [[Rock music|Rock]], [[psychedelic rock]], [[blues]], [[gospel]], [[country|rock]], [[musical improvisation|improvisational]], [[jam band|jam]]
| genre = {{flatlist|
| occupation = [[Musician]], [[songwriter]]
* [[Rock music|Rock]]
| years_active = 1979–1990
* [[jam band|jam]]
| label = [[Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros.]]<br />[[Arista Records|Arista]]
* [[blues music|blues]]
| associated_acts = [[Grateful Dead]] <br /> [[Bobby and the Midnites]] <br /> Go Ahead <br /> Kokomo <br /> [[Silver (band)|Silver]]
* [[gospel music|gospel]]
| website =
* [[country music|country]]
* [[boogie woogie]]
* [[psychedelic music|psychedelia]]}}
| occupation = Musician, songwriter
| years_active = 1971–1990
| label = [[Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros.]]<br />[[Arista Records|Arista]]
| associated_acts = [[Grateful Dead]], Bob Weir Band, [[Bobby and the Midnites]], [[Go Ahead (band)|Go Ahead]], Kokomo, [[Silver (band)|Silver]]
| website =
}}
}}


'''Brent Mydland''' (October 21, 1952&nbsp;– July 26, 1990) was the fourth [[keyboardist]] to play for the [[United States|American]] rock band the [[Grateful Dead]]. He was with the band for eleven years, longer than any other keyboardist in the band.
'''Brent Mydland''' (October 21, 1952&nbsp;– July 26, 1990) was an American keyboardist, songwriter and singer. He was a member of the rock band [[The Grateful Dead]] from 1979 to 1990, a longer tenure than any other keyboardist in the band.

Growing up in [[Concord, California]], Mydland took up music while in elementary school.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brent Mydland |url=https://catalog.pascolibraries.org/Author/Home?author=%22Mydland,%20Brent%22 |access-date=2023-12-22 |website=Pasco County Library System |language=en}}</ref> After graduation, he played with a number of bands and recorded one album with [[Silver (band)|Silver]] before joining [[Bobby and the Midnites]] with [[Bob Weir]] and jazz veterans [[Billy Cobham]] and [[Alphonso Johnson]]. This led to an invitation to join the Dead in 1979, replacing [[Keith Godchaux]] who had decided to leave. Mydland quickly became an important member in the Dead, using a variety of keyboards including [[Hammond organ]] and various [[synthesizer]]s and singing regularly. He wrote several songs on the band's studio albums released while he was a member.

After a tour in the early summer 1990, Mydland died of an accidental drug overdose.


==Biography==
==Biography==


===Early life===
===Early life===
Born in [[Munich]], Germany, the child of a Norwegian U.S. Army chaplain, Mydland moved to San Francisco with his parents at the age of one. Mydland spent most of his childhood in [[Concord, California]].{{sfn|Browne|2015|p=[https://archive.org/details/somanyroadslifet0000brow_g4v6/page/146/mode/2up 146]}} He started piano lessons at age six and had formal classical lessons through his junior year in high school. In an interview he commented that "My sister took lessons and it looked fun to me, so I did too. There was always a piano around the house and I wanted to play it. When I couldn't play it I would beat on it anyway." His mother, a graveyard shift nurse, encouraged Mydland's talents by insisting that he practice his music two hours each day. He played trumpet from elementary till his senior year in high school; his schoolmates remember him practicing on an accordion, as well as the piano, every day after school.{{citation needed|date=April 2018}}
Born in [[Munich]], [[Germany]] as the child of a [[Norwegian people|Norwegian]] U.S. Army chaplain, Mydland

moved to [[San Francisco]], [[California]] with his parents at the age of one. Mydland spent most of his childhood
Mydland played trumpet in the school's marching band, but was dismissed for having long hair. He graduated from [[Liberty High School (Brentwood, California)|Liberty High School]], [[Brentwood, California]], in 1971.{{citation needed|date=April 2018}}
living in Antioch, California, an hour east of San Francisco. He started piano lessons at age 6 and had formal

classical lessons through his junior year in high school. He said, "my sister took lessons, and it looked fun to me,
===Pre-Grateful Dead===
so I did too. There was always a piano around the house and I wanted to play it. When I couldn't play it I would beat on it anyway."
Mydland began playing rock'n'roll with friends in high school (Liberty High School), and was influenced by organists such as [[Lee Michaels]], [[Ray Manzarek]] and [[Steppenwolf (band)|Steppenwolf]]'s [[Goldy McJohn]].{{citation needed|date=April 2018}} He became a fan of the Grateful Dead in the late 1960s, though was less impressed by their 1970s material.{{sfn|Jackson|1999|p=304}}
His mother, a graveyard shift nurse, encouraged Mydland's talents by insisting that he practice his music for two hours each day.

He played trumpet from elementary til his senior year in high school; his schoolmates remember him practicing on an accordion,
After graduation, Mydland lived in a [[quonset hut]] in [[Thousand Oaks, California]], writing songs. He joined a band with Rick Carlos, who was invited by [[John Batdorf]] of [[Batdorf & Rodney]] to join their band.{{citation needed|date=April 2018}} Mydland was asked to join shortly after. He then formed the band [[Silver (band)|Silver]] with Batdorf, releasing one album on [[Arista Records]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/silver-mw0000377227|title=Silver – Silver|publisher=AllMusic|access-date=April 11, 2018}}</ref>
as well as the piano, every day after school.
"In my late teens I went and saw a lot of groups, and thank God I did, because it didn't last much longer." When asked if he had musical
aspirations in high school he admitted to wanting to originally be a " a high school band teacher or something, I played trumpet in the
[marching] band....then my senior year I got kicked out of the [marching] band for having long hair... they told me "sorry we'll lose
points for your long hair", so that was the end of my [marching] band career. I gave up the trumpet and concentrated on the keyboards."
Brent graduated from Liberty High in nearby Brentwood in 1971


Mydland then got in touch with [[Bob Weir]] via a connection from Batdorf & Rodney, and joined Weir's side project [[Bobby and the Midnites]] as keyboardist and backing vocalist.{{sfn|Jackson|1999|p=304}}
===Beginning of music career===
"Late into high school," he said, "I got into playing rock 'n' roll with friends and it was like I had to start from the beginning almost,
because if I didn't have a piece of music in front of me I couldn't do much. I changed my outlook on playing real fast after that.
I think dope [pot] had something to do with that." He was influenced by rock organists like Lee Michaels, Ray Manzarek and
Goldie McJohn of Steppenwolf, and was in a series of local bands. In the late '60s he bought the first albums by the Airplane and the Dead,
and he said "I was even in a band where I used to sing 'Morning Dew,' and we did 'Good Morning Little Schoolgirl,' too."
When asked if that scene, based heavily on extended jams, had influenced him musically at all he said,
"For a while..yes, but I could never find people that could make that kind of music sound good...We'd jam along and then..[pretends to nod off]
.."Are we done?" It's nice to have people who add to it and change it instead of "Ok, i've got MY part!" That gets boring really fast."
"Senior year I got together with a guitar player...The day after we graduated we drove down to L.A. and tried to get a band started down there.
He knew a drummer and bass player who were both pretty good. We were serious about it for about six weeks or so and then it kind of fell apart.
One guy wanted to go surfing, another guy was working. I ended up living in a quonset hut in Thousand Oaks, writing songs and eating a lot of
peanut butter and bread and whatever else was around...In one of the bands, I played with a guy named Rick Carlos and he got a call from
John Batdorf of Batdorf & Rodney asking him to come to L.A. to play with them. A couple months later they were looking for a
keyboard player who could sing the high parts, so I went down there and checked that out and joined the band. I got to do a tour with them,
which was great experience. Then after that fell apart John and I put together Silver. Silver lasted about two years.
We put out an album on Arista and were going to do a second but Clive [Davis, Arista president] kind of choked it."


===Grateful Dead===
===Grateful Dead===
Mydland joined the Grateful Dead in April 1979, replacing [[Keith Godchaux|Keith]] and [[Donna Godchaux]], who had decided to start their own band.{{sfn|Jackson|1999|p=304}} After two weeks of rehearsals, he played his first concert with the band at the [[Spartan Stadium (San Jose, California)|Spartan Stadium]], [[San Jose, California|San Jose]], on April 22.{{sfn|Jackson|1999|p=304}}
In 1978, Brent Mydland had played in a [[Bob Weir]] solo project called the Bob Weir Band. "After Silver
I bummed around L.A. for about six months and then hooked up with Weir through John Masseri, who I'd played
with back in Batdorf & Rodney, and I joined the Bob Weir band.... With Bobby, at first, I'd say to him,
"Well should I play this instrument on this song, or this other instrument?" and he'd say, "I don't care.
Why not play one this time and the other the next time if you feel like it." It loosened me up a lot and it got me
more into improvisation.... I liked it a lot."


Mydland quickly became an integral part of the Dead owing to his vocal and songwriting skills as much as his keyboard playing. He quickly combined his tenor singing with founding members Weir and [[Jerry Garcia]] to provide strong three-part harmonies on live favorites.{{sfn|Jackson|1999|p=305}} He easily fit into the band's sound and added his own contributions, such as in ''[[Go to Heaven]]'' (1980) which featured two of Mydland's songs, "Far From Me" and "Easy to Love You", the latter written with frequent Weir collaborator [[John Perry Barlow]]. On the next album, ''[[In the Dark (Grateful Dead album)|In the Dark]]'' (1987), Mydland co-wrote "Hell in a Bucket" with Weir and Barlow; he also penned the train song "Tons of Steel".
On April 16, 1979, he joined the Grateful Dead, replacing [[Keith Godchaux]] and [[Donna Godchaux]].
The couple had been asked to leave the band in February of that year, due to poor performance throughout the past year.


Mydland quickly became an integral part of the Dead, not least because of his songwriting contributions. ''[[Go to Heaven]]'' (1980) featured two of Mydland's songs, "Far From Me" and "Easy to Love You", the latter having been written with frequent Weir collaborator [[John Perry Barlow]]. On the next album, ''[[In the Dark (Grateful Dead album)|In the Dark]]'' (1987), Mydland co-wrote the defiant favorite "Hell in a Bucket" with Weir and Barlow, and also penned the train song "Tons of Steel". ''[[Built to Last]]'' (1989) featured several more of Mydland's works, most notably the moody "Just a Little Light", the environmental song "We Can Run, But We Can't Hide", the live-performance-driven "Blow Away", and the poignant "I Will Take You Home", a [[lullaby]] written with Barlow for Mydland's two daughters. Mydland easily fit into the band's sound and added his own contributions. His high, gravelly vocal harmonies and emotional leads added to the band's singing strength, and highlighted several old favorites like "Cassidy", "Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo" and "Ramble on Rose," as well as covers like [[Willie Dixon]]'s "Little Red Rooster" [[Robert Johnson]]'s "Walkin' Blues" [[Traffic (band)|Traffic]]'s "[[Dear Mr. Fantasy]]", the [[Beatles]]' [[Hey Jude]]
''[[Built to Last]]'' (1989) featured several more of Mydland's songs: the moody "Just a Little Light", the environmental song "We Can Run", the live-performance-driven "Blow Away" and the poignant "I Will Take You Home", a [[lullaby]] written with Barlow for Mydland's two daughters.
and the Band's "[[The Weight]]". Mydland enjoyed the organ and several other experimental tones, whereas in concert,
his predecessor had usually preferred the piano. Mydland played several different electric pianos and synthesizers
throughout his tenure, including a [[Fender Rhodes]], the early Yamaha digital synth GS-1, Yamaha CP-70,
and a Kurzweil Midiboard (midied to Roland MKS20). His [[Hammond B-3]] stayed with him throughout his entire tenure.


Mydland wrote several other songs that were played live but not released on any studio albums, including "Don't Need Love", "Never Trust A Woman", "Maybe You Know", "Only a Fool", all written solo, and "Gentlemen Start Your Engines", with Barlow. Many of these were intended for a solo album that was started but never completed, along with "Love Doesn't Have to be Pretty", performed live solo, but not with the Grateful Dead.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dead.net/song/only-fool|title = Grateful Dead Only a Fool}}</ref> He also co-wrote "Revolutionary Hamstrung Blues" with [[Phil Lesh]] and Lesh's lyrical collaborator Bobby Petersen, although the song was performed live only once.
After joining the Dead, Mydland also played in another of Weir's bands, [[Bobby and the Midnites]], in 1980 and 1981.


His high, gravelly vocal harmonies and emotional leads added to the band's singing strength, and he even occasionally incorporated [[scat singing]] into his solos. [[Monty Byrom]], guitarist on Mydland's unreleased solo album, said Mydland was "one of the most talented guys I've ever met. I've never seen anybody that could sing with those kind of notes, night after night. He was a cross between [[Gregg Allman]] and [[Howlin' Wolf]]. It was crazy." Mydland's vocals added color to old favorites such as "[[Cassidy (song)|Cassidy]]", "Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo", "Ramble on Rose", the Band's "[[The Weight]]", and he even wrote his own verse for [[Willie Dixon]]'s "[[Little Red Rooster]]". He sang lead on many covers, including [[Traffic (band)|Traffic]]'s "[[Dear Mr. Fantasy]]", the [[Beatles]]' "[[Hey Jude]]", [[the Meters]]' "Hey Pocky Way", and, with Lesh, the Spencer Davis Group's "[[Gimme Some Lovin']]{{-"}}. Mydland's instrumental interactions with Garcia became an increasingly prominent factor in the Dead's music over the years—their duo exchanges in "[[Friend of the Devil]]" were an early and lasting example.
In 1986, Mydland formed [[Go Ahead (band)|Go Ahead]] with several Bay area musicians, including [[Bill Kreutzmann]] and [[Jesse Colin Young]] and former Santana members [[Alex Ligertwood]] and [[David Margen]]. The band toured during the time [[Jerry Garcia]] was recovering from a diabetic coma.


Mydland's last show with the Grateful Dead was on 23 July 1990 at The World Music Theater, in Tinley Park, IL.
Mydland's last show with the Grateful Dead was on July 23, 1990, at the World Music Theater, in Tinley Park, Illinois.


In 1994, he was inducted into [[The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] as a member of the Grateful Dead.<ref>{{cite web | url =http://www.rockhall.com/inductee/the-grateful-dead| title =The Grateful Dead| publisher = Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | accessdate = 2012-10-02}}</ref>
In 1994, he was inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] as a member of the Grateful Dead.<ref>{{cite web | url =http://www.rockhall.com/inductees/the-grateful-dead| title =The Grateful Dead| publisher = Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | access-date = October 2, 2012}}</ref>

====Equipment====
While Keith Godchaux had preferred to play only piano at concerts, Mydland was keen to experiment with different sounds during live performances. He frequently changed his setup to add new sounds. He played several different electric pianos and synthesizers throughout his tenure. Upon joining the band in 1979, his piano sounds came from a [[Fender Rhodes]]. In 1982, he switched to a [[Yamaha CP-70]] electric grand, though he only used it for about one year. During this time he also used analog synthesizers including a [[Minimoog]], and a [[Sequential Circuits Prophet-5]]. In 1983, he replaced his analog synthesizers and electric piano with a Yamaha GS-1 digital piano.<ref name=kb>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.keyboardmag.com/lessons/the-art-of-synth-soloing-brent-mydland|title=The Art of Synth Soloing - Brent Mydland|magazine=Keyboard Magazine|date=May 15, 2018|access-date=September 25, 2019}}</ref> The GS-1 is an extremely rare synthesizer, with only about 100 ever produced. In the mid-eighties, he also added an [[E-mu Emulator#Emulator II|E-mu Emulator II]] to his rig.

In mid 1987, Mydland's synthesizer setup changed once again. [[Bob Bralove]] had been hired by the Grateful Dead to program and maintain new MIDI systems. The GS-1 and Emulator II were replaced by a new [[Kurzweil Music Systems|Kurzweil]] MIDIboard MIDI controller, which gave Mydland the ability to use voices from an array of different synthesizer modules, and blend them together using volume pedals and foot switches. The MIDIboard, like the GS-1 it replaced, was capable of polyphonic aftertouch, a relatively rare feature in MIDI controllers. The synthesizer racks included a [[Roland MKS-20]] digital piano, a Kurzweil 250RMX (the rack-mounted version of the famous [[Kurzweil K250]] synthesizer), a Roland S550 sampler, an [[Oberheim Matrix synthesizers|Oberheim Matrix 1000]], a Lexicon PCM41 digital delay, a Lexicon PCM70 reverb/effects processor, and an Akai mixing board.
A [[Roland D-50]] keyboard was added in the fall of 1987, and a [[Korg M1]] keyboard was added in the fall of 1989 after experimenting with the M1R module version on the 1989 summer tour. These keyboards could be controlled through the MIDIboard, or could be played independently.

Mydland regularly played the [[Hammond organ]], and had a B-3 with ten modified [[Leslie speaker]]s in his setup for his entire tenure. The Grateful Dead purchased three B-3 organs for his use when he joined the band, and he personally owned several B-3 organs at the time of his death. The B-3 he played for the majority of his tenure with the Grateful Dead, known for once being covered with stickers, is currently used by keyboardist [[Jeff Chimenti]] during live performances. It was present at the 50th anniversary [[Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of the Grateful Dead|Fare Thee Well]] concerts in July 2015.

===Other work===
In 1982, he recorded and mastered a solo studio album, but it was never released.

In the summer of 1985, he performed with Dead drummer [[Bill Kreutzmann]] in their band Kokomo along with 707's Kevin Russell and Santana's David Margen.

In 1985, he performed at the Haight Street Fair with Weir, [[John Cipollina]], and [[Merl Saunders]], among others.

In 1986, Mydland formed [[Go Ahead (band)|Go Ahead]] with several San Francisco Bay area musicians, including [[Bill Kreutzmann]], also former Santana members [[Alex Ligertwood]] on vocals and David Margen on bass, as well as guitarist Jerry Cortez. The band toured during the time [[Jerry Garcia]] was recovering from a diabetic coma, and also briefly reunited in 1988.

In 1988, Mydland performed at the Bay Area Music Awards, sharing an organ with Merl Saunders and performing alongside [[Jerry Garcia]], [[Bob Weir]], [[John Fogerty]], and others.

He also did numerous solo projects and performances, as well as duo performances with Bob Weir numerous times throughout the 1980s, with Weir on acoustic guitar and Mydland on grand piano.


===Death===
===Death===
Brent Mydland died at his home in [[Lafayette, California]], on July 26, 1990, shortly after completing the Grateful Dead's summer tour. An autopsy conducted by the Contra Costa Coroner's office revealed that Mydland had died of acute cocaine and morphine intoxication. Richard Rainey, Contra Costa County coroner, stated that "Toxicology tests reveal lethal levels of morphine and cocaine in the blood", a mixture "commonly referred to as a '[[Speedball (drug)|speedball]]'."<ref>{{cite web | url =https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-08-11-mn-236-story.html|title=Grateful Dead Member Died of Drug Overdose|work=Los Angeles Times|date=August 11, 1990}}</ref> He was the third Dead keyboardist to die (after founding member [[Ron "Pigpen" McKernan]] in 1973 and [[Keith Godchaux]] in 1980); Garcia said Mydland's death was "crushing" and it abruptly closed a chapter of the band's career.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.relix.com/articles/detail/relix_revisited_the_brent_mydland_years_an_appreciation_of_the_grateful_dead_in_the_1980s|title=Relix Revisited - the Brent Mydland years|first=Blair|last=Jackson|journal=Relix|date=October 21, 2016|access-date=April 11, 2018}}</ref>
Brent Mydland died of an accidental [[speedball (drug)|speedball]] [[drug overdose|overdose]]<ref>[http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/the-grateful-dead/biography The Grateful Dead: Biography] Rolling Stone online</ref> at his home on "My Road" in [[Lafayette, California]], on July 26, 1990, shortly after completing the band's summer tour. He was buried at [[Oakmont Memorial Park]] in Lafayette.

Mydland was replaced by [[Vince Welnick]] on synthesizers and vocals, and, for a short time, temporary fill-in [[Bruce Hornsby]] on grand piano and accordion.
Mydland is buried at [[Oakmont Memorial Park]] in Lafayette, California.


===Legacy===
===Legacy===
Weir has said that the late '80s and early '90s with Mydland was his favorite time playing in the band.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/q-a-bob-weir-on-life-with-jerry-garcia-and-the-grateful-dead-20120806|title=Q&A: Bob Weir on Life With Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead|magazine=Rolling Stone|date=August 6, 2012|access-date=April 12, 2018}}</ref>
Mydland's contributions to the Dead's sound is unmeasurable. His chemistry with the late band is catalogued well in the [[Grateful Dead's]] latest release, Spring 1990, which features six full-length shows from his last year with the band. In the liner notes, Grateful Dead member [[Robert Hunter (lyricist)|Robert Hunter]] said this of Mydland:


[[David Gans (musician)|David Gans]] has described Mydland as "a talented synthesist [sic], who was able to play all this beautiful synthesized string stuff, but he could still kick ass and take names on the Hammond organ."
{{cquote|The fourth major Grateful Dead era ends with the passing of Brent Mydland. The first concluded with [[Ron "Pigpen" McKernan|Pigpen]]; the second with the departure of Keith and Donna. The third began when Brent joined and began learning the ropes and culminated with Garcia's physical collapse.
The fourth era started with an unexpectedly successful comeback, fully integrating Brent's vocal and keyboard virtuosity. He improved the blend, adding, embellishing and sometimes leading the music.


Mydland's younger daughter, Jennifer Mydland, is an aspiring singer-songwriter.<ref>Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211205/HvAn53H5oHg Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20170918140237/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvAn53H5oHg Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite web| url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvAn53H5oHg| title = Jennifer Mydland Debut Performance, Complete. 4/1/17 | website=[[YouTube]]}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
Without distorting the character of what was uniquely [[Grateful Dead]], the old songs came magically into tune and richly harmonized while new songs of Brent's own composition added diversity to the band's repertoire. The shows reached a performance peak which now passes into Deadhead history. From here on, the sound of the Grateful Dead will be different. The challenge or reconfiguration, resculpting and refining will be a mighty one. What else should be said of Brent? He rode hard, he drank hard, he played with the Dead. He also played with death and lost. He will be conspicuous in his absence.}}


==Discography==
==Discography==


===Grateful Dead studio and current live albums===
===With the Grateful Dead===
{{div col|colwidth=24em}}
*''[[Go to Heaven]]''&nbsp;– 1980
*''[[Go to Heaven]]''&nbsp;– 1980
*''[[Reckoning (Grateful Dead album)|Reckoning]]''&nbsp;– 1981
*''[[Reckoning (Grateful Dead album)|Reckoning]]''&nbsp;– 1981
Line 104: Line 107:
*''[[Built to Last]]''&nbsp;– 1989
*''[[Built to Last]]''&nbsp;– 1989
*''[[Without a Net]]''&nbsp;– 1990
*''[[Without a Net]]''&nbsp;– 1990

===Grateful Dead retrospective live albums===
*''[[Infrared Roses]]''&nbsp;–1991
*''[[Infrared Roses]]''&nbsp;–1991
*''[[Grayfolded]]''&nbsp;– 1994
*''[[Grayfolded]]''&nbsp;– 1994
Line 111: Line 112:
*''[[Dozin' at the Knick]]''&nbsp;– 1996
*''[[Dozin' at the Knick]]''&nbsp;– 1996
*''[[Dick's Picks Volume 6]]''&nbsp;– 1996
*''[[Dick's Picks Volume 6]]''&nbsp;– 1996
*''[[Terrapin Station (Limited Edition)]]''&nbsp;– 1997
*''[[Terrapin Station (Limited Edition)|Terrapin Station]]''&nbsp;– 1997
*''[[Fallout from the Phil Zone]]''&nbsp;– 1997
*''[[Fallout from the Phil Zone]]''&nbsp;– 1997
*''[[Dick's Picks Volume 13]]''&nbsp;– 1999
*''[[Dick's Picks Volume 13]]''&nbsp;– 1999
Line 130: Line 131:
*''[[Road Trips Volume 4 Number 2]]''&nbsp;– 2011
*''[[Road Trips Volume 4 Number 2]]''&nbsp;– 2011
*''[[Road Trips Volume 4 Number 4]]''&nbsp;– 2011
*''[[Road Trips Volume 4 Number 4]]''&nbsp;– 2011
*''[[Spring 1990]]''&nbsp;– 2012
*''[[Spring 1990 (album)|Spring 1990]]''&nbsp;– 2012
*''[[Spring 1990: So Glad You Made It]]''&nbsp;– 2012
*''[[Spring 1990: So Glad You Made It]]''&nbsp;– 2012
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 8]]''&nbsp;– 2013
*''[[Live at Hampton Coliseum]]''&nbsp;– 2014
*''[[Spring 1990 (The Other One)]]''&nbsp;– 2014
*''[[Wake Up to Find Out]]''&nbsp;– 2014
*''[[30 Trips Around the Sun]]''&nbsp;– 2015
*''[[30 Trips Around the Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965–1995]]''&nbsp;– 2015
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 20]]''&nbsp;– 2016
*''[[Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, Washington, D.C., July 12 & 13, 1989]]''&nbsp;– 2017
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 27]]''&nbsp;– 2018
*''[[The Warfield, San Francisco, California, October 9 & 10, 1980]]''&nbsp;– 2019
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 31]]''&nbsp;– 2019
*''[[Giants Stadium 1987, 1989, 1991]]''&nbsp;– 2019
*''[[Saint of Circumstance]]''&nbsp;– 2019
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 35]]''&nbsp;– 2020
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 36]]''&nbsp;– 2020
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 39]]''&nbsp;– 2021
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 40]]''&nbsp;– 2021
*''[[In and Out of the Garden: Madison Square Garden '81, '82, '83]]''&nbsp;– 2022
*''[[Madison Square Garden, New York, NY 3/9/81]]''&nbsp;– 2022
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 44]]''&nbsp;– 2022
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 47]]''&nbsp;– 2023
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 49]]''&nbsp;– 2024
*''[[Dave's Picks Volume 52]]''&nbsp;– 2024
{{div col end}}


===Other artists===
===With other artists===
*''Silver''&nbsp;– [[Silver (band)|Silver]]&nbsp;– 1976
*''Silver''&nbsp;– [[Silver (band)|Silver]]&nbsp;– 1976
*''Sweet Surprise''&nbsp;– [[Eric Andersen]]&nbsp;– 1976
*''Sweet Surprise''&nbsp;– [[Eric Andersen]]&nbsp;– 1976
Line 140: Line 165:
*''[[Down in the Groove]]''&nbsp;– [[Bob Dylan]]&nbsp;– 1988
*''[[Down in the Groove]]''&nbsp;– [[Bob Dylan]]&nbsp;– 1988
*''New Frontier''&nbsp;– New Frontier&nbsp;– 1988
*''New Frontier''&nbsp;– New Frontier&nbsp;– 1988

==See also==
:{{Portal|Grateful Dead}}


==References==
==References==
'''Citations'''
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist|30em}}
'''Sources'''
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book|title=So Many Roads: The Life and Times of the Grateful Dead|first=David|last=Browne|publisher=Hachette UK|year=2015|isbn=978-0-306-82171-4}}
*{{cite book|title=Garcia: An American Life |last=Jackson |first=Blair |year=1999 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=New York |isbn=0-14-029199-7}}
*{{cite book|title=Jerry Garcia: A Biography|first=Jacqueline|last=Edmondson|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=2009|isbn=978-0-313-35122-8}}
*{{cite book|title=The Hammond Organ: Beauty in the B|last=Vail|first=Mark|publisher=Backbeat Books|year=2002|isbn=978-0-87930-705-9|url=https://archive.org/details/hammondorganbeau00vail}}
{{refend}}


'''Further reading'''
{{More footnotes|date=January 2010}}
*{{Allmusic|class=artist|id=p108593|label=Brent Mydland}}
*{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p108593|label=Brent Mydland}}
*{{cite book |title=A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead |last=McNally |first=Dennis |year=2002 |publisher=Broadway Books |location=New York |isbn=0-7679-1185-7}}
*{{cite book |title=Garcia: An American Life |last=Jackson |first=Blair |year=1999 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=New York |isbn=0-14-029199-7}}
*{{cite book |title=DeadBase XI: The Complete Guide to Grateful Dead Song Lists |last=Scott |first=John W. |coauthors=Dolgushkin, Mike; Nixon, Stu |year=1999 |publisher=DeadBase |location=Cornish, New Hampshire |isbn=1-877657-22-0}}
*[http://www.deaddisc.com/GDFD_Brent_Mydland.htm Brent Mydland Discography] on deaddisc.com
*[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE1DF123DF934A15754C0A966958260 Brent Mydland] ''[[New York Times]]'' obituary, July 27, 1990
*{{IMDb name|1150186}}
*{{IMDb name|1150186}}
*{{cite book |title=A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead |last=McNally |first=Dennis |year=2002 |publisher=Broadway Books |location=New York |isbn=0-7679-1185-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/longstrangetripi00mcna_0 }}
*[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6943 Brent Mydland] on [[Find A Grave]]
*{{cite book |title=DeadBase XI: The Complete Guide to Grateful Dead Song Lists |last=Scott |first=John W. |author2=Dolgushkin, Mike |author3=Nixon, Stu |year=1999 |publisher=DeadBase |location=Cornish, New Hampshire |isbn=1-877657-22-0}}

==External links==
*[http://www.deaddisc.com/GDFD_Brent_Mydland.htm Brent Mydland Discography deadisc.com]
*[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE1DF123DF934A15754C0A966958260 Brent Mydland obituary], '''[[The New York Times]]'' July 27, 1990
*Jackson, Blair. "Brent Mydland: Steppin' Out." The Golden Road, Issue 15, Fall 1987
* [http://www.dead.net Official Grateful Dead Website]
*{{Discogs artist}}
*{{Find a Grave|6943}}
* {{IMDb name|1150186|Brent Mydland}}


{{Grateful Dead}}
{{Grateful Dead}}
{{1994 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata
| NAME = Mydland, Brent
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American keyboardist
| DATE OF BIRTH = October 21, 1952
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Munich]], Germany
| DATE OF DEATH = July 26, 1990
| CAUSE OF DEATH = Drug overdose ([[speedball]])
| PLACE OF DEATH = [[Lafayette, California]], United States
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mydland, Brent}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mydland, Brent}}
[[Category:Grateful Dead members]]
[[Category:1952 births]]
[[Category:1952 births]]
[[Category:1990 deaths]]
[[Category:1990 deaths]]
[[Category:American keyboardists]]
[[Category:American rock keyboardists]]
[[Category:Musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area]]
[[Category:Musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area]]
[[Category:Grateful Dead members]]
[[Category:Cocaine-related deaths in California]]
[[Category:People from San Francisco, California]]
[[Category:Deaths by heroin overdose in California]]
[[Category:Drug-related deaths in California]]
[[Category:Drug-related deaths in California]]
[[Category:People from Brentwood, California]]

[[Category:20th-century American musicians]]
[[cs:Brent Mydland]]
[[Category:20th-century American singers]]
[[de:Brent Mydland]]
[[Category:Bobby and the Midnites members]]
[[fr:Brent Mydland]]
[[Category:Go Ahead (band) members]]
[[it:Brent Mydland]]
[[Category:20th-century American keyboardists]]
[[nl:Brent Mydland]]
[[Category:20th-century American male singers]]
[[pt:Brent Mydland]]

Latest revision as of 12:50, 20 December 2024

Brent Mydland
Brent Mydland in 1987
Brent Mydland in 1987
Background information
Born(1952-10-21)October 21, 1952[1]
Munich, West Germany
OriginConcord, California, U.S.
DiedJuly 26, 1990(1990-07-26) (aged 37)[2]
Lafayette, California, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
Instrument(s)Keyboards, vocals
Years active1971–1990
LabelsWarner Bros.
Arista

Brent Mydland (October 21, 1952 – July 26, 1990) was an American keyboardist, songwriter and singer. He was a member of the rock band The Grateful Dead from 1979 to 1990, a longer tenure than any other keyboardist in the band.

Growing up in Concord, California, Mydland took up music while in elementary school.[3] After graduation, he played with a number of bands and recorded one album with Silver before joining Bobby and the Midnites with Bob Weir and jazz veterans Billy Cobham and Alphonso Johnson. This led to an invitation to join the Dead in 1979, replacing Keith Godchaux who had decided to leave. Mydland quickly became an important member in the Dead, using a variety of keyboards including Hammond organ and various synthesizers and singing regularly. He wrote several songs on the band's studio albums released while he was a member.

After a tour in the early summer 1990, Mydland died of an accidental drug overdose.

Biography

[edit]

Early life

[edit]

Born in Munich, Germany, the child of a Norwegian U.S. Army chaplain, Mydland moved to San Francisco with his parents at the age of one. Mydland spent most of his childhood in Concord, California.[4] He started piano lessons at age six and had formal classical lessons through his junior year in high school. In an interview he commented that "My sister took lessons and it looked fun to me, so I did too. There was always a piano around the house and I wanted to play it. When I couldn't play it I would beat on it anyway." His mother, a graveyard shift nurse, encouraged Mydland's talents by insisting that he practice his music two hours each day. He played trumpet from elementary till his senior year in high school; his schoolmates remember him practicing on an accordion, as well as the piano, every day after school.[citation needed]

Mydland played trumpet in the school's marching band, but was dismissed for having long hair. He graduated from Liberty High School, Brentwood, California, in 1971.[citation needed]

Pre-Grateful Dead

[edit]

Mydland began playing rock'n'roll with friends in high school (Liberty High School), and was influenced by organists such as Lee Michaels, Ray Manzarek and Steppenwolf's Goldy McJohn.[citation needed] He became a fan of the Grateful Dead in the late 1960s, though was less impressed by their 1970s material.[5]

After graduation, Mydland lived in a quonset hut in Thousand Oaks, California, writing songs. He joined a band with Rick Carlos, who was invited by John Batdorf of Batdorf & Rodney to join their band.[citation needed] Mydland was asked to join shortly after. He then formed the band Silver with Batdorf, releasing one album on Arista Records.[6]

Mydland then got in touch with Bob Weir via a connection from Batdorf & Rodney, and joined Weir's side project Bobby and the Midnites as keyboardist and backing vocalist.[5]

Grateful Dead

[edit]

Mydland joined the Grateful Dead in April 1979, replacing Keith and Donna Godchaux, who had decided to start their own band.[5] After two weeks of rehearsals, he played his first concert with the band at the Spartan Stadium, San Jose, on April 22.[5]

Mydland quickly became an integral part of the Dead owing to his vocal and songwriting skills as much as his keyboard playing. He quickly combined his tenor singing with founding members Weir and Jerry Garcia to provide strong three-part harmonies on live favorites.[7] He easily fit into the band's sound and added his own contributions, such as in Go to Heaven (1980) which featured two of Mydland's songs, "Far From Me" and "Easy to Love You", the latter written with frequent Weir collaborator John Perry Barlow. On the next album, In the Dark (1987), Mydland co-wrote "Hell in a Bucket" with Weir and Barlow; he also penned the train song "Tons of Steel".

Built to Last (1989) featured several more of Mydland's songs: the moody "Just a Little Light", the environmental song "We Can Run", the live-performance-driven "Blow Away" and the poignant "I Will Take You Home", a lullaby written with Barlow for Mydland's two daughters.

Mydland wrote several other songs that were played live but not released on any studio albums, including "Don't Need Love", "Never Trust A Woman", "Maybe You Know", "Only a Fool", all written solo, and "Gentlemen Start Your Engines", with Barlow. Many of these were intended for a solo album that was started but never completed, along with "Love Doesn't Have to be Pretty", performed live solo, but not with the Grateful Dead.[8] He also co-wrote "Revolutionary Hamstrung Blues" with Phil Lesh and Lesh's lyrical collaborator Bobby Petersen, although the song was performed live only once.

His high, gravelly vocal harmonies and emotional leads added to the band's singing strength, and he even occasionally incorporated scat singing into his solos. Monty Byrom, guitarist on Mydland's unreleased solo album, said Mydland was "one of the most talented guys I've ever met. I've never seen anybody that could sing with those kind of notes, night after night. He was a cross between Gregg Allman and Howlin' Wolf. It was crazy." Mydland's vocals added color to old favorites such as "Cassidy", "Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo", "Ramble on Rose", the Band's "The Weight", and he even wrote his own verse for Willie Dixon's "Little Red Rooster". He sang lead on many covers, including Traffic's "Dear Mr. Fantasy", the Beatles' "Hey Jude", the Meters' "Hey Pocky Way", and, with Lesh, the Spencer Davis Group's "Gimme Some Lovin'". Mydland's instrumental interactions with Garcia became an increasingly prominent factor in the Dead's music over the years—their duo exchanges in "Friend of the Devil" were an early and lasting example.

Mydland's last show with the Grateful Dead was on July 23, 1990, at the World Music Theater, in Tinley Park, Illinois.

In 1994, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Grateful Dead.[9]

Equipment

[edit]

While Keith Godchaux had preferred to play only piano at concerts, Mydland was keen to experiment with different sounds during live performances. He frequently changed his setup to add new sounds. He played several different electric pianos and synthesizers throughout his tenure. Upon joining the band in 1979, his piano sounds came from a Fender Rhodes. In 1982, he switched to a Yamaha CP-70 electric grand, though he only used it for about one year. During this time he also used analog synthesizers including a Minimoog, and a Sequential Circuits Prophet-5. In 1983, he replaced his analog synthesizers and electric piano with a Yamaha GS-1 digital piano.[10] The GS-1 is an extremely rare synthesizer, with only about 100 ever produced. In the mid-eighties, he also added an E-mu Emulator II to his rig.

In mid 1987, Mydland's synthesizer setup changed once again. Bob Bralove had been hired by the Grateful Dead to program and maintain new MIDI systems. The GS-1 and Emulator II were replaced by a new Kurzweil MIDIboard MIDI controller, which gave Mydland the ability to use voices from an array of different synthesizer modules, and blend them together using volume pedals and foot switches. The MIDIboard, like the GS-1 it replaced, was capable of polyphonic aftertouch, a relatively rare feature in MIDI controllers. The synthesizer racks included a Roland MKS-20 digital piano, a Kurzweil 250RMX (the rack-mounted version of the famous Kurzweil K250 synthesizer), a Roland S550 sampler, an Oberheim Matrix 1000, a Lexicon PCM41 digital delay, a Lexicon PCM70 reverb/effects processor, and an Akai mixing board. A Roland D-50 keyboard was added in the fall of 1987, and a Korg M1 keyboard was added in the fall of 1989 after experimenting with the M1R module version on the 1989 summer tour. These keyboards could be controlled through the MIDIboard, or could be played independently.

Mydland regularly played the Hammond organ, and had a B-3 with ten modified Leslie speakers in his setup for his entire tenure. The Grateful Dead purchased three B-3 organs for his use when he joined the band, and he personally owned several B-3 organs at the time of his death. The B-3 he played for the majority of his tenure with the Grateful Dead, known for once being covered with stickers, is currently used by keyboardist Jeff Chimenti during live performances. It was present at the 50th anniversary Fare Thee Well concerts in July 2015.

Other work

[edit]

In 1982, he recorded and mastered a solo studio album, but it was never released.

In the summer of 1985, he performed with Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann in their band Kokomo along with 707's Kevin Russell and Santana's David Margen.

In 1985, he performed at the Haight Street Fair with Weir, John Cipollina, and Merl Saunders, among others.

In 1986, Mydland formed Go Ahead with several San Francisco Bay area musicians, including Bill Kreutzmann, also former Santana members Alex Ligertwood on vocals and David Margen on bass, as well as guitarist Jerry Cortez. The band toured during the time Jerry Garcia was recovering from a diabetic coma, and also briefly reunited in 1988.

In 1988, Mydland performed at the Bay Area Music Awards, sharing an organ with Merl Saunders and performing alongside Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, John Fogerty, and others.

He also did numerous solo projects and performances, as well as duo performances with Bob Weir numerous times throughout the 1980s, with Weir on acoustic guitar and Mydland on grand piano.

Death

[edit]

Brent Mydland died at his home in Lafayette, California, on July 26, 1990, shortly after completing the Grateful Dead's summer tour. An autopsy conducted by the Contra Costa Coroner's office revealed that Mydland had died of acute cocaine and morphine intoxication. Richard Rainey, Contra Costa County coroner, stated that "Toxicology tests reveal lethal levels of morphine and cocaine in the blood", a mixture "commonly referred to as a 'speedball'."[11] He was the third Dead keyboardist to die (after founding member Ron "Pigpen" McKernan in 1973 and Keith Godchaux in 1980); Garcia said Mydland's death was "crushing" and it abruptly closed a chapter of the band's career.[12]

Mydland is buried at Oakmont Memorial Park in Lafayette, California.

Legacy

[edit]

Weir has said that the late '80s and early '90s with Mydland was his favorite time playing in the band.[13]

David Gans has described Mydland as "a talented synthesist [sic], who was able to play all this beautiful synthesized string stuff, but he could still kick ass and take names on the Hammond organ."

Mydland's younger daughter, Jennifer Mydland, is an aspiring singer-songwriter.[14]

Discography

[edit]

With the Grateful Dead

[edit]

With other artists

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

  1. ^ Hollow, Michele (2009). Grateful Dead: What a Long, Strange Trip It's Been. Enslow Publishers, Inc. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7660-3028-2.
  2. ^ Talevski, Nick (2010). Rock Obituaries – Knocking on Heaven's Door. Omnibus Press. p. 454. ISBN 978-0-85712-117-2.
  3. ^ "Brent Mydland". Pasco County Library System. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
  4. ^ Browne 2015, p. 146.
  5. ^ a b c d Jackson 1999, p. 304.
  6. ^ "Silver – Silver". AllMusic. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  7. ^ Jackson 1999, p. 305.
  8. ^ "Grateful Dead Only a Fool".
  9. ^ "The Grateful Dead". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
  10. ^ "The Art of Synth Soloing - Brent Mydland". Keyboard Magazine. May 15, 2018. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  11. ^ "Grateful Dead Member Died of Drug Overdose". Los Angeles Times. August 11, 1990.
  12. ^ Jackson, Blair (October 21, 2016). "Relix Revisited - the Brent Mydland years". Relix. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  13. ^ "Q&A: Bob Weir on Life With Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead". Rolling Stone. August 6, 2012. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  14. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Jennifer Mydland Debut Performance, Complete. 4/1/17". YouTube.

Sources

Further reading

[edit]