Grateful Dawg is a documentary film released in 2000 which chronicles the friendship and musical relationship of musicians Jerry Garcia and David Grisman. Director and producer Gillian Grisman uses multiple videos, as well as live recordings, to help show this bond between two friends and musicians. It gives a view of Garcia outside the Grateful Dead.
Grateful Dawg | |
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Directed by | Gillian Grisman |
Produced by | Gillian Grisman and Pamela Hamilton |
Cinematography | Justin Kreutzmann |
Edited by | Josh Baron |
Release date |
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The film was directed by David Grisman’s daughter Gillian, with cinematography by Justin Kreutzmann, son of Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann.[1] The film details when Grisman and Garcia first met in 1964 at a club in Pennsylvania to see Bill Monroe perform,[2] includes interviews with musicians such as Bela Fleck, Peter Rowan and Ronnie McCoury and many live performances of Grisman and Garcia.[3][4] Grateful Dawg co-producer Pamela Hamilton, founder of PLH Media, LLC is the former NBC producer/on-air talent who brought Garcia and Grisman to NBC's Weekend Today Show, produced their interviews and performances, and spotlighted their music from the CD Not For Kids Only.
The Grateful Dawg DVD has the following chapters:
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