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soldelmisol t1_ixj2pq3 wrote

I can’t help but think he also might have been influenced by Krushov’s (Premier of the USSR then) statement a couple years earlier that in the case of a nuclear war that “…the living will envy the dead.” It was a huge part of the zeitgeist back then as I remember, following the Bay of Pigs standoff.

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ZwischenzugZugzwang t1_ixjsigv wrote

Khrushchev

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soldelmisol t1_ixk0bnr wrote

Of course, apologies.

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ZwischenzugZugzwang t1_ixk4mot wrote

Don't sweat it. Seems like half my college career was writing papers on Khrushchev and listening to Grateful Dead on acid.

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soldelmisol t1_ixkcqty wrote

Ah. I was more Jefferson Airplane and Ravi Shankar, but in a similar space.

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pickleer t1_ixj67h3 wrote

Jewish tradition has it that someone always sits with the dead, that they are never left alone before burial. This is considered "high mitzvah" (mitzvah is a worthy deed) because that person can never come back to thank those who sat with them. That has always stuck with me, a charity more powerful because there is no possible way to acknowledge or repay it. It moved me to keep my charities towards the homeless anonymous but thinking it through, I see where it could cause a feeling of indebtedness with the recipient. Clearly, the x-ians who came up with this "grateful dead" thing have found a way around the need to repay!

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series_hybrid t1_ixj5umi wrote

I always heard that it was from the Egyptian "Book of the Dead" found in one of the pharaohs tombs...

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bolanrox t1_ixj8it1 wrote

tomorrow never knows got most of the lines from the Tabitian book of the dead

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growingsprouts t1_ixjhbcz wrote

Cool! Blows my theory out the water: from Blind Lemon Jefferson's, 'One Kind Favour' - which Grateful Dead do cover. Tune is about a man wanting his grave to be kept clean upon burial. It does heavily tie into the reason above though!

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big_macaroons OP t1_ixkdevc wrote

You might be interested to know that a different SF band - Jefferson Airplane - was named after Blind Lemon Jefferson. According to founding guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, his nickname was "Blind Thomas Jefferson Airplane," a name given to him by his friend Richmond "Steve" Talbot, inspired by the name of one of Kaukonen's influences, bluesmen Blind Lemon Jefferson. According to Kaukonen, when the band was trying to come up with a name, they were "...coming up with all these really stupid names and I said, 'If you want something really silly, try Jefferson Airplane.'" The rest of the band liked it and it stuck. Source

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Stilcho1 t1_ixj1ncu wrote

Cool. I would have thought it came from Shakespeare. I seem to remember the phrase in one of the plays. Something like:

"I would be grateful dead."

Could be faulty memory too. I googled it for about 2 minutes and didn't find the quote I was looking for.

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taosk8r t1_ixkowxs wrote

This makes the Ben and Jerry's flavor "Berry Jerry" make a lot more sense to me now.

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Eibhleann t1_ixn31wg wrote

There’s a fantastic podcast that talks about this and goes into a deep dive about other parts of their history called Dead and Gone. It focuses primarily on a number of murders and disappearances that occurred within the community that followed the band. (As in literally, they had caravans of busses and would set up camps.)

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JeepMan831 t1_ixn7u1j wrote

Both the Dead and Velvet underground first went by the name The Warlocks. Word is when they learned of each other they both changed their name.

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