Vince Welnick, the Grateful Dead’s last keyboard player and a veteran of several other bands, including the Tubes and Missing Man Formation, has died at age 55, the Grateful Dead’s long-time publicist said.
Welnick died on Friday, said Dennis McNally, who declined to release the cause. The Sonoma County coroner’s office said Saturday that an autopsy would be performed next week. Welnick lived in the northern California town of Forestville, but McNally said he did not know if he died at home or in a hospital.
”His service to and love for the Grateful Dead were heartfelt and essential. He had a loving soul and a joy in music that we were lucky to share,” the group said in a statement on their website. ”Our Grateful Dead prayer for the repose of his spirit: may the four winds blow him safely home.”
Welnick was the last in a long line of Grateful Dead keyboardists, several of whom died prematurely, leading some of the group’s fans to conclude that the position came with a curse.
He had replaced Brent Mydland, who died of a drug overdose in 1990. Mydland had succeeded Keith Godchaux, who died in a car crash shortly after leaving the band. Godchaux had replaced the band’s original keyboard player, Ron ”Pigpen” McKernan, a heavy drinker who died in 1973 at age 27.
McNally recalled that the legend of the curse took a lighthearted turn at Welnick’s first performance with the Grateful Dead in Cleveland in December 1990.
”Just before he was to go on for the first time, one of the sound guys went over and sat down at Vince’s seat in front of the piano and it collapsed under him,” he said.
The fact is, though, that two other Grateful Dead keyboardists, Bruce Hornsby and Tom Constanten, survived the supposed curse just fine. Constanten worked with McKernan in the late 1960s, and Hornsby and Welnick played alongside one another for 18 months in the early 1990s.
With long, frizzy hair and tie-dyed clothes, Welnick clearly looked the part of a member of a band that was born in 1965 in San Francisco, then the cradle of the country’s emerging psychedelic counterculture. But he was largely unfamiliar with the band’s music when he joined and he recalled years later that he was so nervous he could barely play at that first show in Cleveland. He was quickly put at ease when the audience gave him a warm welcome.
Welnick, who grew up in Phoenix, moved to San Francisco in the early 1970s with The Beans, which soon renamed itself The Tubes.
After the group temporarily disbanded in the mid-1980s, he worked with Todd Rundgren before joining the Grateful Dead.
The band retired the name Grateful Dead and quit touring after lead guitarist Jerry Garcia died of a heart attack in 1995. The death of the group’s unofficial leader hit Welnick particularly hard, McNally recalled on Saturday.
”When he joined the Grateful Dead he really embraced the opportunity, both musically and emotionally,” McNally recalled. ”And to lose it within five years hurt him maybe worse than anybody else in the band.”
In the years following Garcia’s death the group’s other long-time members have occasionally toured as The Other Ones or The Dead.
Welnick, who formed his own group, Missing Man Formation, occasionally went on the road himself and had been scheduled to perform later this month, according to his website.
Survivors include his wife, Lori. — Sapa-AP