The Grateful Dead’s 60th anniversary celebration at Polo Fields in Golden Gate Park was less a concert and more a cosmic convergence. Dead and Company were joined by Billy Strings, Sturgill Simpson, and Trey Anastasio from Phish, each bringing their own magic to the party. For me, it was one of those rare moments where the past, present, and future all aligned in perfect harmony.
Fans, both young and old, arrived with sky-high expectations. Tickets were not cheap. General admission three-day passes were $600, and VIP packages started at $1,500. A far cry from the free park shows the Grateful Dead once gave in their early years. Yet this event felt bigger than just nostalgia. It felt like a pilgrimage.

My wife and I bought tickets as a 25-year anniversary gift to each other. In recent years, she has become deeply immersed in classic live Dead recordings, and for both of us, this weekend was more than a show. When we met in 1997, I was already deep into music, not just one genre, but anything with heart. I had Dead tapes and posters, and while I had only been to a handful of shows, I loved the culture. The music from the 70s still speaks to me, and Shakedown Street was part of my teenage mythology. My first introduction to the culture was in the pages of High Times magazine at a very impressionable age in the late 80s and early 90s, and my aunt had a vinyl collection of the best acid rock and funk bands. She was a real hippie who lived the evolution through the 60s and 70s, and she was all about the culture.
In 1998, my wife gave me a framed Jerry Garcia portrait. Since then, I’ve collected tour posters and developed a more personal relationship with the band’s music, more intimate than when Jerry was alive. My teenage years were soaked in weed, LSD, MDMA, and endless experimental moments. Music was our glue. It bonded us. It gave us language and identity. While I was definitely known for my enthusiastic drug use, I was also working through trauma and seeking meaning through experience.
Time has brought growth. I have made plenty of mistakes. As an intern at Chez Panisse a long time ago, I learned that sauce should elevate quality ingredients without overpowering them. Music, weed, psychedelics, and other substances are the same. They should deepen the moment, not become the moment. The exception, of course, is psychedelic self-exploration.
When I heard 180,000 people would gather at Golden Gate Park over a three-day period, I was all in. I had been there many times before for shows and 420 celebrations, but this would eclipse them all. I was even at the Tibetan Freedom Concert in 1996, which held the record for the largest crowd I had ever seen. Until Dead and Company took the stage.
Hotels were outrageous, so we took Ubers in and out of the city to avoid parking nightmares and save money. Still, we walked 27 miles over the weekend. Each night we stood from 4 PM to 10 PM, dancing and swaying, completely immersed. My legs were destroyed, but it was worth every step. Future concertgoers should know Golden Gate Park is stunning, but it is a trek.
Shakedown Street had a new feel. The traditional free-for-all was replaced with structured, vendor-approved booths. It was set up on the park promenade, and while it was packed and featured some solid vendors, it lacked the wild energy of past iterations. We heard another version was going on over on Haight Street, but we never made it.
The layout of the event made everything feel far away. Even the bathroom felt like a hike. Still, once you arrived, it was all worth it. They had a designated consumption area called Grasslands, complete with edibles, prerolls, and legal flower. Most people brought their own, but it was beautiful to see friends and community members thriving in the space. Humboldt Seed Company even had seeds available at the event.
We arrived late Friday but lucked into a great spot near the base of the hill, just beyond the VIP and accessibility area. We met kind folks from Virginia, and I shared some old-school weed with them — the kind you just cannot find in dispensaries anymore. I rolled 60 joints before Friday, knowing I would need them. No tools, no loose flower, just ready-to-go joints and some select hash varieties to enjoy with my mini hammer pipe blown by Chemdog himself.
The flower I brought included Chemdog, Sour Diesel, OG, Crippy, hazes that burned the nostrils, and some modern gems like ZDP, Chocolate Runtz, Dripz, and TITS. It felt only right to bring the best for a weekend like this.
Billy Strings was electric. His set was pure energy and full of tributes to Jerry. I wish he had played the second set. He later joined Dead and Company for a melodic Warf Rat, and Phil’s son Grahame Lesh came out for Box of Rain and Playing in the Band.
Saturday reached new heights. Sturgill Simpson brought rawness and soul. His take on the Dead’s catalog was stirring. During Clockmaker on Mars, he teased the riff from Bulls on Parade, and I nearly lost it. That was a deep personal callback to Rage Against the Machine at the Tibetan Freedom Concert in 1996, where I stood next to my brother and my friend Aaron Avitar. The moment collapsed time. Then came Morning Dew, one of my all-time favorites. Sturgill’s version had people crying, speechless. It was emotional and authentic. They closed with Brokedown Palace, a perfect landing. It is the song I hope plays when I pass from this life.
The sound design was out of this world. They clearly borrowed tricks from the Sphere in Vegas. It felt like the sound was wrapping around us. We stood in front of a psychedelic windmill, and the mix was perfect: surround sound in an open field. I have never heard anything like it at a live show.

Night three was something else entirely. With early entry and only 300 others, we secured a spot 30 feet from the center stage. It was perfect. I even limited my water intake to avoid missing anything due to bathroom trips.
Trey Anastasio earned my respect that night. His tone, phrasing, and vocal nods to Jerry were tasteful and powerful. He and John Mayer traded solos with a joy you could feel. They were clearly feeding off each other’s energy.
Predicting the setlist was impossible. Fire on the Mountain featured Trey and John dueling in harmony. Then came Broken Arrow, which hit with emotional weight. From Drums and Space, they transitioned into Standing on the Moon, with Bob leading 60,000 people on an emotional journey. Many thought they would close with Ripple. Instead, they gave us Touch of Grey, ending on an ecstatic high.
It was one of the greatest musical events I have ever attended. The visuals enhanced the band like a light brush of soy on a perfect piece of bluefin toro. As the weekend ended and we walked out of the park, I felt a wave of deep gratitude, not just for the music and the moment, but for everything that led me here. Decades ago, it was High Times that first gave me a glimpse into this world. Long before dispensaries or festivals or even legal seeds, it was that magazine that made me feel like I wasn’t alone. That I wasn’t crazy for believing that this plant, good music, this feeling could actually matter. And here I was, all these years later, in a crowd of over 60,000, reflecting on the past, present, and future.
James Loud is an award-winning cannabis breeder, educator, and multimedia creator, known for preserving iconic cultivars and advancing breeding science. He founded James Loud Genetics and hosts the James Loud Podcast and Loud Times Review Show, blending education with advocacy. James also teaches breeding at Oaksterdam University and speaks globally on genetics, cultivation, and industry trends.
This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.