San Francisco, CA
Dead & Company Wraps Up Final Tour With Electric Shows In San Francisco
Dead & Company, a band that featured Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, concluded its final tour with a three-night stop at San Francisco’s Oracle Park this weekend.
The band, which began in 2015, performed a two-set show to close out the weekend as Deadheads flocked to the baseball stadium to experience iconic Grateful Dead songs and covers on Sunday.
The trio of sold-out shows on the tour marks the close of another chapter for the Grateful Dead, a band that has seen members reunite and form several touring projects since the death of lead guitarist and songwriter Jerry Garcia in 1995.
Dead & Company, the latest touring group of Grateful Dead members, notably featured the guitar and vocals of John Mayer. The band embarked on its final tour without Bill Kreutzmann after the founding member of the Dead backed out of the tour in April because of a “shift in creative direction.”
The band cruised through songs such as “Bertha,” “Althea” and “Loser” in its first set before “becoming stuck exclusively to Grateful Dead material” in the second set of Sunday’s show, Ultimate Classic Rock reported.
The San Francisco stop featured the usual pre-concert Shakedown Street, a nod to the Dead’s 1978 song, where fans gathered outside the venue “to share food, acquire handcrafts and drugs, and swap stories about kismet encounters with friends made at previous shows,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
Outside the Bay Area, the Empire State Building lit up in “tie dye” on Sunday night to honor the band’s last stop on its last tour.
Deadheads who dropped by Oracle Park this weekend told San Francisco’s Fox affiliate that the fan base feels “connected” and assured the station that the band has been “growing and changing and evolving” in its music.
“It’s a party that won’t stop and people keep wanting to go to,” said Joel Selvin, a former San Francisco Chronicle pop music critic, in an interview with the news station.
Check out clips from this weekend of Dead & Company shows below.
San Francisco, CA
New San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie celebrates inauguration night in Chinatown with banquet and night market
Large turnout for new San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie’s inauguration night celebrations in Chinatown.
He thanks the Asian and AAPI communities for their support. San Franciscans, even one that said she didn’t vote for him, say they are excited and optimistic that he may bring change.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco's Chinatown hosts events to celebrate city's new mayor Daniel Lurie
The celebration of San Francisco’s new mayor isn’t over yet.
San Francisco’s Chinatown hosted a community banquet, a special night market and community-led celebration for new mayor Daniel Lurie on Wednesday night.
There will be live performances, an opportunity to showcase artists and Chinatown restaurants and small businesses said they’re ready for it.
Some of the people who spoke to NBC Bay Area on Wednesday said that clear Lurie is bringing a lot of hope for change to those in this community. A section of Grant Avenue was transformed to host a special night market in celebration of San Francisco’s new leadership.
Lurie made the rounds on Wednesday morning before being sworn in as the city’s 46th mayor and touted the event.
“We’re going to have some celebrations in Chinatown tonight,” he said.
Tane Chan of the Wok Shop said that she thinks the new mayor’s decision to put Chinatown in the spotlight could have a lasting impact.
“We have had some tough times and with mayor Lurie here encouraging all the visitors and all the residents to come and walk through Chinatown and just give us boost,” she said.
Mark Young, co-chair of the unity celebration banquet, said that people can feel the buzz in Chinatown.
“There is going to be 18 vendors a local headliner DJ, his name is Zhu,” he said. “There is going to be cultural festivities as well as this banquet that we have going on which is going to have over 900 guests from the AAPI community.”
The night market celebration is cohosted by the inaugural committee and the non-profit group ” Be Chinatown.”
Jayde Wong with Lion Dance Me said they’re bringing about 75 high school students out to perform at Wednesday night’s event.
“We’re bringing out all red lions tonight and red is the symbol of good fortune and so we’re some hoping to bring some good fortune to Daniel Lurie during his term as mayor and hopefully he will bring some good fortune back to our community as well,” she said.
The night market runs until 9:30 p.m. Wednesday.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Mayor-Elect Daniel Lurie Launches Political Career With Cable Cars, Chinatown Market and Prayer | KQED
After breakfast, Lurie walked through the Tenderloin with San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott.
“People in the Tenderloin are frustrated,” Lurie told KQED. “People in Bernal Heights are frustrated, so I’m going to commit myself every single day to be tireless in getting people the help that they need, whether it’s into a mental health bed or a drug treatment bed or into a shelter bed.”
It wasn’t Lurie’s first time walking through the Tenderloin, according to Kate Robinson, director of the Tenderloin Community Benefit District. She said he joined her team on multiple morning shifts to ensure kids got to school safely.
“Incoming Mayor Lurie was the very first to request to come back and then come back again,” Robinson said. “That set him apart just for me, personally, seeing the level of care and seeing how genuinely interested he was in talking to the residents, talking to our safety stewards.
“I’m optimistic.”
Scott said the new administration has a lot of ideas and energy, but San Francisco residents will expect the city to move forward.
“When all the ceremony and all that goes away, we still have a job to do, so it’s really important that we stay focused on getting that job done, and that’s where my focus is,” Scott said. “Of course, I’m gonna do the things that the mayor has asked for us to do and do that to the best of my ability.”
Darrell Luckett, who’s lived in the Tenderloin for 40 years, stopped Lurie and urged him to follow through on his promises to clean up encampments and drug use.
“He said he’s gonna do it. All we can do is kick back, and you see what he do,” Luckett said after shaking hands with the mayor.
“A lot of people always say they’re gonna do this stuff,” Deonte Dial added.
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