From the tape-trading trees of the 1980s to 21st century torrenting and file-sharing, Deadheads have spent decades tracking down live recordings from the Grateful Dead‘s 30-year career. In the early ’90s, the Dead themselves began officially releasing archival live recordings — and that operation has steadily grown into a commercial juggernaut, helping the band to set chart records 30 years after frontman Jerry Garcia‘s death and 60 years after its formation.
Now, Deadheads have another way to enjoy the band’s extensive live catalog. On Thursday (April 16), the live-music streaming platform nugs — home to archival recordings by artists including Bruce Springsteen, Phish and Pearl Jam — launches Play Dead, a new app dedicated to the high-resolution presentation of the Grateful Dead’s sprawling vault.
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Authorized by Grateful Dead Productions and developed in conjunction with Rhino Entertainment, which has exclusively licensed the Dead’s intellectual property since 2006, Play Dead will offer high-resolution streaming of all previous archival Grateful Dead releases. This includes roughly 300 concerts, including many previously available only as physical-only releases, like the 58-volume quarterly Dave’s Picks series, launched in 2012.
Play Dead subscriptions will cost $9.99/month or $99.99/year, with other pricing options available for existing nugs subscribers and new customers interested in bundling Play Dead and nugs.
Rhino’s robust physical release schedule for Dead recordings will continue apace, with all new releases also appearing on Play Dead, but the service will also offer two new vault releases every week in perpetuity — amounting to an exponential increase in the volume of new archival releases available to Deadheads. Twenty of these previously unreleased vault recordings have gone live on Play Dead to accompany its launch.
“This is my life’s work,” says nugs founder/CEO Brad Serling, a Deadhead who launched the platform in the late ’90s. “I was born to do this. So here we are — it’s finally happening.”
It’s been a long time coming for Serling, who the Dead hired in 2000 to do a version of this. That initiative, dubbed Project Bandwagon, would have created an online distribution channel for the music of a handful of acts — including, possibly, the Dead, Dave Matthews Band, Phish and Pearl Jam — along with tie-ins for merch and ticketing. Without subscription apps, iPhones and social media, the band considered selling hard drives pre-loaded with Dead concerts, Serling says, calling the ill-fated project “a very pie-in-the-sky, very 2000, dotcom-era idea.”
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But the seed was planted, and for the next two decades, as the Dead’s business operation evolved, Serling would find himself discussing the prospect of digitizing the Dead’s vault with two key players in its releases: Rhino Entertainment president Mark Pinkus and the band’s legacy manager and audio archivist David Lemieux. In January 2020, at Dead & Company’s Mexican destination festival Playing In The Sand, Serling and Lemieux began to outline what creating such a platform would look like in practice.
So, a Deadhead might ask, what’s taken so long? “What we’re embarking on now is the largest tape transfer project in the history of rock and roll, as far as I know, at least for any single band,” Serling says. The Dead’s vault contains a vast assortment of tapes — multitracks, reel-to-reels, DATs, anywhere from two to a dozen for a given show — that all require careful digitization. A decade ago, nugs partnered with a third-party company, Sonicraft, to help operationalize Springsteen’s archives for the platform; the Dead project is substantially more time-intensive.
“We thought we were going to be ready to launch it prior to the 60th [anniversary] shows,” says Pinkus, referring to Dead & Company’s August 2025 concerts in Golden Gate Park celebrating 60 years of Grateful Dead music. “As with most things in life, it takes a while to do them right.”
Play Dead Streaming App Courtesy of nugsDoing it right has been critical for the Play Dead team. Bootlegs for many of the 2,300-plus concerts the Grateful Dead performed exist, of course, and resourceful Deadheads know where to find them. But Play Dead continues the philosophy of the band’s archival releases up to this point: deploy savvy mastering techniques to ensure official releases significantly outstrip the audio quality of the unauthorized versions floating around the internet or living on old cassettes. “This is not, ‘Let’s do quick transfers and spit them out,'” says Lemieux, adding that the fidelity is “really unlike anything you’ve heard.”
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In fact, Play Dead will even surpass the audio quality the Dead’s archival customers are familiar with; the service has a minimum 24-bit, 48kHZ audio quality threshold, which exceeds the quality that can be committed to a CD. Beyond mastering unreleased recordings for future Play Dead vault releases, the Dead’s audio team, led by mastering pro David Glasser, has gone back through previous archival releases, optimizing them for the fidelity enabled by streaming. Even for listeners who have worn out their copies of the CD-only Dave’s Picks, those recordings should sound better on Play Dead.
“The music’s all over the place on the internet, but it’s not in good enough quality, and it’s not presented in a thoughtful way,” Pinkus says. “Play Dead is going to give it to you in high-res, sounding better than you’ll find it anywhere on the internet, and it’s going to be in a logical, thoughtful, fun way to listen to and interact with.”
High-resolution audio isn’t all Play Dead has to offer. The platform will support the creation and sharing of playlists, along with curated selections by Lemieux and other venerable Deadheads. Lemieux raves about the app’s interface, which helps to make a daunting amount of data navigable. Play Dead will also allow offline listening and seamlessly transition between bit rates and sample rates based on available bandwidth.
“This app is going to create a completely different experience than the joy that one gets from these physical releases,” Pinkus says.
Meanwhile, Deadheads accustomed to the band’s predictable schedule of physical releases and (still impressive) array of live recordings available on major streaming platforms like Apple Music and Spotify can carry on. “Play Dead will be additive,” Pinkus says, assuring that the band’s physical releases will continue as normal, and that its music won’t leave other streamers. “Play Dead will just be more music for more Deadheads.” But, he adds, those sources won’t approach the audio fidelity now offered by Play Dead.
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“This is the closest you are getting to the piece of media that was in the room with the band, other than the band members on stage and whoever might still be alive from who was in the room,” Serling says. “This is the last living relic of what was in the room with the band on any given night, and we are making a high-res digital capture of that relic. To me, it’s very much like that scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark when they lift the lid off the Ark and everybody’s faces melt. We want to melt your faces.
“You can listen to it on archive.org [the site where many Dead bootlegs circulate], but that’s a copy of a copy of a clone,” he continues. “Some of them sound pretty good, but they’re not mastered by Dave Glasser — and, I think it’s important to say, they’re not hand-picked by David Lemieux. He’s choosing these [shows] for a reason.”
It’s a role Lemieux has cherished since he began steering the Dead’s archival releases in 1999. He’s a voracious listener of all the band’s distinct eras, and says “we’re really going for a full variety” with Play Dead’s vault releases, promising music from each decade the Dead was active. Plus, where recent archival Dead releases have generally held firm to a “complete shows” criteria, Play Dead will allow flexibility for posting partial shows in the Dead’s vault that may be victims of deteriorated physical media or a distracted audio engineer.
“We’re definitely going to be putting things up that we don’t have complete,” Lemieux says. “It’s either, let it sit on the vault shelves forever and nobody hears it, or get up the 30, 60, 80% of the show that we have, so at least people can hear what is in the vault on the shelves.”
In conversation, Pinkus, Serling and Lemieux — all dyed-in-the-wool Deadheads who first saw the band in the ’80s — repeatedly emphasize that they approach their work with the Dead’s legacy as fans. And to them, Play Dead realizes a long-held dream of many Deadheads. “This is really the opening of the vault,” Lemieux says. “Ultimately, we don’t really have an interest in stuff sitting on shelves. We want to get it into people’s ears.”
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