Drag meets Deadhead craft
BERTHA is a drag-forward love letter to the Grateful Dead, built on a tight house band and a rotating cast of queens. The show leans into the Dead's playful spirit while keeping the vocals crisp and the grooves wide. Expect a set that nods to classic pairings like
Scarlet Begonias into
Fire on the Mountain, plus singalongs on
Bertha and a coy, slowed
Friend of the Devil. Newcomers mix with veteran deadheads, with patched denim next to sequined bodysuits and tiny roses pinned to lapels. One neat quirk: the band often tags transitions with short teases, a wink to tape-trader culture. Another tidbit: visuals lift from Kelley/Mouse poster art, but done in drag-ball colors rather than sepia. Take these setlist and staging notes as informed guesses, not guarantees.
Who shows up and how it feels
The room tends to feel welcoming and chatty, with folks swapping enamel pins and comparing show dates as the band tunes.
The BERTHA Scene: Sequins, Setbreaks, and Sweet Vibes
Fashion cues and rituals
You will notice vintage tie-dye next to glitter corsets, plus cowboy boots with tiny roses and bears stitched into the leather. Folks trade setlist predictions at the bar, then clap the classic Not Fade Away pattern on instinct when the drums get sparse. Merch skews tactile, with screen-printed posters, enamel pins, and small-run tees using bold type and saturated color.
Afterglow that lingers
Between sets, people compare notes on favorite years and swap stories about first shows, often pulling up tape dates on their phones. Expect a kind, mixed-age crowd that respects the drag spotlight while still loving a long guitar break. The show ends with easy hugs and photo swaps, and the room usually lingers like a porch hang after a summer gig.
How BERTHA Plays It: Groove, Harmony, and Glow
Jam with a wink
The singers split leads and harmonies so the choruses feel big without getting shouty. Guitars favor clean, glassy tones with a little grit, while keys fill the middle so the drums can pulse instead of pound. Expect shapeshifts in tempo, like easing
Friend of the Devil into a slow sway or pushing
Shakedown Street into a clipped, funky strut. The band is good at short handoffs, dropping to near silence so a queen can land a line, then snapping back on the one. A neat habit borrowed from old Dead tapes is leaving the end of a tune unbuttoned, so a new groove can bloom without a hard stop.
Color, not bombast
Vocals lean conversational, which suits the lyrics, but they still tuck in tidy three-part stacks on refrains. Lighting favors warm fades and tie-dye washes that serve the music instead of fighting it.
If You Like These, BERTHA Feels Like Home
Jam lineage you can hear
If you follow
Dead & Company, this show scratches a similar itch for expansive grooves and songbook reverence.
Bob Weir and Wolf Bros fans will recognize the leaner rhythm feel and the way the vocals ride on top of a woody, open mix.
Goose heads may show up for the danceable builds and cheeky left turns that keep a jam light on its feet.
Overlap that makes sense
If you are into
The String Cheese Incident, the bright harmonies and color-forward visual vibe line up. All of these projects center community singalongs and playful risk, which is core to
BERTHA too. The difference here is the drag storytelling, adding character arcs and costume beats without choking the music.