Find more presales for shows in Port Chester, NY
Show Gillian Welch & David Rawlings play the Grateful Dead presales in more places
Picking Bones with Gillian Welch & David Rawlings
Gillian Welch and David Rawlings came out of the 90s Americana wave with close harmonies, spare guitars, and story songs that feel older than they are.
Old songs, new roots
This run centers on their take on the Grateful Dead songbook, a shift that spotlights their old-time roots while tracing the Dead's folk backbone.What the night might hold
Expect Friend of the Devil, Dire Wolf, and a tender Brokedown Palace, with a late encore of Black Muddy River if the room stays hushed. The crowd mixes acoustic pickers, Dead fans who favor melody over volume, and younger writers clocking Rawlings's right hand from a few rows back. Trivia: Rawlings's main guitar is a small 1930s Epiphone archtop he capos high for that bright, woody snap, and the pair often sing into one mic to ride dynamics. They cut All The Good Times at home to tape, leaving small imperfections in, which suits these Dead tunes. Please note that any setlist or staging notes here are informed hunches from past nights and might not match what you see.The Gillian Welch & David Rawlings Crowd, Up Close
This crowd dresses more in earth tones than tie-dye, with vintage denim, well-worn boots, and the odd Dead rose patch stitched to a jacket.
Quiet hearts, steady hands
Between songs the room stays quiet, then bursts into quick cheers for tricky runs or clever lyrical turns. If the duo invites it, expect a soft singalong on Ripple or a gentle hum on a Brokedown Palace tag, more choir than shout. Merch leans low-key: letterpress posters, simple shirts, and maybe a pin that nods to skeleton iconography without going loud. You will spot friends trading notes on tunings and capo moves, and older fans pointing out which verses come from the Dead's folk sources. It feels like a listening party shared by players and readers, where the beat is a boot tap and the loudest moment is the final release of breath.How Gillian Welch & David Rawlings Make the Dead Breathe
Live, Gillian Welch carries the center line with a dry, steady alto while David Rawlings threads a high harmony that sometimes flips to the melody mid-verse.
Two voices, one engine
Their guitars act like a small orchestra: Welch anchors the pulse with round, even strums, and Rawlings darts between rhythm and lead with quick runs that answer the vocals.Small moves, big feeling
On Dead material they often trim verses and let choruses breathe longer, keeping tempos unhurried so the words land. Listen for Rawlings's high capo on the archtop, which makes bright, bell-like leads while still letting him drop bass notes for lift. They may reharmonize a turnaround by hinting at a minor shade before returning to the home chord, a gentle change that adds ache without drama. Lighting is simple and warm, just enough to draw eyes to hands and faces, which suits the music-first focus. When a solo peaks, they often back the volume down instead of up, creating a hush that pulls the room closer.If You Like Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, You Might Migrate This Way
Fans of Bob Weir should connect with the duo's acoustic frame and reverence for Dead storytelling, especially when tempos relax and words lead.