The Grateful Dead's music catalog experienced a 53 percent increase in streaming following the death of co-founder Bob Weir at age 78. Fans turned to classics like "Ripple" and "Friend of the Devil" in the days after the news broke. Tributes from bandmates and family highlighted Weir's enduring legacy in the counterculture scene.
Bob Weir, the Grateful Dead's co-founding guitarist and singer, died last weekend at age 78, catching many fans off guard as there had been no prior reports of illness. His final public performances came during the band's 60th anniversary concerts in August 2025 at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, described by his family as "emotional, soulful, and full of light"—not farewells, but gifts of resilience.
In the immediate aftermath, streaming numbers for the Grateful Dead's catalog jumped significantly. From January 9 to 13, 2026, there were 9.5 million on-demand audio streams, up 53 percent from 6.2 million in the prior week of January 2 to 8, 2025, according to Luminate data. The most streamed tracks in the U.S. were "Ripple," which rose 6 percent year-over-year, and "Friend of the Devil," up 26 percent—neither originally sung by Weir.
Bandmate Bill Kreutzmann, the Grateful Dead's drummer, shared a heartfelt tribute on social media, recalling their meeting in the mid-1960s with Jerry Garcia in Mother McCree’s Uptown Jug Champions. "Together, we embarked on a journey without a destination," Kreutzmann wrote, reminiscing about smoking joints in back alleys, playing pranks, and the Haight-Ashbury adventures, including throwing water balloons at tourist buses. He concluded: "There are so many people who can rightfully say that their life would not have been the same without Bob Weir. That’s been true for me since I was 17. And through it all, the high times and the low tides, my love for him will not, indeed can not, fade away."
Trey Anastasio echoed the sentiment in an Instagram post: "The more I got to know Bobby, the more I liked him... He just loved playing, and I loved that about him. I don’t think he ever got caught up in the bigness... There were times when I was talking to him when I thought he was the last actual hippie."
Weir's family reflected poetically: "As we remember Bobby, it’s hard not to feel the echo of the way he lived. A man driftin’ and dreamin’, never worrying if the road would lead him home. A child of countless trees. A child of boundless seas."
SiriusXM honored Weir with special programming on its Grateful Dead Channel (Ch. 23), Phish Radio (Ch. 29), and Jam On (Ch. 309), including a broadcast of Dead & Company's final 2025 show at Golden Gate Park, Weir's last live performance. Kreutzmann had co-founded Dead & Company in 2015 with Weir, John Mayer, Mickey Hart, Oteil Burbridge, and Jeff Chimenti, before leaving in 2023.