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Bill Graham Fine Art Print

from Dec 31, 1967

 - BG100-02-01-FP

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Bill Graham's New Year's Eve parties were famous in the Bay Area, their association with the Grateful Dead cemented in history and their continuation in one form or another long after Winterland's demise fortunate and welcomed. Father Time, aka Bill Graham with silver wig jammed over bushy black eyebrows, made his grand entrance from the back of the hall at midnight, barely skimming the heads of revellers on his way to the stage and perched on a different vehicle each year. Motorcycle, sled and giant joint were just a few of the conveyances, and when he wasn't "... Pushing some button that's going to do something... " he got "... To experience for just a few seconds something that the performers see year round..."

Young sons David and Alex came with Graham to the Winterland new year's shows, but Graham was always the very last to leave after the bash. "It became a big thing with me... I would get very ponderous... and it would be the end of my year." After Winterland closed in 1978, the tradition continued at other venues: in 1983, Father Time rode a giant mushroom to the Oakland stage, in '85 a 20-foot pink birthday cake made the trip in honor of the Grateful Dead's anniversary, and in '88 Graham came in, or was it out, on a mirrored ball. Thankfully, the tradition of Father Time did not retire after Graham's tragic death in a 1991 helicopter crash. In 1996, Peter Barsotti and BGP created an eight-foot tall Father figure for the 1996-97 San Francisco New Year's Eve outdoor celebration designed to float heaven-ward at the stroke of midnight.

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