Background
John Dawson was born in Chicago. The son of a Los Altos Hills, California filmmaker, he took guitar lessons from a teacher and friend from the Peninsula School in Menlo Park, California.
John Dawson was born in Chicago. The son of a Los Altos Hills, California filmmaker, he took guitar lessons from a teacher and friend from the Peninsula School in Menlo Park, California.
Foreign high school he attended the Millbrook School near Millbrook, New New York
His family moved to California in 1952. While at Millbrook, he took courses in music theory & history and sang in the glee club After a stint at Occidental College, Dawson"s musical career began in the mid-1960s folk music scene in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Dawson was also heavily influenced by the Bakersfield sound genre of country music
By 1969, Dawson had written a number of country rock songs, and Garcia had become interested in playing pedal steel guitar. Joined by Nelson, they formed the New Riders of the Purple Sage.
The New Riders became the opening act for the Grateful Dead, and their original lineup included three Grateful Dead members — Garcia on pedal steel, Philosophy Lesh on bass, and Mickey Hart on drums. Within a year, Dave Torbert replaced Lesh and Spencer Dryden replaced Hart in the New Riders lineup, with Garcia continuing to play in both bands.
In 1970 and 1971, the New Riders and the Grateful Dead performed many concerts together.
In November 1971, Buddy Cage replaced Jerry Garcia as the New Riders" pedal steel player, allowing NRPS to tour independently of the Dead. During this same period, Dawson appeared as a guest musician on three Grateful Dead albums — Aoxomoxoa, Workingman"s Dead, and American Beauty. In the years that followed, Dawson and Nelson led a gradually evolving lineup of musicians in the New Riders of the Purple Sage, playing their psychedelic influenced brand of country rock and releasing a number of studio and live albums.
In 1982, David Nelson and Buddy Cage left the band.
John Dawson and the New Riders carried on without them, taking on more of a bluegrass influence with the addition of multi-instrumentalist Rusty Gauthier to the group. NRPS continued to tour intermittently and released the occasional album.
Then, in 1997, Dawson retired from the music business, moved to Mexico, and became an English teacher, and the New Riders disbanded. In 2005, David Nelson and Buddy Cage revived the New Riders of the Purple Sage, without Dawson"s participation but with his agreement and moral support.
Subsequently Dawson made several guest appearances at New Riders concerts.
Dawson died in Mexico of stomach cancer on July 21, 2009.
New Riders of the Purple Sage]
There he met fellow guitarist David Nelson, and was part of the rotating lineup of Mother McCree"s Uptown Jug Champions, a jug band that included Jerry Garcia and several other future members of the Grateful Dead.