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Grateful Dead founding member Bobby Weir, 77, looks 'forward to dying'

Grateful Dead founding member Bobby Weir is one of the last men standing in his legendary rock band. 

The thought of mortality has crossed Weir’s mind, as he’s seen many of his band members pass. 

Despite having lived a life full of music and memories, Weir’s sentiment wasn't one of fear, but rather of acceptance.

GRATEFUL DEAD FOUNDING MEMBER PHIL LESH DEAD AT 84

Bobby Weir

Grateful Dead founding member Bobby Weir confessed he was looking forward to dying after he witnessed several of his bandmates' deaths. ( Steve Jennings/Getty Images)

"Every day, things change. I’ll say this: I look forward to dying," Weir, 77, told Rolling Stone.

"I tend to think of death as the last and best reward for a life well-lived. That’s it. I’ve still got a lot on my plate, and I won’t be ready to go for a while."

Bobby Weir

Musician Bobby Weir attends the Kennedy Center Honoree reception in 2024. (Chris Kleponis / AFP via Getty Images)

While Weir has showed no signs of slowing down, he witnessed several deaths of his band members, including bassist Phil Lesh and guitarist Jerry Garcia

"I wish … well, Phil made it to his eighties. Jerry didn’t, and there was a lot that Jerry had to offer that he didn’t get to offer.

Lesh was one of the founding members and died in October 2024. He was 84.

Weir witnessed several deaths of his band members, including bassist Phil Lesh and guitarist Jerry Garcia. 

Weir witnessed several deaths of his band members, including bassist Phil Lesh and guitarist Jerry Garcia. 

Weir was famously the "little brother" of the Grateful Dead, as he joined the band at age 16. 

In 1963, he met Garcia in Palo Alto, California, in an alleyway, according to Rolling Stone.

Weir is one of the band’s few remaining members, alongside drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann.

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Before Lesh’s death, the four bandmates discussed reuniting in honor of the rock band’s 60th anniversary this year. Since Lesh’s passing, Weir is now unsure of a band reunion.

"We speak a language that nobody else speaks," Weir explained. "We communicate, we kick stuff back and forth, and then make our little statement in a more universal language."

 Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, Mickey Hart and Jerry Garcia.

The Grateful Dead, clockwise, Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, Mickey Hart and Jerry Garcia in 1970. (Chris Walter/WireImage)

He continued, "For us, it’s a look or a motion with one shoulder, or the way you reflect a phrase or something that tips off the other guys where you’re going with this. And then they work on being where you’re headed, getting there with a little surprise for you. That’s a formula that’s worked real well for us over the years, and there just aren’t enough of us left now to do that anymore."

However, this month, Weir returned to Las Vegas for another Dead & Company residency with 18 shows at the Sphere. 

"That’s what I do," he said. "That’s what I’m here for."

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Phil Lesh performing with the Grateful Dead in 1979

Phil Lesh performs with The Grateful Dead in 1979. (Photo by Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, in October 2024, Lesh’s death was confirmed on his official Instagram page.

"Phil brought immense joy to everyone around him and leaves behind a legacy of music and love," his social media read at the time. 

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"When Phil's happening, the band's happening," Grateful Dead co-founder, frontman and lead guitarist Garcia, who died in 1995, once said of Lesh's bass playing.

The Grateful Dead disbanded in 1995 after Garcia's death, but Lesh continued to perform into his 80s, often with his son Grahame Lesh.

Phil Lesh at the 2023 Great South Bay Music Festival

The Grateful Dead disbanded in 1995 after Garcia's death, but Lesh continued to perform into his 80s, often with his son Grahame Lesh. (Photo by Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images)

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Lesh and Garcia first met in 1959, and after reconnecting in 1964, Garcia invited Lesh to join the group, then called the Warlocks. Garcia asked Lesh to play bass guitar, which he never had done before, according to Rolling Stone.

Stephanie Giang-Paunon is an Entertainment Writer for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to stephanie.giang@fox.com and on Twitter: @SGiangPaunon.

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