Bobby and the Midnites was a
Grateful Dead spin-off group led by
the Dead's guitarist/singer
Bob Weir during the first half of the '80s. Their initial lineup, in addition to
Weir, was:
Bobby Cochran (guitar, vocals),
the Dead's
Brent Mydland (keyboards, vocals),
Tim Bogert (bass), noted jazz fusion drummer
Billy Cobham, and
Matt Kelly (harmonica, guitar, congas), who had been in
Weir's '70s spin-off group,
Kingfish. This sextet played their first gig at Golden Bear in Huntington Beach, CA, on June 30, 1980.
Bobby and the Midnites signed to
the Dead's label, Arista Records, and released their self-titled debut album in November 1981, by which time
Alphonso Johnson had replaced
Bogert on bass. The album charted for a couple of months, but was not a big seller. The band, having dropped
Kelly and replaced
Mydland with keyboard player
Dave Garland, toured extensively in 1982, 1983, and 1984. In March 1983,
Ken Gradney replaced
Johnson on bass. In August 1984, Columbia Records released
Bobby and the Midnites' second album,
Where the Beat Meets the Street, which again was not commercially successful, though it charted briefly.
Bobby and the Midnites played their final show on September 30, 1984, at Rio in Valley Stream, NY, after which
Weir, while continuing with
the Grateful Dead, rejoined
Kingfish and did solo performances. He later performed with such groups as Nightfood and Go Ahead, and starting in 1988, began to tour regularly in a duo with bassist
Rob Wasserman.
–
William Ruhlmann, Rovi