Berry Duane Oakley Carries Two Legacies with Live Dead & Brothers

As Live Dead & Brothers continue their summer tour, bassist Berry Duane Oakley reflects on family, legacy and carrying forward the music of the Allman Brothers Band and Grateful Dead for a new generation.

“There are a million Allman Brothers bands and a million Dead bands… nobody was really blending both worlds together.”

Live Dead & Brothers isn’t another tribute band. It’s a meeting point between two of rock’s most influential musical legacies, bringing together musicians with direct ties to both the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers Band.

For bassist Berry Duane Oakley, the son of legendary Allman Brothers bassist Berry Oakley, Live Dead & Brothers isn’t about recreating the past—it’s about celebrating the connection between two bands that forever changed American music.

“There are a million Allman Brothers bands and a million Dead bands,” Oakley said. “Nobody was really blending both worlds together.”

That idea became Live Dead & Brothers, a lineup featuring Oakley alongside former RatDog guitarist Mark Karan, keyboardist Scott Guberman, drummer Pete Lavezzoli, Melody Trucks, and The Fitzkee Brothers.

Rather than simply alternate between Allman Brothers and Grateful Dead songs, the band seamlessly blends both catalogs.

“We’ll go from ‘Dark Star’ into ‘In Memory of Elizabeth Reed,’ then back into ‘Dark Star,'” Oakley said. “We’ll do ‘I Know You Rider’ into ‘Midnight Rider.’ The music naturally fits together.”

“The connection was always there.”

“Jerry had an influence on Dickey. Dickey had an influence on Jerry. My father and Phil Lesh would have long conversations about bass playing.”

That musical conversation stretches back more than fifty years.

Long before tribute bands existed, members of the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers Band were sharing stages, swapping ideas and inspiring one another.

“My father and Phil were always talking about bass playing,” Oakley said. “Because of Phil, my dad built the famous Tractor Bass.”

That spirit of improvisation still defines every Live Dead & Brothers performance.

“The Dead philosophy was always that you never play the same thing twice,” Oakley said. “A lot of this music is open to interpretation.”

It also means audiences rarely see the same show twice.

“We might only follow the setlist about thirty percent of the time,” he laughed. “Sometimes we’re just reading the room and letting the music take us where it wants to go.”

Growing Up Between Two Legacies

Berry Duane Oakley never had the opportunity to know his biological father, who died in a motorcycle accident in 1972 just months before he was born.

Music surrounded him from the very beginning.

His mother later married Three Dog Night vocalist Chuck Negron, while Doors guitarist Robbie Krieger became his godfather.

“Berry Oakley was my father.”
“Chuck Negron was my dad.”

In just eight words, Oakley sums up the story of his life.

It’s a distinction that means everything to Oakley. One left behind a musical legacy that he would spend years discovering. The other was there for the everyday moments—raising him, guiding him and teaching him the importance of patience, kindness and family.

“Chuck taught me to be patient. To be kind. To treat people well,” Oakley said. “Family was always important to him.”

Those values have stayed with Oakley throughout a career that has taken him from Bloodline, alongside a teenage Joe Bonamassa, to Butch Trucks & The Freight Train Band, the Allman Betts Band, and now Live Dead & Brothers.

Learning His Father’s Legacy

In 1989, shortly after the release of the Dreams box set, Dickey and Donna Betts approached Oakley’s mother with an idea.

“They told my mom, ‘We want to take Berry on the road,'” Oakley recalled. “‘He needs to learn his father’s legacy.'”

That invitation changed his life forever.

“I’ve been playing my dad’s songs longer than he got the chance to.”

Today, Oakley often finds himself reflecting on that remarkable reality.

“My father only had a few years with those songs,” he said. “I’ve been fortunate enough to spend decades with them.”

Later, performing alongside original Allman Brothers drummer Butch Trucks brought everything full circle.

“Once I played with Butch, everything clicked,” Oakley said. “That was my father’s drummer. Suddenly I understood why those bass lines worked the way they did.”

Passing It Forward

For Oakley, Live Dead & Brothers isn’t simply about honoring the past.

It’s about making sure the music continues to reach new audiences.

He says one of his favorite moments is looking out into the crowd and seeing multiple generations sharing the experience together.

“We’ve got grandparents bringing their kids and grandkids,” he said. “That’s really special.”

“The Allman Brothers and the Grateful Dead aren’t around anymore…”

“…but the music still brings people joy. We get to pass it on to the next generation.”

That may ultimately be the greatest purpose behind Live Dead & Brothers.

While the original bands have become part of rock history, the songs remain alive through the musicians who lived them, learned from them, and continue to carry them forward—one improvisation, one audience, and one generation at a time.

Live Dead & Brothers continue their summer tour with performances across the country. Tour dates and ticket information are available on the band’s Bandsintown page.

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