
In
the winter of 1954-55 America was in an economic, social, and cultural
interregnum. One style of life, one mood like Victorianism or Edwardianism
was giving way to another. The industrial age based on the mechanical
exploitation of coal and iron was giving way to electronics, computers,
automation with all the social and intellectual results such a
basic revolution implies but as yet few indeed understood what
was happening.
The
country was in a minor economic depression following the end of the Korean
War. The Korean War represented a qualitative leap forward in technology
and a lag in all other factors. However, morale broke down for a more
simple reason. You can fight only one such war every twenty-five years.
The Korean War took place within the effective memory of the Second World
War. The academic and intellectual establishment, Left, Right, and Center,
was shattered, demoralized, and discredited by the years of McCarthyism.
Young men by the thousands were returning from the Korean War to the colleges
disillusioned and contemptuous of their elders. They said to each other,
Keep your nose clean and dont volunteer. Dont
believe anybody over thirty. Communication between groups broke
down. Only those of the older generation who had remained defiant were
respected, listened to, questioned. Just as the Army took years to discover
the almost total breakdown of morale in Korea, so the older intellectuals
were unaware that a volcano was building up under them.
McCarthyism
itself was an expression of breakdown of an older American synthesis.
It has often been pointed out that McCarthy came from a small Wisconsin
city, from a state which was once the home of the radical Progressive
LaFollette, the most intransigent spokesman for the old agrarian Populism
with its distrust of Wall Street, the New York and New England political
and cultural establishment, isolationist, defiantly middle class. The
doors were closed and locked forever for any escape into economic power
of the Midwestern debtor society of small farmers, small-town independent
merchants, and country bankers. McCarthyism is the last expression of
what in central Europe was called the Green Revolution, devouring itself
in impotence.
Most
of the slogans of McCarthyism, like those of the John Birch Society today,
had once possessed an entirely different meaning and had been formative
ideas in the shaping of an older America. This content had been emptied
out and replaced by truculent suspicion of any and all enlightened ideas
which were forming the new, succeeding society. At the top America was
in the hands of a sort of regency. The ship of state was steering itself.
A generation was growing up which had known World War II only as children.
Not one of the hopes or the promises of that war had been realized. Russia
and the United States both had the Bomb and were striving to divide the
world between them, to turn whole nations into aircraft carriers and army
bases.
The
Korean War had ended in a bloody stalemate and a wholesale breakdown of
morale. While McCarthy was at the height of his power, with few exceptions
the intellectual and moral leaders of America feared to challenge, if
they did not actually support him. The entire academic community was shattered
and terrorized both by McCarthy and dozens of local witch hunts and state-sponsored
investigating committees. McCarthyism more than any other thing revealed
to the young the moral bankruptcy of their elders. College professors
complained that they were facing a silent generation who received their
lectures with the response no comment. Nihilism in public
life was reflected in nihilism amongst young intellectuals. The intellectual
establishment, in fact, many of whom were ex-Communists, largely supported
McCarthy. Nihilism in authority breeds nihilism in response, as it did
in nineteenth-century Russia.
Although
all the literary editors and the academicians were busy telling the world
in the early fifties that the age of experiment and revolt was over, a
very few critics, myself amongst them, had begun to point out that this
slogan alone showed how complete was the breakdown of communications between
the generations. Under the very eyes of the pre-war generation a new age
of experiment and revolt far more drastic in its departures, far more
absolute in its rejections, was already coming into being. The Beat writers
were not at first part of this movement. Kerouac had published a very
conventional novel, Ginsberg was writing dry whimsical little imitations
of William Carlos Williams, Burroughss intoxicated lucubrations
were not considered publishable even by himself. Gregory Corso, a naïve
writer, a kind of natural-born Dadaist, was tolerated as an amusing mascot
by the boys on The Harvard Advocate as a convenient practical joke.
San
Francisco was the one community in the United States which had a regional
literature and art at variance with the prevailing pattern. During the
thirties it had become a strong trade-union town with a politically powerful
Left, yet this radical activity was remarkably independent of the doctrinaire
dictates of the American Communist Party. Perhaps the main reason for
this was that most of the leadership had come from the IWW, the anarcho-syndicalist
One Big Union movement which had been so strong on the Pacific
Coast a generation before. During the war, work camps for conscientious
objectors were established throughout the mountains and forests of California.
These boys came down to San Francisco on their leaves. They met with San
Francisco writers and artists who had been active in the Red Thirties
but who had become, not professional anti-Bolsheviks, but anarchists and
pacifists. During the war, meetings of pacifist and anarchist organizations
continued to be well attended. Immediately on the wars end a group
of San Francisco writers and artists began an Anarchist Circle with public
meetings which for five years were better attended than those of all the
Socialist and Communist organizations put together. From this group and
from the artists C.O. camp at Waldport, Oregon, came a large percentage
of cultured activities in San Francisco which have lasted to the present
time a radio station, three little theaters, a succession of magazines,
and a number of people who are considered the leading writers and artists
of the community today. And it was this sympathetic environment that the
so-called Beat writers discovered around the early fifties.
There
is probably more misunderstanding and misinformation current about the
Beat Generation than any other phenomenon in contemporary culture. This
is due to the fact that the sensational press were quick to seize on the
Beat writers and to reconstruct them in their own image. The public personality
which had been grafted onto Allen Ginsberg is the kind of person the editors
of Time magazine would be if they only had the nerve. The Beat
writer is what the French call a hallucination publicitaire, Madison
Avenues idea of a Revolutionary Bohemian Artist. It bears almost
no relation to actuality although the delusion, the false image, is a
continuous temptation to the real writers. They can always find applause
and profit by living up to the delusions of their enemies.
The
factual historical misinformation about the Beat Movement is immense.
In the first place, there never really was a Beat Movement, with the exception
of four writers Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs,
and Gregory Corso. Second, these writers have had little connection with
San Francisco down the years and they were all fairly well known amongst
bohemian intellectuals before they ever saw the city. William Burroughs,
several years older than the rest, had first brought them together in
New York shortly after 1950. Kerouac and Ginsberg were at that time students
at Columbia and Gregory Corso a non-student at Harvard University. For
several years a group of very hip young men had been running a magazine
in St. Louis called Neurotica. About 1952 two of the editors, Jay
and Fred Landesman, moved to New York and opened a large loft studio a
block away from the San Remo Café, then the most in or the most far out
of the Greenwich Village bohemian hangouts. It was at the Landesmans
studio that Kerouac, Ginsberg, Corso, and Burroughs first made contact
with the literary bohemian society of New York. There are several novels
about this phase of the movement. With the exception of Clellan Holmess
Go, they very significantly do not concentrate on the specific
behavior patterns peculiar to the four Beats but describe the general
scene in the first postwar generation of disaffiliation, revolt, disgust.
The
trouble with the New York scene around the San Remo Café was its total
mindlessness. There was nothing there but disgust. When Ginsberg and Kerouac
began visiting San Francisco in the course of their student wanderings
around the country during vacation the effect on them was explosive. In
1956 I asked the proprietors of the Six Gallery, one of the launching
pads of abstract expressionism, if they would sponsor a reading by Walter
Lowenfels, who could not get a hall anywhere in San Francisco because
he was under indictment for violation of the Smith Act. He was an editor
of the Philadelphia edition of The Daily Worker and had been a
well-known modernist poet in the Paris America of the late twenties and
early thirties. (He is the Jabberwohl Kronstadt in Henry Millers
Black Spring.) The proprietors of the gallery were delighted at
the chance to defy authority. Nobody under 40 had ever heard of Lowenfels
as a poet but to everyones amazement the large gallery was jam-packed
with young people who came to hear him read. The proprietors were so delighted
that they asked me to arrange other readings. The next one made history.
It was a parade of the citys leading avant-garde poets Robert
Duncan, Brother Antoninus, Philip Lamantia, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Michael
McClure, and four young men who had just come to town Gary Snyder,
Philip Whalen, Gregory Corso, Allen Ginsberg. Here Ginsberg first read
Howl, which he had been working on in a state of excited entrancement
for the past two weeks. The effect beggars description. A new folklore
and a new folkloristic relationship between audience and poet had been
created.
The
Six Gallery reading is usually said to have launched the Beat movement.
In fact the only connection is Allen Ginsberg himself. Kerouac was present
but did not participate except to create periodic disturbances. Public
reading of poetry had become a regular institution in San Francisco as
early as 1928 and was a principal attraction in the John Reed Club, the
Communist artist and writers organization, and in the Jack London
Club, the competing Socialist group. Poetry readings were given by the
united pacifist Randolph Bourne Council and later by the San Francisco
Anarchist Circle all through the war and the decade after, mostly in the
Arbeiter Ring, the largely Jewish workingmens fraternal organization.
The San Francisco Poetry Center had been in existence for some years and
had already moved to San Francisco State College. The annual Poetry Festivals
had begun shortly after the war and the satirical musical review, The
Poets Follies, under the direction of Weldon Kees and Michael
Grieg, with acts like the beautiful stripper Lili St. Cyr reading T.S.
Eliots Ash Wednesday (dressed), had already shown three consecutive
years. Kenneth Patchen, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and myself had already
started reading poetry to jazz in local jazz clubs. (The great bassist
and composer Charles Mingus was closely associated with many of the artists
and writers of San Francisco during the war years.)
The
older poets had all been active in the anarchist and pacifist movement
for many years, had been conscientious objectors during the war, and worked
in C.O. camps or in hospitals. Of the younger, Philip Whalen and Gary
Snyder had grown up in IWW circles in Oregon and Washington.
It
was from this background that the very superficial and largely factitious
interest in Zen Buddhism shared by Kerouac and Ginsberg comes, not, as
is often imagined, from contact with G.I.s returning from China,
Japan, and Korea. The influence of Oriental religion on San Francisco
is partly indigenous. There are many large, flourishing Buddhist churches
in the Bay Area with mostly Japanese congregations, but with Caucasians
as well, and with many contacts with the general community. I know of
only one returned G.I. who came back with an interest in Buddhism. He
had no contact with the San Francisco intellectual community except myself
and became an academic Buddhologist. On the other hand, Alan Watts, Gerald
Heard, Christopher Isherwood, Aldous Huxley, and myself in California
and the painters Mark Tobey and Morris Graves in Seattle were centers
of interest in Oriental religion, but more especially in the revival of
the contemplative life, all through the war years. Most of us conducted
seminars, discussion groups, and retreats teaching younger people the
elements and the techniques of nonviolence and meditation. These activities
of course still go on in different forms and on a much larger scale. Gary
Snyder is an ordained Zen monk and learned in the poetry and religious
literature of India, China, and Japan. I will always remember the night
Jack Kerouac appeared uninvited at my home, sat down with a jug of cheap
port wine beside him on the floor, announced that he was a Zen Buddhist,
and discovered that everybody in the room read at least one Oriental language.
Kerouacs
portrayal of this aspect of San Francisco culture, in The Dharma Bums,
would be a malevolent libel if it were deliberate. It is only an expression
of his own baffled ignorance in the face of human motivations and beliefs,
which he was intrinsically incapable of understanding. It is this ignorant
confabulation presenting itself as reality which accounts for the almost
complete eclipse of Kerouacs reputation. Young people no longer
read him and consider him absurd, the apotheosis of uptight. It is not
just the misrepresentation of fact but the misunderstanding of motivation,
the distortion of character and the ignorance of the ideas involved which
has caused him to be no longer read by people who really understand what
he is talking about. The world view of post-modern culture and of the
San Francisco version of it especially has now become the common possession
of millions of young people and it is backed up with a whole literature
and way of life which bears no real resemblance to the disorderly conduct
for its own sake of Kerouacs characters.
Another
influence on the San Francisco scene was Henry Miller, who had lived in
Big Sur since 1941 and who was known to most of the San Francisco writers.
I doubt if either Ginsberg or Kerouac ever read much of what he has written.
They once hitchhiked down the coast 130 miles to visit him and were not
admitted. Millers very positive and powerful religious convictions
and love of life have little to do with the nihilism of the beatnik.
I
should mention by the way that the word beatnik was invented
by the San Francisco columnist, Herb Caen. The term beat was
a common slang phrase amongst bop musicians and often, like funky,
and other bop slang, was used in a reverse sense, but usually to mean
emotionally exhausted. The term Beat Generation was first
used simultaneously by Clellan Holmes, in an article in the New York
Times Magazine, and by myself in New World Writing. This article
and others like it which I wrote at the time about the then youngest generation
of poets the new age of experiment and revolt included along
with Ginsberg and Corso, Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Denise Levertov,
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Robert Duncan, Brother Antoninus, and many others.
This was an unfortunate linkage which has endured to this day. None of
these people has anything to do with any imagined Beat movement. Their
writing is of the widest variety and they share only a rejection of the
morals of a commercial civilization and a return to the international
idiom of modern verse which had been stifled in America by the Reactionary
Generation of the forties and the Proletarians of the thirties.
William
Carlos Williams and Ezra Pound, but Williams especially, were strong influences
on this entire group, as were the unreconstructed modernists surviving
from the inter bellum years Louis Zukofsky, Walter Lowenfels, Sam
Beckett, Kenneth Patchen, and myself. Another factor in San Francisco
culture that is very important is its closer connection with London and
Paris than with New York. San Francisco intellectuals first made contact
with London anarchists during the Spanish War and all during the Second
World War correspondence was kept up with people like Sir Herbert Read,
Alex Comfort, George Woodcock, Charles Wrey Gardner, Tambimuttu, and others.
I for instance first read the poetry of Denise Levertov when she was a
Land Girl in Essex and introduced her by mail to Charles Wrey Gardner,
who was publishing Poetry Quarterly in Billericay. George Barker
lived in Big Sur in the forties. Dylan Thomas spent two long periods in
San Francisco.
French
publications of the résistance like Éditions de minuit and
Pierre Segherss Poésie arrived in G.I. mail in some quantity
as soon as the Americans got to Africa, and lesser amounts had trickled
in from the very beginning. Writers like Simone Weil, Sartre, Camus, and
poets of the résistance like Char, Frénaud, Rousselot, Seghers,
Follain, Guillevic, were read in San Francisco before anyone in New York
literary circles had so much as heard of them. People in San Francisco
had corresponded with Simone Weil from the days of the Spanish War.
All
this goes to make up the picture of the emergence of the post-modern worldwide
intellectual culture in which the Beat Generation was only a minor episode,
a kind of misunderstanding on the part of a few intellectual amateurs
and following them the literary journalists of the gutter press. The present
revolt of youth, the new radicalism, the democratization of the avant-garde,
are all aspects of a worldwide revolution in the very foundations of culture,
basic changes in ways of living, the emergence of a fundamentally new
civilization. Allen Ginsberg has survived into this new civilization,
and is today one of its leading figures in Tel Aviv, Calcutta, Moscow,
but the Beat Generation placard which was hung around his neck has long
since dropped away. Only squares and elderly Communist bureaucrats in
the minor Balkan countries used the term beatnik after 1960.
What
was the significance of the Beat movement, so called? What was its effect
on the evolution of American literature and culture? It was the form in
which the mass disaffiliation of postwar youth from a commercial, predatory,
and murderous society first came to the attention of that society itself.
Kerouacs On the Road was a bestseller. It served the purpose
of detective stories and cowboy romances and girlie magazines for the
vast new white-collar class; the grey flannel suburbia escaped into a
dream world of fast cars, easy women, drunken parties. This world of Jack
Kerouacs had essentially the same values as did the world of the
upwardly mobile new professions. A whole literature of dope, homosexual
prostitution, knife fights, sado-masochism, gang bangs has followed in
its train the soap operas and horse operas of the lumpen petty
power élite, the little Jet or Squirt Set, in the decade since its publication.
Their life has gradually come to resemble their escape literature. The
effect of Kerouac on young people, on the revolt of youth, on the genuinely
disaffiliated, was minimal. True, all sorts of juvenile delinquents abandoned
their disorderly conduct in the soda fountains near the high schools of
Cle Elum, Fort Dodge, and Tucumcari, hitchhiked to San Francisco, and
started making like Kerouacs characters in North Beach. But this
invasion vanished like the Gauls from Rome. It was unable to hold the
territory. While it lasted it had certain characteristics that distinguished
it from the older bohemia or the present worldwide culture of secession.
It was life-denying. It hated sex. It used alcohol only for oblivion.
One of the diagnostic signs of the Beat syndrome, very obvious in Kerouacs
and Burroughss books, was contempt for women. The Beat come-on was
to treat a girl exactly as one would treat a casual homosexual pickup
in a public convenience. An interesting thing about the winter of 1957
in North Beach was the wave of young girl suicides, one of them the mistress
of the hero of On the Road. Another man had killed his wife in
Mexico some years before, playing William Tell at a party. This kind of
senseless nihilism was pushed aside by the rising tide of genuine revolt
with a new ethic and a new kind of social responsibility and a new and
very male and very female sexuality even though the squares are
still bothered because everybody wears long hair.
Burroughs
is a special case. His work is source material for social history, not
literature, and as such of minor importance. He is also one of many writers
mining a current faddism. Corso is another special case. Like most naïves,
he really has little relationship to literary literature. It is possible
to relate le douanier Rousseau to the beginnings of Cubism but
the relationship is fortuitous. If anything, they were influenced by him,
certainly not the other way around. He wanted to paint as photographically
as possible. This does not mean that Corso is not a considerable poet;
he is, just as Rousseau is a very great painter.
Of
the four Beat writers, Ginsberg is much the most important. Howl
has sold hundreds of thousands of copies and been translated into most
civilized languages and many semi-civilized ones. It is a true vatic utterance,
the speech of a nabi, an excited Hebrew prophet, and the closest
parallels in literature are Hosea and Jeremiah. For several years it was
fantastically popular with American students and played an important role
in reinforcing and consolidating their contempt for the conspiracy of
the Social Lie the American Way of Life. Ginsberg has none of the
life hatred, nihilism, praise for oblivion, sexual disgust, or social
destructiveness of Kerouac and Burroughs. He has never lost a certain
boyish ingenuousness which leads him to showing off on television and
provoking arguments about dope and homosexuality with Bolshevik bureaucrats.
In some ways he resembles, most especially in his unquenchable youthfulness,
Colin Wilson. The great difference between the Angries and the Beats is
that the Americans rejected the entire social structure. They didnt
want to be admitted to the old Establishment or to found a new one. They
wanted to pull down all Establishments whatsoever. More important even
than this all of them, even Kerouac and Burroughs, were interested
in what the avant-garde between the wars called The Revolution of the
Word. They were interested in attacking, disorganizing, and in the case
of Ginsberg and Corso, reorganizing the structure of the human sensibility
as such through a revolutionary use of language, the overturning of the
old patterns of logic and syntax. This last phrase is almost exactly that
of the surrealist theoretician André Breton and it is still believed in
passionately by the Beat poets. On the other hand, I have found in interviews
with the leading Angries that when you question them about this matter
they are unable to understand what you are talking about its
some French thing, like eating frogs and snails. An American television
interviewer, after a long hassle trying to get the most articulate of
the Angries to understand what he was talking about, gave up with the
remark, aired throughout the world, I guess Id be angry too
if I went to all that trouble and ended up writing like bum Galsworthy.
Whatever the faults of the Beats, they were the first challenge to what
we call the basic values of the civilization to reach a popular audience,
but it must be remembered that they were essentially a small focal point
in an overwhelming social movement, a highly visible ripple in a worldwide
New Wave.
II
The
most significant, if not the best by older critical standards, literature
in America today is to be found, not in books, or even in the established
literary magazines, but in poetry readings, in mimeographed broadsides,
in lyrics for rock groups, in protest songs in direct audience
relationships of the sort that prevailed at the very beginnings of literature.
The art of reading and writing could vanish from memory in a night and
it would not make a great difference to the poetry, or even much of the
prose, of the youngest generation of poets and hearers of poetry. This
is the new world of youth which so disturbs the oldies. Rightly so, it
is a world they never made. In it they are strangers and afraid
totally unable, most of them, to comprehend what is happening.
The
last few years have seen a steady stream of American books on the New
Left, on the revolt of youth, and especially on such mass phenomena as
the Free Speech Movement in Berkeley and the anti-Vietnam protests on
all the campuses. With no exceptions these books have been written by
ideologues, men of the Thirties, or by somewhat younger people who grew
up in lingering Marxist sectarian groups. They all try to assimilate a
non-ideological, non-political worldwide movement to the programmatic
delusions of another age.
What
we are witnessing today is a profound change in the patterns of life and
an even greater change in its possibilities. This affects all nations
I used to say except Red China beatniks, hooligans, gammlers,
stilyagi, provos, hippies theyre not just to be found
in Amsterdam, in the East Village in New York, on Haight Street in San
Francisco, or on Notting Hill in London. Terms of abuse only represent
the attempt of the squares and the oldies to exorcise behavior which they
do not understand with stereotyped formulas which they think they do.
Britain
is a special case. British society assimilates all things the ceremonies
of the monarchy, the country house orgies of high life, the stodgy Communist
Party of Great Britain. Today the Teddy Boys are middle-aged; the Angries
lunch in the Reform Club; and even Mods and Rockers, no longer young,
have been digested by a homogeneous and homogenizing society. Carnaby
Street is already part of the Establishment and a tourist attraction second
only to the boys in bearskin busbies. The subculture of secession in Great
Britain is a kind of Fabian anarchism, slowly penetrating all structures
of the society by metastasis. This is not true anywhere else and it makes
the profound and ever-widening schism in the soul in modern society difficult
to explain to a British audience. Can you imagine an American president
making the very influential American anarchist, critic, poet, psychiatrist,
urbanist, educator, Paul Goodman, a knight like Sir Herbert Read, or Bob
Dylan an M.B.E. like John Lennon?
Most
nations show no capacity to absorb their youth culture. Not only does
the sight of the long coiffure give most premiers, ministers, and cabinet
secretaries running and barking fits, but it is becoming increasingly
difficult for young people in the uniform of secession beards,
long hair, blue jeans to cross national boundaries. They are harassed
with elaborate customs inspections and forced to give proof of their solvency
and in some countries, Greece, Morocco, and Algiers for instance, are
refused entrance on their appearance alone. Les douaniers are perfectly
right; they are the enemy. If there were enough of them national boundaries
would disappear instantly.
Does
this mean that they are Internationalists and Pacifists, capital I and
capital P? Certainly not. Any question like this provokes a false answer.
What is happening cannot be explained in terms of ideology. Ideologies
are at best schematizations of social reality, never fit the facts, and
wear out rapidly like ill-fitting shoes. Suppose Hitler had conquered
the world and had totally suppressed all the documents and the very memory
of the writings of Marx. Would the industrial process then have failed
to produce human self-alienation? Would there no longer be
any necessity for the capitalist system to expand regardless of human
values or else collapse? Would the ratio of labor power to capital investment
and with it the rate of profit stop falling? Would the failure of the
economic system to ensure a minimum of life satisfactions for the majority
of its members not have resulted in an ever-increasing demand for a fundamental
change in the quality of life? Do all these things depend upon familiarity
with a four-foot shelf of books full of errors and failed prophecies?
Revolutionary consciousness is not the product of courses in the ABC of
Marxism. It is a kind of natural secretion of the hopeless contradictions
of modern society and it is most doubtful if Marx would have recognized
it in fact he notoriously was as intolerant as any country pastor
in Ibsen of the mild bohemianism of his own children.
Fortunately
for the present generation, the hundred years from 1848 to 1948 witnessed
the total bankruptcy of all ideologies. The revolutions of the past, said
Teilhard de Chardin, had economic and political objectives, but the latter
half of the twentieth century will see a worldwide revolutionary struggle
to change the quality and meaning of life. This revolution cannot be understood
unless we realize that it starts off with the slate wiped clean. There
is no worse guide conceivable than an aged ex-Left-Trotskyite holding
down a professorship in a multiversity, the boss of a corps of graduate
students tagging demonstrators about the campus with questionnaires.
Today
there is growing up throughout the world an entirely new pattern of life.
For several years I have called it the subculture of secession but this
it is no more it is a competing civilization, a new society
within the shell of the old. It has come about not through books
or programs but through a change in the methods of production. It is a
society of people who have simply walked into a computerized, transistorized,
automated world, a post-industrial or post-capitalist economy, in which
there is an ever-increasing democratization of at least the possibilities
for a creative response to life.
What
does democratization of the arts mean in practice in America? What happens
when an entire subculture takes to poetry, rock groups, folk songs, junk
sculpture, collage pop pictures, total sexual freedom, and costumes invented
ad lib? What is the relationship of this literary and artistic activity
in which everyone can take part to the official, professionalized culture?
What is the relationship of the Establishment and the Secession? Obviously
the younger people are both seceding from something and acceding to something.
What?
Conventional
academic poetry is certainly flourishing in America. Most poets of this
type, in fact all of them, have very good jobs in universities which pay
from $8000 to $30,000 a year. Their books do not sell, but readings on
the poetry circuits of the Establishment are at least as profitable as
ever was Vaudeville. Any established poet can ask and receive fees from
$500 to $1000 an appearance, thus nuzzling the heels of concert stars
on the rung above him.
There
is another world of poetry readings altogether. Ferlinghetti, Ginsberg,
and Bob Dylan form the only bridge from one world to another. I have no
idea what Bob Dylans sales are, but Ferlinghettis Coney
Island of the Mind alone had sold 250,000 copies by 1969. The book
sells at the rate of 45,000 a year and has been translated into Swedish,
Danish, Polish, Russian, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Czech, Slovak,
Serbian, at least, not counting pirated editions in the Orient and in
the smaller Iron Curtain countries. Ferlinghettis other books sell
20,000 a year, altogether. Ginsbergs Howl has sold over 200,000
in the U.S. alone. Kaddish had sold 30,000. Reality Sandwiches,
20,000. The foreign editions of Ginsberg are innumerable. Dylan Thomass
sales are still about equal to Ginsbergs or Ferlinghettis
and he was one of the most popular platform personalities
in American history but not in Great Britain!
People
like Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and the leading rock groups have fabulous incomes.
Yet even those who have gone over to the nightclub circuit like Peter,
Paul, and Mary and Judy Collins still live essentially the same lives
as the seceders on unemployment payments or welfare, with the same values
and the same pleasures, and they are even more active in civil-rights
and civil-liberties struggles. That is the point in a society of
abundance where the poor live better than Charlemagne, everybody can afford
to be ethical. Aristotle confines his Nichomachean Ethics to the
moral behavior of free citizens of Greek city states. Slaves, says he,
cannot afford ethics their wills are not their own. The reason
for the vast eruption of moral protest in America since the beginning
of the civil-rights struggle is that people now can afford to be good
aggressively so. Nothing serious, except possibly murder, can happen
to a young girl who leaves a Northern college and goes to the South to
help out. Suppose her parents disown her? She wont starve. Shell
have an interesting life and be welcomed back to school with a scholarship.
In an abundant society a large number of people will discover that ethics
is (or are) fun like poetry or jazz or happenings. Only in a wealthy
society could the film play so important a role. Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage,
Bruce Conner, James Broughton, one of their films costs more than James
Joyce made on Ulysses yet these film-makers are as much
a part of the scene as Gary Snyder, whose life motto is, Dont
own anything you wouldnt leave out in the rain or as
Joan Baez, who must make as much as Maria Callas.
Far
more important than their large sales, readings by Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti,
Gary Snyder are mass demonstrations where the charisma practically reeks,
and could be bottled and sold. In the new subculture, no longer very submerged,
these poets have founded a way of life. In countless coffee shops and
community pads people gather nightly, play records of rock groups like
The Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful Dead, The Only Alternative and the
Other Possibilities, records of protest and of folk singers like Bob Dylan
and Joan Baez, or records of the modern jazz musicians, Ornette Coleman,
John Handy, Cecil Taylor, Archie Shepp; or they may beat congas and atonal
guitars polyrhythmically and recite their own poetry. Usually this poetry
has no life beyond the immediate occasion. Sometimes small groups, essentially
neighborhood communities, in the analogs of New Yorks East Village
and San Franciscos Haight-Ashbury district, which are springing
up all over the country, get together and put out duplicated publications
of their own poems. Sometimes they even manage a hand press, and produce
a regular magazine. The girls set type, the fellows turn the cranks, babies
crawl on the floor, and cats tip over the fonts and piss in the pied type.
The first magazine of this kind from such a group was The Ark,
published just after World War II by the San Francisco Anarchist Circle.
Since 1946 its progeny are numbered in thousands, but they still come
from the same kind of group (although nobody is so square as to call himself
an anarchist anymore), and are produced in the same circumstances in the
same cold water flats with rubbish décor.
Like
the old French Canadian threat of winning the battle of the cradle, this
is a revolution which hopes to win simply by outliving and outbreeding
the squares. In a few years most people will be under 25. In this world
there are no economic problems. This is the world of post-Theobald man,
functioning on the bare minimum subsistence income which the modern Welfare
State actually does guarantee right now. These people not only accept
their redundancy, they glory in it. Nobody works any more than enough
to get his unemployment insurance. The standard of living is exactly that
of the unsophisticated redundants two pairs of blue jeans a year
in Appalachian fashion, welfare cuisine of lots of rice and beans, wine
at $1.30 a gallon, and grass consumed till every roach has vanished from
its crutch. Where the records and books come from, I dont know.
I guess theyre stolen. Paintings, and found art, like the poetry,
are authentic products of cottage industry.
If
you democratize art you necessarily, at least at first, lower its standards.
Anybody can do junk sculpture or drip painting or collages. Anybody can
sing as well as Bob Dylan. Anybody can write as well as most of the poems
given away in San Francisco shops by the Free Poetry Movement (on the
butchers counter a stack of mimeographed sheets and a card, Free
Poems Take One). When Lenin said the time would come when
any cook could run the State he didnt say hed be a very good
cook or a very good governor. However, already a new set of artistic and
literary values or criteria are emerging. They reflect the interpersonal
relationships and their attendant values of a quite different kind of
society anti-predatory, anti-exploitative, personally, morally
engaged. This results in a quite different formal esthetic and
through all the apparent chaos, a new concept of form can be seen emerging
and new evaluations. Fifty years of socialist power have not ended human
self-alienation but seem to have increased it. You cant expect the
Free Poetry Movement to produce Homers overnight or even T.S. Eliots.
However the Seceders have attacked precisely alienation and I suppose
that is the fundamental criterion: does this poem or song or story or
film or painting or play overcome the gulf between man and man and between
man and himself even a very little?
This
is a revolutionary movement which has substituted for Workers of
the World Unite You Have Nothing to Lose But Your Chains,
Please Let Me Alone, Man; I Just Want to Do Nice Things With My
Friends. Innocuous as this might seem as a revolutionary slogan,
it is a specter that is haunting Europe, and America, and Asia as well.
In Prague there was a coffee shop called The Viola where Ferlinghetti
was recited to records by Thelonious Monk, although in Prague in cette
belle époque between the wars nobody ever thought to recite Allen
Tate to Stephen Foster on the banjo.
Poetry,
probably because it is the one art most difficult to turn into a commodity,
is, with folk-rock and jazz, the focus of life in this world. An equally
important reason is that contemporary disaffiliation is essentially a
religious challenge to the universal hypocrisy of the Social Lie, and
poetry, of all the arts, can give most specific, most overt, most challenging
expression to religious values. Beginning with Howl, which is a
poem by a nabi of the New York Subway, strictly in Allen Ginsbergs
own tradition, that of the Hebrew prophets, most of the poetry of the
subculture of secession has been religious and its practitioners have
been devoted to the theological virtues voluntary poverty, sexual
honesty, and obedience to personal integrity.
In
such a culture, particularly if it is floated by, rather than submerged
in, an affluent society like our own, economic questions wither away,
more rapidly than in Lenins State. The significant poetry of the
youngest generation escapes altogether from the strictures of the dismal
science. These are the people who have walked into the Great Society uninvited,
without even turning down an invitation to the White House. They have
taken possession of the social results of the cybernetic future.
Political
organizations that represent one pole or the other of the vast evil try
to use this subculture without success. Turnouts like the great Vietnam
protests are not organized by the Progressive Labor Party or the Students
for a Democratic Society or any of the other tiny neo-Bolshevik groups
that crowd their way into the TV cameras. They crank out leaflets and
go through the mechanical patterns of leading the struggle
but they are very minor external parasites on the tail of a vast mass
movement. When they take over and force their people to the front, they
find themselves without followers. The youth of America or the
rest of the world for that matter do not protest the Vietnam War
for geopolitical reasons, in the interests of Chairman Mao or Ho Chi Minh
or the Kremlin but as a murderous conspiracy of the aged, and for
purely human and moral reasons. They look on the war as a war of the old
men at the desks and on the podiums against the young men and women in
the rice paddies and behind the guns. When political groups try to force
this protest into their own channels they discover that the protestors
have suddenly gone away. The crazier violent groups are doubtless, as
always, 75 percent agents provocateurs.
There
is a good deal of confusion about several quite different types of youth
behavior. Just because conduct is revolting, that doesnt mean it
is revolt. There is no more relationship between the wild boys of the
road motorcycle clubs like Hells Angels or some of the more
violent Rocker types and poets like Gary Snyder or singers like
Bob Dylan or Joan Baez, than there is between an Establishment writer
like John Osborne and people who hunt foxes. A good part of what goes
on amongst people under thirty is simply the perennial youth culture we
have always had, which has always disturbed the old, from Babylon to Benny
Goodman. Today the opportunities for mischief offered by affluent society
simply make it all that more conspicuous.
When
the Hells Angels announced they were going to disrupt the Vietnam
protest march in Berkeley, Ken Kesey and Allen Ginsberg invited the leaders
down to Keseys mountain home and turned them on with LSD and the
next day they were as meek as lambs, loved all sentient creatures, and
rode in the march on Keseys Op-Art truck. Thats the connection.
Which
brings up the subject of narcotics. It is true that more young people
smoke marijuana than drink alcohol (except for wine and beer). They say
it is obviously less harmful, and less harmful than tobacco. Most medical
opinion agrees with them. The reason for the persecution by the State
is that marijuana is impossible to tax. Anybody can grow it in a window
box in a moderately dry and warm climate. But by very definition, a pleasure
which is not taxable is a vice.
As
for LSD and the various hallucinogens and stimulants (speed) the
more dangerous ones are losing their popularity. People who use LSD claim
that it doesnt cause lung cancer or lead men to beat their wives
or women to let their children starve. Since older Americans smoke two
to four packs of lethal cigarettes a day and consume immense quantities
of alcohol solely to get drunk and go to sleep with the
goof ball and get up with a pep pill their moral horror when they
discover their children smoke grass or drop acid is a little disgusting.
I have been in some pretty low pads but I have never been in one whose
atmosphere of evil and debauchery approached by miles that of an ordinary
financial district junior executives and stenographers cocktail
bar.
Total
sexual freedom astonishingly enough to the elders doesnt
seem to make a great deal of difference. There is total sexual freedom
in the Wall Street or Madison Avenue cocktail lounge too but there
it is motivated by malevolent mutual hostility and exploitation. In the
typical post-Beat cooperative rooming house it is usually motivated by
a rather excessively aggressive mutual affection, a vulgarized hobo Buddhism.
An older-type square is liable to turn off abruptly when the young lady
poet says as she takes him to bed, I just love all sentient creatures,
dont you, hunh? Most remarkable is the sharp decline in homosexuality
in a completely permissive environment.
Again,
the Carnaby Street costume is often confused with the Revolt of Youth.
This is absurd. Carnaby Street is for the rich rich by the standards
of the secession. It is a remarkably successful attempt of London to disrupt
and capture some of the international fashion trade so long held by Paris
and then by Italy and New York. (The Beatles and Carnaby Street are what
defunct empires produce, attempting to rectify the balance of payments
when everybody can make their own steel.) Nor is it really peculiarly
British. Clothes like this are common now everywhere amongst the junior
Jet or Squirt Set. Portobello Road and Waterlooplein costumes Edwardian
evening gowns topped by 1840 army dress tunics, or togas, or chitons worn
with high button boots are something else. This fashion for optional dress
dress any way you want began in San Francisco and New York
about 1960. Before that it had been confined to a small handful of post-Beat
intellectuals and their girls, mostly in San Francisco but with
a few friends in the East Village. Now it is also worldwide but I think
it is more than a fashion it is here to stay. In the future probably
both rich and poor will dress any way they like. The society can produce
an unlimited variety of costume. Clothes are certainly not crucial
but it is beards, long hair, bare feet, that seem to distress the oldies
more than even dope and promiscuity.
What
lies back of all this confusion is simply that the older generation believes
that those who reject their values must be delinquents. They are incapable
of seeing that a new culture with a new system of values has sprung up
around them. People ask loaded questions like: Do they sponge on their
parents for a college education? No. In the American West a college education
costs so little it can be earned by part-time work. Many students attend
classes without registering or paying anything and the hipper teachers
wink at them. I conducted a seminar last year in which half the students,
and by far the better half, were so-called non-students.
Do
they loaf and write poetry on welfare or unemployment payments
in other words on the taxpayers money? Whats wrong with that?
Better write poetry with the taxes than what any current administration
is doing with them. One bomber destroyed while attacking a bamboo bridge
or burning up babies costs more than it would cost to keep all the poets
in America for a year.
Such
questions are invidious and show a complete lack of understanding of people
whose only response is, Go away man, I just want to do nice things.
I love everybody. Something is happening and youll never know what
it is.
What
are the things the seceders accede to? Where and how are they engagé?
In issues that directly effect the quality of life. The provos of Amsterdam
are no different than the people in the East Village or San Franciscos
Haight-Ashbury. They are against and will act in mass against the destruction
of the environment by the automobile, the pollution of the atmosphere
and waters, the censorship of art, drama, literature, they will act for
all civil-rights and civil-liberties issues. They will even support trade-union
action to organize the wage slaves in California agriculture because
this is a moral issue. Otherwise they are antagonistic to trade unions
as part of a vicious system. They will fight for free theater and music
in the parks. For neighborhood cultural centers and of course in
attacks by the Establishment on the Blacks they appear in force.
The
society is vulnerable to this kind of direct, personal spontaneous attack.
If you put your hand in an old-fashioned gear box of a steam shovel, you
will get it torn off. If you poke your finger into a million-dollar computer,
it will shudder, choke, and break down. Four Negro boys walked into a
cheap Southern restaurant and asked for hamburgers and sat and waited
quietly that was more than a decade ago. They began a process which
nothing now can ever stop.
Similarly,
poets and singers and even underground moviemakers are each one
more subversive of the old society than any organization or party
possibly could be anymore. And they have their own international. The
London Scene is top-heavy with Americans especially San Franciscans.
Provos seem to go back and forth across the Channel every week. The Underground
Press Syndicate includes not only The Berkeley Barb and The
East Village Other, but the London International Times, and
Peace News, and papers in Amsterdam, Stockholm, Paris, and the
Rhineland. Although they are many times as many, like the old Paris-London-America
avant-garde around the Café Dôme in the twenties, everybody seems to know
everybody else and wherever you go, you find friends who dig Gary
Snyder, know where the best grass grows, and love all sentient creatures.
III
Youth
is The Man of the Year. Marijuana parties and Vietnam demonstrations are
overwhelmed by sociology students with true-or-false questionnaires and
by Life photographers. What passes for analysis of what is happening
is usually based on vestigial remnants of the sectarian Marxism of the
years between the wars, as appropriate to contemporary problems as the
speculations of the Gnostics.
What
goes on? I really wanna know, says Donovan. First, the biological
structure of the human race is changing. Most obviously man is growing
younger. In both the wealthy and poor nations the majority of the population
is under thirty, and soon the majority of the voting population will be
in their twenties. Birth rates, death rates, infant mortality, age at
sexual maturity, age at the onset of senescence, general health, causes
of death, even height, weight, and condition of the teeth all the
statistics of public health have changed drastically in the last two decades
and are still changing in the same directions. People under thirty dont
look like members of the same nation as their grandparents.
Mental
health statistics, records of commitments to mental hospitals, prison
populations, out-patient cases of neurosis and psychosis, arrests for
petty crimes and disorders, juvenile delinquency, seem to be moving in
the opposite direction. Mostly this is due to better diagnosis and treatment
and to more thorough policing of the society. It is simply not true that
the tensions of life are greater now than they were a century ago,
as a reading of Engelss Condition of the British Working Class
or any of hundreds of similar works on the slum poor and the workers in
mines and mills of those days will prove.
The
poor didnt have mental problems. Tension, like sexual intercourse
in the old joke, was much too good for them. If they broke through the
crust of society and disturbed their betters they were hauled off to court
and jail. If they stayed in the slums they were allowed to stew in their
own juice of crime undisturbed, or tried, convicted, and punished on the
spot by the policemans club.
Today
a skilled mechanic in a Stockholm suburb lives better than Gustavus Adolphus;
that we know, but we seldom realize that in many ways a Negro family in
San Francisco on welfare payments in a subsidized housing project lives
better than Charlemagne. Both can afford tensions and neuroses which only
fifty years ago were the exclusive privilege of the Viennese mercantile
aristocracy.
In
the years since the Second World War our ways of life have changed drastically,
but they have lagged just as drastically behind the changes in technology,
as technology still lags behind the changes in science itself. The well-educated
layman over forty seldom has any notion of what has happened in biology,
physics, astronomy, cosmology, since he read the ABC of Relativity
and the popular works of Eddington and Jeans, just as the suburban housewife
who switches on her electronic oven has any idea of how it
works, or still less, of what technology could really do to housekeeping
if it got the chance. We are still destroying the environment with a machine,
the internal combustion automobile engine, which is totally obsolete,
from the steering mechanism to the sales organization to the political
disgrace of the Arab peninsula. A billion people still have unwanted children
year after year. We still inhale clouds of carcinogens to relax our nerves.
We still drink alcohol in poisonous concentrations. We still murder niggers
in America and gooks in Vietnam. One third of the population
is still, as FDR said, ill clothed, ill housed, and ill fed in
the civilized countries. In the world, nine-tenths of the people still
live lives that are nasty, brutish, and short, and grow steadily worse.
Here,
in the foregoing paragraphs, lies the explanation of whats happening.
The cybernetic, computerized, transistorized society is already here in
potential and an ever-increasing number of people are insisting on walking
into it and living there. We can afford peace, we can afford creative
leisure, we can afford to demonstrate and revolt until we get them. A
society in which hard labor is no longer the original source of value
can afford to be good. The best and most effective demonstration is simply
to start living by the new values. The people who do are going to outlive
the people who dont unless the oldies murder them all in their wars.
The
past year has witnessed a tremendous step up in the tempo and force of
protest and a great clarification of objectives. First of course is the
Vietnam War. It is no longer safe for spokesmen for the Credibility Gap,
otherwise known as the U.S. State Department and Executive, to appear
on college campuses. They are physically attacked and driven from the
platform and have to be rescued by helicopter from cellar exits. One of
the most popular buttons amongst young Americans reads, Lee Harvey
Oswald, Where Are You Now That Your Country Needs You? Students
riot and go on general strikes when the Navy erects a recruiting booth
on university property. You dont have to take my word for it
Time magazine says so too.
What
would have happened had there been no Vietnam War? Much the same thing
but at a slower tempo. Vietnam, like Voltaires God, has been so
convenient that, had it not have existed, it would have had to be invented.
There is more than a stale joke here. All correspondents agree that the
minute they land in Saigon, the brass overwhelms them with exhibitions
of new hardware, like little children on Christmas morning. All wars,
but Vietnam most especially, are characterized by a qualitative change
in the technology, a great leap forward in which quantity
changes into quality, to talk Marxist argot. Electronic search-and-destroy
gimmicks above the jungles, and an indomitable demand to change completely
the quality of life at home.
There
are no Dutch troops in Vietnam, so the provos have been able to concentrate
on resistance to the destruction of the environment by an outworn technology
in the grip of mindless greed. From the point of view of an intelligent
insect from Mars, there is a remarkable similarity. The fumes that make
Amsterdam almost uninhabitable and the machines that clutter the streets
and destroy all the advantages and pleasures of men living together in
cities these differ from napalm only in being slower in their effects
it is all gasoline in one form or another. For politics
in Clausewitzs maxim, substitute technology.
Against
cigarettes, against hard alcohol, against sexual hypocrisy, against political
fraud, against the commodity culture of conspicuous expenditure, against
the dead hand of the past armed with a police truncheon that opposes all
motion into the future for the ancient theological virtues, voluntary
poverty the rejection of the destructive lures of a predatory society,
the chastity of sexual honesty, and obedience to personal integrity .
. . it is very convenient to the social critic that the youth of Amsterdam
should have been able to define their program so clearly, unconfused by
the vast evil that hangs in a cloud over America. Is this anarchism? If
anarchism is the realization that the ballot is a paper substitute for
the bullet, the bayonet, and the billy, that liberty is the mother, not
the daughter of order, and that property in the means of life is robbery,
it is anarchism. Certainly there is no important difference between the
anti-programmatic programs of youth in Amsterdam, Stockholm, and San Francisco.
The fundamentals stand out clearer in the smoggy air of Amsterdam, that
is all. As jazz musicians say, we need a new book.
The
great difference between Europe and America is on the other side, amongst
the old whisky drinkers, as American youth now call them. Europe lies
under a dictatorship of the aged. Willy Brandt, Günter Grass, Harold Wilson,
these are professional young men grown old. Who represents youth
in France? A mummified boy adventurer from the Chinese and Spanish Revolutions,
a kind of political Jean Cocteau . . . really a horrifying vision. A politician
like Kiesinger, who has been as carefully manufactured as a TV image as
ever was Nixon, Kennedy, and Reagan, to whom is he manufactured to appeal
to? The young? Indeed not. People all over recently were crying about
the comeback of Nazism in the provincial elections. Kiesinger has been
constructed to appeal to the stay put, not the come back. His publicity
image is that of a kind of Talleyrand or Abbé Sieyès of a half-century
of lost revolutions, wholesale betrayals, and genocide on all hands. His
appeal is aimed at a target distinguishable by the same gleam of silver
hair as his own head.
In
America things are different. This is the land of highly developed consumer
research. Whats the Target? Youth. Whats the hottest commodity
along Mad Alley? Revolt. God knows, I was told that on Madison Avenue
in the executive office of MCA ten years ago, when they wanted to take
me over as a stellar attraction.
So
the Republican rebirth in the November election was a kind of youth revolt
. . . a revolt of aging youth who are entering income brackets they never
knew existed until they got their tax forms. Illinois, Massachusetts,
New York, Oregon, the winners were all presented as idealized junior executive
types. Where this was impossible, as in the case of Reagan, who is about
as old as I am, liberal applications of pancake makeup, Man-Tan, mascara,
hair dye, pep pills, and the experience of a lifetime playing good cowboys
produced a reasonable facsimile thereof, if not youth itself. Reagans
opponent, Pat Brown, looked old and tired and vulgar in his cradle.
Johnson
the Second and his successors are old men with old ways and old solutions
for old problems, whatever their ages. Most of them are men of the Cold
War, if not of the New Deal, the Spanish Civil War, and the Moscow Trials.
What everyone realizes, except themselves, about the Vietnam War is that,
blood and horror disregarded, it is inappropriate it is an obsolete
answer. The 1968 national election was a contest (as will be the 1972)
between the draft-card burners and the IBM branch managers, young youth
against old youth . . . the audiences of Bob Dylan versus the audiences
of Dave Brubeck. I think from the point of view of older societies, in
both senses, American politics in the coming years is going to seem very
odd indeed. The Declaration of Independence, the Communist Manifesto,
Mein Kampf, these are totally obsolete as rhetorical manuals. The
new styles are to be found in Seventeen, Mademoiselle, and Playboy.
Or so the million-dollar public-relations firms believe. The backwash
into Europe is going to be interesting to observe. Even more interesting
is going to be the youth backlash the response of the target itself.
Besides being anti-anti-life, the young are also anti-manipulation, or
is that the same thing?
KENNETH
REXROTH
1967-1969
Pot
of Tage
SF History Home
The
Hippies - By Hunter S. Thompson
Thursday,
July 13, 2006 The best year to be a hippie was 1965, but then there
was not much to write about, because not much was happening in public
and most of what was happening in private was illegal. The real year
of the hippie was 1966, despite the lack of publicity, which in 1967
gave way to a nationwide avalanche in Look, Life, Time, Newsweek,
the Atlantic, the New York Times, the Saturday Evening Post, and even
the Aspen Illustrated News, which did a special issue on hippies in
August of 1967 and made a record sale of all but 6 copies of a 3,500-copy
press run. But 1967 was not really a good year to be a hippie. It
was a good year for salesmen and exhibitionists who called themselves
hippies and gave colorful interviews for the benefit of the mass media,
but serious hippies, with nothing to sell, found that they had little
to gain and a lot to lose by becoming public figures. Many were harassed
and arrested for no other reason than their sudden identification
with a so-called cult of sex and drugs. The publicity rumble, which
seemed like a joke at first, turned into a menacing landslide. So
quite a few people who might have been called the original hippies
in 1965 had dropped out of sight by the time hippies became a national
fad in 1967.
Ten
years earlier the Beat Generation went the same confusing route. From
1955 to about 1959 there were thousands of young people involved in
a thriving bohemian subculture that was only an echo by the time the
mass media picked it up in 1960. Jack Kerouac was the novelist of
the Beat Generation in the same way that Ernest Hemingway was the
novelist of the Lost Generation, and Kerouac's classic "beat"
novel, On the Road, was published in 1957. Yet by the time Kerouac
began appearing on television shows to explain the "thrust"
of his book, the characters it was based on had already drifted off
into limbo, to await their reincarnation as hippies some five years
later. (The purest example of this was Neal Cassidy [Cassady], who
served as a model for Dean Moriarity in On the Road and also for McMurphy
in Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.) Publicity follows
reality, but only up to the point where a new kind of reality, created
by publicity, begins to emerge. So the hippie in 1967 was put in the
strange position of being an anti-culture hero at the same time as
he was also becoming a hot commercial property. His banner of alienation
appeared to be planted in quicksand. The very society he was trying
to drop out of began idealizing him. He was famous in a hazy kind
of way that was not quite infamy but still colorfully ambivalent and
vaguely disturbing.
Despite
the mass media publicity, hippies still suffer or perhaps not from
a lack of definition. The Random House Dictionary of the English Language
was a best seller in 1966, the year of its publication, but it had
no definition for "hippie." The closest it came was a definition
of "hippy": "having big hips; a hippy girl." Its
definition of "hip" was closer to contemporary usage. "Hip"
is a slang word, said Random House, meaning "familiar with the
latest ideas, styles, developments, etc.; informed, sophisticated,
knowledgeable [?]." That question mark is a sneaky but meaningful
piece of editorial comment.
Everyone
seems to agree that hippies have some kind of widespread appeal, but
nobody can say exactly what they stand for. Not even the hippies seem
to know, although some can be very articulate when it comes to details.
"I
love the whole world," said a 23-year-old girl in San Francisco's
Haight-Ashbury district, the hippies' world capital. "I am the
divine mother, part of Buddha, part of God, part of everything.
"I
live from meal to meal. I have no money, no possessions. Money is
beautiful only when it's flowing; when it piles up, it's a hang-up.
We take care of each other. There's always something to buy beans
and rice for the group, and someone always sees that I get 'grass'
[marijuana] or 'acid' [LSD]. I was in a mental hospital once because
I tried to conform and play the game. But now I'm free and happy."
She was then asked whether she used drugs often. "Fairly,"
she replied. "When I find myself becoming confused I drop out
and take a dose of acid. It's a short cut to reality; it throws you
right into it. Everyone should take it, even children. Why shouldn't
they be enlightened early, instead of waiting till they're old? Human
beings need total freedom. That's where God is at. We need to shed
hypocrisy, dishonesty, and phoniness and go back to the purity of
our childhood values."
The
next question was "Do you ever pray?" "Oh yes,"
she said. "I pray in the morning sun. It nourishes me with its
energy so I can spread my love and beauty and nourish others. I never
pray for anything; I don't need anything. Whatever turns me on is
a sacrament: LSD, sex, my bells, my colors.... That's the holy communion,
you dig?" That's about the most definitive comment anybody's
ever going to get from a practicing hippie. Unlike beatniks, many
of whom were writing poems and novels with the idea of becoming second-wave
Kerouacs or Allen Ginsbergs, the hippie opinion makers have cultivated
among their followers a strong distrust of the written word. Journalists
are mocked, and writers are called "type freaks." Because
of this stylized ignorance, few hippies are really articulate. They
prefer to communicate by dancing, or touching, or extrasensory perception
(ESP). They talk, among themselves, about "love waves" and
"vibrations" ("vibes") that come from other people.
That leaves a lot of room for subjective interpretation, and therein
lies the key to the hippies' widespread appeal.
This
is not to say that hippies are universally loved. From coast to coast,
the forces of law and order have confronted the hippies with extreme
distaste. Here are some representative comments from a Denver, Colo.,
police lieutenant. Denver, he said, was becoming a refuge for "long-haired,
vagrant, antisocial, psychopathic, dangerous drug users, who refer
to themselves as a 'hippie subculture a group which rebels against
society and is bound together by the use and abuse of dangerous drugs
and narcotics." They range in age, he continued, from 13 to the
early 20's, and they pay for their minimal needs by "mooching,
begging, and borrowing from each other, their friends, parents, and
complete strangers.... It is not uncommon to find as many as 20 hippies
living together in one small apartment, in communal fashion, with
their garbage and trash piled halfway to the ceiling in some cases."
One
of his co-workers, a Denver detective, explained that hippies are
easy prey for arrests, since "it is easy to search and locate
their drugs and marijuana because they don't have any furniture to
speak of, except for mattresses lying on the floor. They don't believe
in any form of productivity," he said, "and in addition
to a distaste for work, money, and material wealth, hippies believe
in free love, legalized use of marijuana, burning draft cards, mutual
love and help, a peaceful planet, and love for love's sake. They object
to war and believe that everything and everybody except the police
are beautiful."
Many
so-called hippies shout "love" as a cynical password and
use it as a smokescreen to obscure their own greed, hypocrisy, or
mental deformities. Many hippies sell drugs, and although the vast
majority of such dealers sell only enough to cover their own living
expenses, a few net upward of $20,000 a year. A kilogram (2.2 pounds)
of marijuana, for instance, costs about $35 in Mexico. Once across
the border it sells (as a kilo) for anywhere from $150 to $200. Broken
down into 34 ounces, it sells for $15 to $25 an ounce, or $510 to
$850 a kilo. The price varies from city to city, campus to campus,
and coast to coast. "Grass" is generally cheaper in California
than it is in the East. The profit margin becomes mind-boggling regardless
of the geography when a $35 Mexican kilogram is broken down into individual
"joints," or marijuana cigarettes, which sell on urban street
corners for about a dollar each. The risk naturally increases with
the profit potential. It's one thing to pay for a trip to Mexico by
bringing back three kilos and selling two in a circle of friends:
The only risk there is the possibility of being searched and seized
at the border. But a man who gets arrested for selling hundreds of
"joints" to high school students on a St. Louis street corner
can expect the worst when his case comes to court.
The
British historian Arnold Toynbee, at the age of 78, toured San Francisco's
Haight-Ashbury district and wrote his impressions for the London Observer.
"The leaders of the Establishment," he said, "will
be making the mistake of their lives if they discount and ignore the
revolt of the hippies and many of the hippies' non hippie contemporaries
on the grounds that these are either disgraceful wastrels or traitors,
or else just silly kids who are sowing their wild oats."
Toynbee
never really endorsed the hippies; he explained his affinity in the
longer focus of history. If the human race is to survive, he said,
the ethical, moral, and social habits of the world must change: The
emphasis must switch from nationalism to mankind. And Toynbee saw
in the hippies a hopeful resurgence of the basic humanitarian values
that were beginning to seem to him and other long-range thinkers like
a tragically lost cause in the war-poisoned atmosphere of the 1960's.
He was not quite sure what the hippies really stood for, but since
they were against the same things he was against (war, violence, and
dehumanized profiteering), he was naturally on their side, and vice
versa.
There
is a definite continuity between the beatniks of the 1950's and the
hippies of the 1960's. Many hippies deny this, but as an active participant
in both scenes, I'm sure it's true. I was living in Greenwich Village
in New York City when the beatniks came to fame during 1957 and 1958.
I moved to San Francisco in 1959 and then to the Big Sur coast for
1960 and 1961. Then after two years in South America and one in Colorado,
I was back in San Francisco, living in the Haight-Ashbury district,
during 1964, 1965, and 1966. None of these moves was intentional in
terms of time or place; they just seemed to happen. When I moved into
the Haight-Ashbury, for instance, I'd never even heard that name.
But I'd just been evicted from another place on three days' notice,
and the first cheap apartment I found was on Parnassus Street, a few
blocks above Haight.
At
that time the bars on what is now called "the street" were
predominantly Negro. Nobody had ever heard the word "hippie,"
and all the live music was Charlie Parker-type jazz. Several miles
away, down by the bay in the relatively posh and expensive Marina
district, a new and completely unpublicized nightclub called the Matrix
was featuring an equally unpublicized band called the Jefferson Airplane.
At about the same time, hippie author Ken Kesey (One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest, 1962, and Sometimes a Great Notion, 1964) was conducting
experiments in light, sound, and drugs at his home at La Honda, in
the wooded hills about 50 miles south of San Francisco. As the result
of a network of circumstance, casual friendships, and connections
in the drug underworld, Kesey's band of Merry Pranksters was soon
playing host to the Jefferson Airplane and then to the Grateful Dead,
another wildly electric band that would later become known on both
coasts along with the Airplane as the original heroes of the San Francisco
acid-rock sound. During 1965, Kesey's group staged several much-publicized
Acid Tests, which featured music by the Grateful Dead and free Kool-Aid
spiked with LSD. The same people showed up at the Matrix, the Acid
Tests, and Kesey's home in La Honda. They wore strange, colorful clothes
and lived in a world of wild lights and loud music. These were the
original hippies.
It
was also in 1965 that I began writing a book on the Hell's Angels,
a notorious gang of motorcycle outlaws who had plagued California
for years, and the same kind of weird coincidence that jelled the
whole hippie phenomenon also made the Hell's Angels part of the scene.
I was having a beer with Kesey one afternoon in a San Francisco tavern
when I mentioned that I was on my way out to the headquarters of the
Frisco Angels to drop off a Brazilian drum record that one of them
wanted to borrow. Kesey said he might as well go along, and when he
met the Angels he invited them down to a weekend party in La Honda.
The Angels went and thereby met a lot of people who were living in
the Haight-Ashbury for the same reason I was (cheap rent for good
apartments). People who lived two or three blocks from each other
would never realize it until they met at some pre-hippie party. But
suddenly everybody was living in the Haight-Ashbury, and this accidental
unity took on a style of its own. All that it lacked was a label,
and the San Francisco Chronicle quickly came up with one. These people
were "hippies," said the Chronicle, and, lo, the phenomenon
was launched. The Airplane and the Grateful Dead began advertising
their sparsely attended dances with psychedelic posters, which were
given away at first and then sold for $1 each, until finally the poster
advertisements became so popular that some of the originals were selling
in the best San Francisco art galleries for more than $2,000. By this
time both the Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful Dead had gold-plated
record contracts, and one of the Airplane's best numbers, "White
Rabbit," was among the best-selling singles in the nation.
By
that time, too, the Haight-Ashbury had become such a noisy mecca for
freaks, drug peddlers, and curiosity seekers that it was no longer
a good place to live. Haight Street was so crowded that municipal
buses had to be rerouted because of the traffic jams.
At
the same time, the "Hashbury" was becoming a magnet for
a whole generation of young dropouts, all those who had canceled their
reservations on the great assembly line: the high-rolling, soul-bending
competition for status and security in the ever-fattening yet ever-narrowing
American economy of the late 1960's. As the rewards of status grew
richer, the competition grew stiffer. A failing grade in math on a
high school report card carried far more serious implications than
simply a reduced allowance: It could alter a boy's chances of getting
into college and, on the next level, of getting the "right job."
As the economy demanded higher and higher skills, it produced more
and more technological dropouts. The main difference between hippies
and other dropouts was that most hippies were white and voluntarily
poor. Their backgrounds were largely middle class; many had gone to
college for a while before opting out for the "natural life"Ã
an easy, unpressured existence on the fringe of the money economy.
Their parents, they said, were walking proof of the fallacy of the
American notion that says "work and suffer now; live and relax
later."
The
hippies reversed that ethic. "Enjoy life now," they said,
"and worry about the future tomorrow." Most take the question
of survival for granted, but in 1967, as their enclaves in New York
and San Francisco filled up with penniless pilgrims, it became obvious
that there was simply not enough food and lodging.
A
partial solution emerged in the form of a group called the Diggers,
sometimes referred to as the "worker-priests" of the hippie
movement. The Diggers are young and aggressively pragmatic; they set
up free lodging centers, free soup kitchens, and free clothing distribution
centers. They comb hippie neighborhoods, soliciting donations of everything
from money to stale bread and camping equipment. In the Hashbury,
Diggers' signs are posted in local stores, asking for donations of
hammers, saws, shovels, shoes, and anything else that vagrant hippies
might use to make themselves at least partially self-supporting. The
Hashbury Diggers were able, for a while, to serve free meals, however
meager, each afternoon in Golden Gate Park, but the demand soon swamped
the supply. More and more hungry hippies showed up to eat, and the
Diggers were forced to roam far afield to get food.
The
concept of mass sharing goes along with the American Indian tribal
motif that is basic to the whole hippie movement. The cult of tribalism
is regarded by many as the key to survival. Poet Gary Snyder, one
of the hippie gurus, or spiritual guides, sees a "back to the
land" movement as the answer to the food and lodging problem.
He urges hippies to move out of the cities, form tribes, purchase
land, and live communally in remote areas. By early 1967 there were
already a half dozen functioning hippie settlements in California,
Nevada, Colorado, and upstate New York. They were primitive shack-towns,
with communal kitchens, half-alive fruit and vegetable gardens, and
spectacularly uncertain futures. Back in the cities the vast majority
of hippies were still living from day to day. On Haight Street those
without gainful employment could easily pick up a few dollars a day
by panhandling. The influx of nervous voyeurs and curiosity seekers
was a handy money-tree for the legion of psychedelic beggars. Regular
visitors to the Hashbury found it convenient to keep a supply of quarters
in their pockets so that they wouldn't have to haggle about change.
The panhandlers were usually barefoot, always young, and never apologetic.
They would share what they collected anyway, so it seemed entirely
reasonable that strangers should share with them. Unlike the beatniks,
few hippies are given to strong drink. Booze is superfluous in the
drug culture, and food is regarded as a necessity to be acquired at
the least possible expense. A "family" of hippies will work
for hours over an exotic stew or curry, but the idea of paying three
dollars for a meal in a restaurant is out of the question.
Some
hippies work, others live on money from home, and many get by with
part-time jobs, loans from old friends, or occasional transactions
on the drug market. In San Francisco the post office is a major source
of hippie income. Jobs like sorting mail don't require much thought
or effort. The sole support of one "clan" (or "family,"
or "tribe") was a middle-aged hippie known as Admiral Love,
of the Psychedelic Rangers, who had a regular job delivering special
delivery letters at night. There was also a hippie-run employment
agency on Haight Street; anyone needing temporary labor or some kind
of specialized work could call up and order whatever suitable talents
were available at the moment. Significantly, the hippies have attracted
more serious criticism from their former compatriots of the New Left
than they have from what would seem to be their natural antagonists
on the political right. Conservative William Buckley's National Review,
for instance, says, "The hippies are trying to forget about original
sin and it may go hard with them hereafter." The National Review
editors completely miss the point that serious hippies have already
dismissed the concept of original sin and that the idea of a hereafter
strikes them as a foolish, anachronistic joke. The concept of some
vengeful God sitting in judgment on sinners is foreign to the whole
hippie ethic. Its God is a gentle abstract deity not concerned with
sin or forgiveness but manifesting himself in the purest instincts
of "his children."
The
New Left brand of criticism has nothing to do with theology. Until
1964, in fact, the hippies were so much a part of the New Left that
nobody knew the difference. "New Left," like "hippie"
and "beatnik," was a term coined by journalists and headline
writers, who need quick definitions of any subject they deal with.
The term came out of the student rebellion at the University of California's
Berkeley campus in 1964 and 1965. What began as a Free Speech Movement
in Berkeley soon spread to other campuses in the East and Midwest
and was seen in the national press as an outburst of student activism
in politics, a healthy confrontation with the status quo.
On
the strength of the free speech publicity, Berkeley became the axis
of the New Left. Its leaders were radical, but they were also deeply
committed to the society they wanted to change. A prestigious University
of California faculty committee said the activists were the vanguard
of a "moral revolution among the young," and many professors
approved. Those who were worried about the radicalism of the young
rebels at least agreed with the direction they were taking: civil
rights, economic justice, and a new morality in politics. The anger
and optimism of the New Left seemed without limits. The time had come,
they said, to throw off the yoke of a politico-economic establishment
that was obviously incapable of dealing with new realities.
The
year of the New Left publicity was 1965. About the same time there
was mention of something called the pot (marijuana) left. Its members
were generally younger than the serious political types, and the press
dismissed them as a frivolous gang of "druggies" and sex
"kooks" who were only along for the ride.
Yet
as early as the spring of 1966, political rallies in Berkeley were
beginning to have overtones of music, madness, and absurdity. Dr.
Timothy Leary the ex-Harvard professor whose early experiments with
LSD made him, by 1966, a sort of high priest, martyr, and public relations
man for the drug was replacing Mario Savio, leader of the Free Speech
Movement, as the number-one underground hero. Students who were once
angry activists began to lie back in their pads and smile at the world
through a fog of marijuana smoke or to dress like clowns and Indians
and stay "zonked" on LSD for days at a time. The hippies
were more interested in dropping out of society than they were in
changing it. The break came in late 1966, when Ronald Reagan was elected
governor of California by almost a million-vote plurality. In that
same November the GOP gained 50 seats in Congress and served a clear
warning on the Johnson administration that despite all the headlines
about the New Left, most of the electorate was a lot more conservative
than the White House antennae had indicated. The lesson was not lost
on the hippies, many of whom considered themselves at least part-time
political activists. One of the most obvious casualties of the 1966
elections was the New Left's illusion of its own leverage. The radical-hippie
alliance had been counting on the voters to repudiate the "right-wing,
warmonger" elements in Congress, but instead it was the "liberal"
Democrats who got stomped. The hippies saw the election returns as
brutal confirmation of the futility of fighting the Establishment
on its own terms. There had to be a whole new scene, they said, and
the only way to do it was to make the big move either figuratively
or literally from Berkeley to the Haight-Ashbury, from pragmatism
to mysticism, from politics to dope, from the involvement of protest
to the peaceful disengagement of love, nature, and spontaneity. The
mushrooming popularity of the hippie scene was a matter of desperate
concern to the young political activists. They saw a whole generation
of rebels drifting off to a drugged limbo, ready to accept almost
anything as long as it came with enough "soma" (as Aldous
Huxley named the psychic escape drug of the future in his science-fiction
novel Brave New World, 1932). New Left writers and critics at first
commended the hippies for their frankness and originality. But it
soon became obvious that few hippies cared at all for the difference
between political left and right, much less between the New Left and
the Old Left. "Flower Power" (their term for the power of
love), they said, was nonpolitical. And the New Left quickly responded
with charges that hippies were "intellectually flabby,"
that they lacked "energy" and "stability," that
they were actually "nihilists" whose concept of love was
"so generalized and impersonal as to be meaningless."
And
it was all true. Most hippies are too drug oriented to feel any sense
of urgency beyond the moment. Their slogan is "Now," and
that means instantly. Unlike political activists of any stripe, hippies
have no coherent vision of the future which might or might not exist.
The hippies are afflicted by an enervating sort of fatalism that is,
in fact, deplorable. And the New Left critics are heroic, in their
fashion, for railing at it. But the awful possibility exists that
the hippies may be right, that the future itself is deplorable and
so why not live for Now? Why not reject the whole fabric of American
society, with all its obligations, and make a separate peace? The
hippies believe they are asking this question for a whole generation
and echoing the doubts of an older generation.
Pot
of Tage
SF History Home
Chronology
of San Francisco Rock
January
1, 1965
New Year’s Eve costume ball at California Hall to raise funds
for the Council on Religion and the Homosexuals harassed by police.
It became a turning point in the San Francisco gay rights movement.
ACLU took the case, which was dismissed.
April 3, 1965
Students at UC Berkeley circulated a flyer which claimed seismologist
Dr. Charles Richter suggested the next big earthquake would be centered
in the East Bay. It was a tongue-in-cheek ad for the Johnny Otis Show
at Zellerbach Hall which, the flyer said, met all State earthquake
requirements.
May 14, 1965
“Boss of the Bay,” KYA presents the Rolling Stones, the
Byrds, Beau Brummels, Paul Revere and the Raiders, and the Vejtables,
at Civic Auditorium.
August 13, 1965
The Matrix, San Francisco’s first folk night club, opened at
3138 Fillmore in the Marina District. New band called “The Jefferson
Airplane“ performed.
September 2, 1965
Beatles concert at the Cow Palace in Daly City. Pandemonium broke
out as fans rushed the stage.
September 21,
1965
The Jefferson Airplane opened for Lightnin’ Hopkins at the Matrix
on Fillmore St. Norm Mayell backed Hopkins on drums.
October 15, 1965
The Great Society performed at the opening of the Coffee Gallery.
Band members included Darby, Jerry and Grace Slick. San Francisco
State College Vietnam Day Committee Teach-In. Country Joe and the
Fish entertained.
October 16, 1965
Family Dog collective dance and concert, a tribute to Dr. Strange,
at Longshoremen’s Hall with The Jefferson Airplane andthe Charlatans,
and the Great Society. Russ “The Moose” Syracuse of KYA
was master of ceremonies.
October 24, 1965
Family Dog collective dance and concert at Longshoremen’s Hall
with the Lovin’ Spoonful.
November 6, 1965
San Francisco Mime Troupe Appeal party in a loft on Minna Street.
The Jefferson Airplane, the Fugs and the Mystery Trend performed.
December 10, 1965
Warlocks become “The Grateful Dead,” and debut with the
new name at the Fillmore Auditorium for the second San Francisco Mime
Troupe Appeal Party. The Jefferson Airplane, The Great Society, the
John Handy Quintet, the Mystery Trend, and Sam Thomas also appeared.
January 8, 1966
KYA Super Harlow A Go-Go dance and show at Longshoremen’s Hall
with the Vejtables and the Baytovens. “Super” Harlow Meyers
was Russ “The Moose” Syracuse’s radio engineer on
KYA’s “All-Night Flight,” and a former disc jockey.
January 21, 1966
Three-day Trips Festival at Longshoremen’s Hall, 400 North Point
St. featured the Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company,
The Loading Zone, Chinese New Years’ Lion Dancers and Drum and
Bugle Corps, Stroboscopic Trampoline, and Ken Kesey and His Merry
Pranksters.
February 4, 1966
Bill Graham presented The Jefferson Airplane at the Fillmore Auditorium,
1805 Geary Street.
February 12, 1966
Rock For Peace at the Fillmore Auditorium with the The Great Society,
Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Big Brother and the Holding Company.
Benefit for Democratic congressional candidates and the Viet Nam Study
Group.
Lincoln’s
Birthday Party with Sopwith Camel at the Firehouse, former quarters
of Engine Co. 26 and Truck Co. 10, 3767 Sacramento St. The Charlatans
also appeared.
February 19, 1966
Family Dog and Bill Graham presented The Jefferson Airplane at the
Fillmore Auditorium. Wildflower and Sopwith Camel at the Fire House.
March 4, 1966
The Charlatans and the Electric Chamber Orkustra appeared at Soko
Hall, 739 Page St.
March 12, 1966
The Alligator Clip, the Charlatans, Sopwith Camel, and Duncan Blue
Boy and his Cosmic Yo-Yo, at the Firehouse on Sacramento Street.
March 15, 1966
Thomas C. Lynch, Attorney General of the State of California, condemned
the use of LSD and other drugs in a statement to the State Senate
Judiciary Committee in Sacramento.
March 19, 1966
Big Brother and the Holding Company appeared at the Fire House. Sgt.
Barry Sadler, who was to entertain, could not attend.
March 22, 1966
Sopwith Camel appears at the Matrix in the Marina District
March 25, 1966
Paul Butterfield Blues Band and Quicksilver Messenger Service opened
at Fillmore Auditorium.
April 7, 1966
City Lights Books sponsored the appearance of Russian poet Andri Vozneskensy
at the Fillmore. Lawrence Ferlinghetti read translations and The Airplane
performed.
April 8, 1966
The Jefferson Airplane opened at California Hall on Polk Street.
April 9, 1966
Week of Angry Arts Vietnam Mobilization fund raiser at Longshoremen’s
Hall, 400 North Point St.
April 15, 1966
Fifth-Annual San Francisco State College Folk Festival with Malvina
Reynolds, Mark Spoelstra, and Dick and Mimi Fariñia.
April 16, 1966
Charlatans, Mystery Trend, Wanda and Her Birds and the Haight St.
Jazz Band appeared at California Hall.
April 30, 1966
Jefferson Airplane and Quicksilver Messenger Service at the Fillmore
Auditorium.
May 6, 1966
Jefferson Airplane, and the Jaywalkers at the Fillmore Auditorium
May 18, 1966
PH Phactor Jug Band opened at 40 Cedar Street, also known as Cedar
Alley, near Polk and Geary.
May 20, 1966
Capt. Beefheart and His Magic Band opened at the Avalon Ballroom,
Sutter and Van Ness.
May 27, 1966
Artist Andy Warhol and his Plastic Inevitable, Velvet Underground
and Nico, plus the Mothers, at Fillmore Auditorium.
May 30, 1966
Benefit for the Haight-Ashbury Legal Organization (HALO) at Winterland.
The Jefferson Airplane performed.
June 4, 1966
The Jefferson Airplane appear in Exposition Auditorium at Civic Center.
June 6, 1966
The Turtles, and Oxford Circle at the Fillmore Auditorium.
June 22, 1966
The Jefferson Airplane at the Avalon Ballroom.
June 24, 1966
Lenny Bruce and the Mothers of Invention appeared in concert at Fillmore
Auditorium.
KFRC Presents
the Beach Boys Summer Spectacular at the Cow Palace. Other acts included
the Jefferson Airplane, Lovin' Spoonful, Chad and Jeremy, Percy Sledge,
The Byrds, and Sir Douglas Quintet,
June 26, 1966
Sopwith Camel opened for the Rolling Stones in performance at the
Cow Palace. Jefferson Airplane also performed.
July 1, 1966
Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother, and Jaywalkers at the
Fillmore Auditorium.
July 2, 1966
Great Society, Sopwith Camel and the Charlatans at the Fillmore Auditorium.
July 3, 1966
Love, Grateful Dead and Group B at the Fillmore Auditorium.
July 10, 1966
United Farm Workers’ benefit at the Fillmore with Quicksilver
and the Messenger Service and the San Andreas Fault Finders.
July 17, 1966
Allen Ginsberg read poetry and Sopwith Camel performed in concert
at the Fillmore, to benefit A.R.T.S. Gary Goodrow of The Committee
emceed.
July 22, 1966
The Association, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Sopwith Camel, and
Grassroots at the Fillmore Auditorium.
July 26, 1966
The Temptations’ dance and show at the Fillmore Auditorium.
August 6, 1966
Vietnam War peace march up Market Street.
August 7, 1966
Third-Annual South-of-Market and North Beach Children’s Adventure
Day Camp benefit with Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother and
the Holding Company, and The Grateful Dead held at Fillmore Auditorium.
Gary Goodrow of The Committee was master of ceremonies.
August 10, 1966
Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs at the Fillmore Auditorium.
August 17, 1966
Psychedelic fashion show and tarot reading at the Fillmore. The Airplane
and Mimi Fariñia entertained.
August 25, 1966
Yardbirds performed at the Carousel Ballroom. The Carousel was the
former El Patio Ballroom on the second floor of the car dealership
on the southwest corner of Market and Van Ness.
August 26, 1966
Grace Slick and the Great Society, Country Joe and the Fish, and Sopwith
Camel at the Fillmore Auditorium. It is Country Joe and the Fish's
first performance at the Fillmore - they filled in for 13th Floor
Elevator.
August 29, 1966
Beatlemania swept San Francisco as the “Fab Four” performed
in concert at Candlestick Park. It was the Beatle’s last public
appearance together. Also appearing were The Cyrkle, The Ronettes,
and the Remains. Ticket purchases by mail were available from KYA,
No. 1 Nob Hill Circle, San Francisco.
September 5, 1966
Labor Day opening of Martha and The Vandellas at the Fillmore Auditorium.
September 6, 1966
The Blues Project opened at the Matrix.
September 11,
1966
Benefit for BOTH/AND jazz club at the Fillmore with “Big Mama”
Thornton, The Airplane, Elvin Jones, Jon Hendricks Trio and the Joe
Henderson Quartet.
September 16,
1966
Grateful Dead at the Avalon Ballroom
September 23,
1966
The Jefferson Airplane opened at Winterland.
September 27,
1966
The Four Tops, with Johnny Talbot and De Thanks opened at Fillmore
Auditorium.
September 30,
1966
Three-day Acid Test opened at San Francisco State College Commons.
The test was to peak on the evening of Oct. 1. The Grateful Dead performed.
October 6, 1966
Love Pagent in the Panhandle of Golden Gate Park. Big Brother, Wildflower,
The Dead and the Electric Chamber Orkustra entertained. California
Legislature outlaws sale and possession of LSD.
October 7, 1966
Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Big Brother, and Electric Train at the Avalon
Ballroom.
October 15, 1966
Artists’ Liberation Front Free Fair in the Golden Gate Park
Panhandle.
The Jefferson
Airplane at the Fillmore Auditorium.
October 21, 1966
Grateful Dead, Lightnin’ Hopkins and Loading Zone at the Fillmore,
with dancing and strobe light show.
October 23, 1966
The Yardbirds, and Country Joe and the Fish at the Fillmore.
October 27, 1966
New “alternative” weekly newspaper, “The Guardian,”
debuted. Edited and published by Bruce Brugman. Editors at the Chronicle,
Examiner and News Call-Bulletin give it little chance for survival.
October 31, 1966
Bob McKendrick presented “Dance of Death” costume ball
at California Hall. The Dead, and Mimi Fariñia entertained.
November 6, 1966
The Jefferson Airplane at the Fillmore Auditorium.
November 8, 1966
Movie and TV actor Ronald Reagan defeated incumbent Gov. Edmund G.
Brown by almost one million votes.
November 12, 1966
Hells Angels’ motorcycle gang dance at Sokol Hall, 739 Page
St. Grateful Dead performed.
November 13, 1966
The Dead, Quicksilver, and Big Brother and the Holding Company Zenefit
at the Avalon Ballroom for the Zen Mountain Center.
November 19, 1966
Righteous Brothers, with April Stevens and Nino Tempo, appeared at
the USF Gymn |