Tag Archives: jimi Hendrix

FAMOUS HIPPIE QUOTES

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HIPPIEA


Source: Like A Rolling Stone
“I’ve been smiling lately, dreaming about the world as one. And I believe it could be someday it’s going to come. “
Cat Stevens
Source: “Peace Train”
“Feed them on your dreams. “
Crosby, Stills & Nash
Source: “Teach Your Children”
“The Future is no place to place your better days. “
Dave Matthews Band
Source: Cry Freedom
“You’re going to have to change the priorities of your life, if you love this planet. “
Dr. Helen Caldicott
“When you’ve seen beyond yourself, then you may find, peace of mind is waiting there. “
George Harrison
Source: “Within You Without You”
“The world is ready for a mystic revolution, a discovery of the God in each of us.”
George Harrison
“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you’ve always imagined. “
Henry David Thoreau
“If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears the beat of a different drummer. Let him step to the music he hears, however measured or far away.”
Henry David Thoreau
“Sex, drugs, and insanity have always worked for me, but I wouldn’t recommend them for everyone. “
Hunter S. Thompson
“…see the whole thing is a world full of rucksack wanderers, Dharma Bums refusing to subscribe to the general demand that they consume production and therefore have to work for the privilege of consuming, all that crap they didn’t really want anyway such as refrigerators, TV sets, cars,…and general junk you finally always see a week later in the garbage anyway, all of them imprisoned in a system of work, produce, consume, work, produce, consume, I see a vision of a great rucksack revolution thousands or even millions of young Americans wandering around with rucksacks, going up to mountains to pray, making children laugh and old men glad, making young girls happy and old girls happier, all of ’em Zen Lunatics who go about writing poems that happen to appear in their heads for no reason and also by being kind and also by strange unexpected acts keep giving visions of eternal freedom to everybody and to all living creatures. “
Jack Kerouac
Source: The Dharma Bums, 1958
“the only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes “Awww!” “
Jack Kerouac
“Don’t trust anybody over thirty! “
Jack Weinberg
“If you smile at me I will understand because that is something everyone, everywhere does in the same language.”
Jefferson Airplane
Source: Wooden Ships
“Time to live, time to lie, time to laugh, and time to die. Take it easy baby. Take it as it comes.”
Jim Morrison
“”You have to forget about what other people say, when you’re supposed to die, or when you’re supposed to be loving. You have to forget about all these things. You have to go on & be crazy. Craziness is like heaven.”
Jimi Hendrix
“I’m the one who’s gonna die when it’s time for me to die, so let me live my life the way I want.”
Jimi Hendrix
“Imagine no possesions, I wonder if you can, No need for greed or hunger, A brotherhood of man. Imagine all the people Sharing all the world. “
John Lennon
Source: “Imagine”
“We are stardust, we are golden, and we’ve got to get ourselves back to the garden. “
Joni Mitchell
Source: “Woodstock”
“And maybe it’s the time of year. Yes, and maybe it’s the time of man. And I don’t know who I am. But life is for learning. “
Joni Mitchell/CS&N
Source: “Woodstock”
“Old hippies don’t die, they just lie low until the laughter stops and their time comes round again. “
Joseph Gallivan
“You’re either on the bus or off the bus. “
Ken Kesey
Source: “On The Bus”
“Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it’s time to pause and reflect.”
Mark Twain
“The Medium is the Message. “
Marshall McLuhan
“Be Here Now! “
Ram Dass
Source: “Be Here Now”
“Sock it to me?”
Richard Nixon
Source: Laugh-In
“I took the road less traveled by, and that has made all the difference. “
Robert Frost
“If you’re going to San Francisco, be sure to wear a flower in your hair.”
Scott Mckenzie
Source: “San Francisco”
“You create your own reality. “
Seth
Source: Seth Speaks by Jane Roberts
“They’ve all gone to look for America.”
Simon and Garfunkel
Source: “America”
“Feelin’ groovy “
Simon and Garfunkel
“Like a true Nature’s child, we were born, born to be wild”
Steppenwolf
Source: “Born to be Wild”
“We’ve painted ourselves into a corner where the only choice is real nightmare – triage, epidemic disease, famine, fascism, the collapse of human rights – or a leap to an entirely different level. We’ve taken business-as-usual off the menu. Now only the extreme possibilities loom.”
Terence McKenna
Source: Tripping
“We are all just prisoners here of our own device….You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.”
The Eagles
Source: Hotel California
“Let’s live for today! “
The Grass Roots
Source: Let’s Live for Today
“I’m just beginning to see… The trees are drawing me near, I’ve got to find out why. “
The Moody Blues
Source: “Tuesday Afternoon”
“You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometimes, you just might find, you’ll get what you need.”
The Rolling Stones
Source: Let It Bleed
“Hippy is an establishment label for a profound, invisible, underground, evolutionary process. For every visible hippy, barefoot, beflowered, beaded, there are a thousand invisible members of the turned-on underground. Persons whose lives are tuned in to their inner vision, who are dropping out of the TV comedy of American Life.”
Timothy Leary
Source: “The Politics of Ecstasy”
“The attitude is we live and let live. This is actually an amazing change in values in a rather short time and it’s an example of freedom from religion. “
Tom Wolfe
“If it feels good do it! “
Unknown
“Do your own thing. “
Unknown
“Black is beautiful “
Unknown
“Tell it like it is. “
Unknown
“Keep the Faith! “
Unknown
“Live and let live.”
Unknown
“Kerouac opened a million coffee bars and sold a million pairs of Levis to both sexes. Woodstock rises from his pages. “
William S. Burroughs

OWSLEY STANLEY: MAN WHO DRUGGED THE WORLD-DIES

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Owsley Stanley: Man who drugged the world

OWSLEY Stanley, who died this weekend, made most of the world’s supply of mind-bending drugs in his tiny kitchen, thus helping to create flower power, hippiedom and a warped revolution

Published: Tue, March 15, 2011

 
Owsley Stanley pictured in 1991 would give away LSD free to his many hippie followersOwsley Stanley, pictured in 1991, would give away LSD free to his many hippie followers []

There has been a trip taken by many people over a number of years, starting in the Sixties, says Owsley Stanley in a wordy essay on the website where he sold hand-crafted metal jewellery from his adopted home in northern Australia. “It is a trip to renew our connection with the planet we live on and its lifeforms… We thought of ourselves as exploring new ways of looking at the universe but as it turns out the adventure is almost as old as man himself.”

Stanley, once described by US agents as “the man who did for LSD what Henry Ford did for the motorcar”, has now set out on a different kind of trip, following his death in a car crash on Sunday night at the age of 76. A dogmatic eccentric, who had moved to tropical Queensland in order to be safe from the ice age he believed would be unleashed by global warming and who refused to eat anything other than meat and dairy foods because he thought vegetables were toxic, he was not by all accounts the easiest character.

But for a few years in the last century he was synonymous with the drug he manufactured in vast quantities and dispensed free because he and his hundreds of thousands of hippie followers were convinced it would save the world. In the Oxford Dictionary of ModernSlang, “Owsley acid” is defined as “high-quality LSD”. That’s the hallucinogenic drug lysergic acid diethylamide (the abbreviation comes from its German name) first created from a grain fungus bya Swiss chemist in the Thirties.

With its mind-bending psychological effects it was used for a while as a therapeutic mental health drug. Patients included the actor Cary Grant, who announced excitedly: “I have been born again.” It was also studied with great interest by the CIA, which tested it widely and even tried to slip some to Fidel Castro before a TV address. In the early Sixties it was discovered by the fledgling counter-culture springing up in San Francisco’s run- down but picturesque Haight- Ashbury district. Already interested in Native American spiritualism and back-to-nature simplicity these early hippies were entranced by the “psychedelic” view of the world that even the tiniest dose of acid – as LSD was nicknamed – could provide.

Among them was Augustus Owsley Stanley III, who was born in Kentucky in 1935 and whose grandfather of the same name had been governor of that state. Studying at the University of Berkeley, just across the bay from San

Francisco, he dropped out after less than a year having discovered the recipe for LSD in a chemistry journal. He reputedly made 1.25million doses between 1965 and 1967.

His makeshift laboratory was raided by police soon after he started but since LSD was not yet illegal officers were forced to give his equipment back. With a reputation for making the purest product Stanley became the official supplier to novelist Ken Kesey, who had been introduced to the drug as a CIA volunteer and now organised “acid test” parties where guests sipped from LSD-spiked punch.

Meanwhile Jimi Hendrix’s song Purple Haze was said to be inspired by a potent batch of Owsley acid.

When the drug was made illegal in California in 1966 Stanley carried on running a secret lab. This was raided in 1967. He escaped jail but finally went to prison for two years when he was arrested for possessing marijuana and a judge revoked his bail. “I wound up doing time for something I should have been rewarded for,” he said in a rare interview with the San Francisco Chronicle in 2007. “What I did was a community service, the way I look at it. I was punished for political reasons. Absolutely meaningless. Was I a criminal? No. I was a good member of society – only my society and the one making the laws are different.”

That may not convince everyone but he certainly did not conform to the standard image of a drug baron. Because the doses involved in taking LSD were tiny it was difficult to manufacture the drug in modest quantities and Stanley gave a great deal of it away in order to keep the street price down. He said he wanted to get out after it became illegal but he felt an obligation to the hundreds of thousands of hippies who were switching on to the new psychedelic consciousness.

“I got to San Francisco in 1967 and we were definitely happy customers of Owsley Stanley,” says Ben Collins, now an HIV consultant in his 60s but then a student at Stanford University. He recalls travelling to a desert gig by the band Jefferson Airplane, where lead singer Grace Slick kept whispering the refrain “Drop acid, drop acid” into the microphone.

Collins and his friends didn’t know what this meant – but by the end of the summer they did. Colins says: “It had a transformative influence on the college campuses and the major hip cities. A lot of people dropped out and Stanford virtually shut down for a while. It felt creative and incredibly positive and you really did have the impression that if everybody just lived together dropping acid it would solve the problems of the world.

“We were watching terrible images from Vietnam on the news every night and all the young men taking LSD were facing the draft so there was an incredible need to escape from the world to some other place and ‘get out of it’. It’s no coincidence that the anti-war movement became so powerful at that time.” Young people flocked to Haight- Ashbury to take part in what became known as the Summer of Love. By the autumn of 1967 the leaders of the hippie community pleaded with them to stop coming and to take the counter-culture to their home communities instead.

By that time LSD was becoming embedded in the culture – and not just in songs by bands such as the Grateful Dead, for whom Stanley worked as manager and sound engineer. The Beatles’ album Magical Mystery Tour was clearly inspired by psychedelic imagery and the BBC banned their song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds because of the cheeky abbreviation its title seemed to spell. Meanwhile the drop-out communities with their new ways of living spawned new movements for women’s liberation and gay rights, and lent valuable support to the growing civil rights movement.

Not everyone was impressed. The writer Joan Didion went to stay in Haight-Ashbury and wrote of the squalor she found there, with lost teenagers sought by frantic parents and rape dressed up as free love. “We are seeing the desperate attempt of pathetically unequipped children to create a community in a social vacuum,” she wrote. “We had somehow neglected to tell these children the rules of the game we happened to be playing. They are less in rebellion against the society than ignorant of it.”

For his part, Stanley moved to Australia, became a great-grandfather and was said to have become less crabby with age. “I never set out to change the world,” he said. “I only set out to make sure I was taking something [where] I knew what it was. And it’s hard to make a little. My friends all wanted to know what they were taking too. Of course, my friends expanded very rapidly.” Unlike later kinds of recreational drugs, LSD is not addictive. Some heavy users

reported “flashbacks” but these are no longer officially recognised as a psychiatric symptom.

The main danger was an impaired ability to make sensible judgments and understand common dangers. According to one popular urban myth, people tended to jump off buildings because they thought they could fly. Today the drug has largely disappeared, partly because the new way of looking at the world lost its attraction. “After lots of acid trips I got jaded,” recalls Collins. “‘Same ol’ eternal verities,’ I would mutter at the end of another 24-hour trip.”

SEATTLE WASHINGTON – BOOZER DEFACE JIMI HENDRIX STATUE

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Seattle 911 — A Police and Crime Blog

The latest news about Seattle police, Seattle shootings, thefts, arrests, fires, criminals and crimes

Boozers deface Jimi Hendrix statue, get arrested

Thursday, September 19, 2013 by:Scott Sunde

Dung Nguyen of Cleanscapes spreads a product called "Elephant Snot" onto graffiti sprayed on Capitol Hill's iconic Jimmy Hendrix statue on Broadway. The product helps remove spray paint. Two men were arrested for a blatant graffiti spree Wednesday night. (Joshua Trujillo, seattlepi.com)

Dung Nguyen of Cleanscapes spreads a product called “Elephant Snot” onto graffiti sprayed on Capitol Hill’s iconic Jimi Hendrix statue on Broadway. The product helps remove spray paint. Two men were arrested for a blatant graffiti spree Wednesday night. (Joshua Trujillo, seattlepi.com)

Seattle police have arrested and jailed two men, ages 20 and 21, who defaced the statue of favorite son Jimi Hendrix on Broadway as part of a spray-painting spree.

The men were not criminal masterminds. There was the drinking before it all began. The security camera and Metro bus driver who photographed them, and the numerous witnesses who watched them. Then, too, they did have paint on them by the time Seattle police found them.

Before 8 p.m. Wednesday, police got reports of two drunk men painting the Hendrix statue and construction equipment in the 1600 block of Broadway.

You don't step on Superman's cape or mess with Mr. Hendrix in this town

You don’t step on Superman’s cape or mess with Mr. Hendrix in this town

Witnesses told police the men bought spray paint at a local store and came out to deface the statue.

Then they used the spray paint on construction equipment, a building, utility box and signs.

Their getaway: Take a Metro bus to downtown.

Of course, they used the paint on the bus as they got off at Eighth Avenue and Olive Way, police say. The Metro driver took their photograph and alerted authorities.

The two continued to paint buildings as they walked to downtown, police said.

Police checked surveillance video of the two buying the paint. Meanwhile, transit police stopped the men at Third and Pike.

Officers and witness on Capitol Hill went downtown. The witnesses identified the men.

Both men had paint on their hands and clothes, police say. And one had cans of spray paint in his pocket and backpack.

And to answer the musical questions, the two are now experienced. And then some.

ALTON KELLEY 67 ARTIST- KING OF PSYCHEDELIC ROCK DIES

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Image                ALTON KELLEY ON LEFT

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Alton Kelley, 67, Artist of Psychedelic Rock, Dies

By WILLIAM GRIMES
Published: June 5, 20

Alton Kelley, whose psychedelic concert posters for artists like the Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix and Big Brother and the Holding Company helped define the visual style of the 1960s counterculture, died on Sunday at his home in Petaluma, Calif. He was 67.

The cause was complications of osteoporosis, said his wife, Marguerite Trousdale Kelley.

Mr. Kelley and his longtime collaborator, Stanley Mouse, combined sinuous Art Nouveau lettering and outr?mages plucked from sources near and far to create the visual equivalent of an acid trip. A 19th-century engraving from ”The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam” inspired a famous poster for a Grateful Dead concert at the Avalon Ballroom in 1966 that showed a skeleton wearing a garland of roses on its skull and holding a wreath of roses on its left arm.

The Grateful Dead later adopted this image as its emblem. Mr. Kelley and Mr. Mouse also designed several of the group’s album covers, including ”American Beauty” and ”Workingman’s Dead.”

Mr. Kelley was born in Houlton, Me., and grew up in Connecticut, where his parents moved to work in defense plants during World War II. His mother, a former schoolteacher, encouraged him to study art, and for a time he attended art schools in Philadelphia and New York, but his real passion was racing motorcycles and hot rods. He applied his training to painting pinstripes on motorcycle gas tanks.

After working as a welder at the Sikorsky helicopter plant in Stratford, Conn., he moved to San Francisco in 1964, settling into the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. With a group of friends he helped stage concerts in 1965 at the Red Dog Saloon in Virginia City, Nev., by the Charlatans, an electric folk-rock band. On returning to San Francisco, he became a founding member of the Family Dog, a loose confederation of artists, poets, musicians and other free spirits who put on some of the earliest psychedelic dance concerts, first at the Longshoremen’s Hall and later at the Avalon Ballroom.

Mr. Kelley was in charge of promoting the concerts with posters and fliers, but his drafting ability was weak.

That shortcoming became less of a problem in early 1966, when he teamed up with Stanley Miller, a hot-rod artist from Detroit who worked under the last name Mouse. The two formed Mouse Studios, with Mr. Kelley contributing layout and images and Mr. Mouse doing the distinctive lettering and drafting work. Often they took trips to the public library in a search for images from books, magazines and photographs.

”Stanley and I had no idea what we were doing,” Mr. Kelley told The San Francisco Chronicle last year. ”But we went ahead and looked at American Indian stuff, Chinese stuff, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, modern, Bauhaus, whatever.”

One of their first posters, for a concert headlined by Big Brother and the Holding Company, reproduced the logo for Zig-Zag cigarette papers, used widely for rolling marijuana cigarettes.

”We were paranoid that the police would bust us or that Zig-Zag would bust us,” Mr. Mouse said.

From 1966 to 1969 Mr. Kelley worked on more than 150 posters for concerts at the Avalon Ballroom and the Fillmore, publicizing the most famous bands and artists of the era, among them Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Butterfield Blues Band and Moby Grape, as well as the Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Jimi Hendrix, and Country Joe and the Fish. They created three posters for concerts headlined by Bo Diddley, who died on Monday.

With time, Mr. Kelley’s drawing improved, and the partners virtually fused into a poster-generating unit.

”Kelley would work on the left side of the drawing table and Mouse on the right,” said Paul Grushkin, the author of ”The Art of Rock: Posters From Presley to Punk” and a longtime friend of both men. ”They turned out a poster a week.”

At the time the posters were put up on telephone poles. Everyone who attended a concert at the Avalon received a free poster advertising the next show on the way out the door. Some were sold in head shops for a few dollars. Today mint-condition posters by Mr. Kelley and Mr. Mouse can command prices of $5,000 or more.

With the waning of the 1960s, Mr. Kelley and Mr. Mouse diversified. They formed Monster, a T-shirt company, in the mid-1970s. They also designed the Pegasus-image cover for the Steve Miller album ”Book of Dreams” and several albums for Journey in the 1980s.

In their final collaboration, in March of this year, they contributed the cover art for the program at the induction ceremony at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. On his own, Mr. Kelley designed posters and created hot-rod paintings, which he transferred to T-shirts.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Kelley is survived by three children, Patty Kelley of San Diego, Yossarian Kelley of Seattle and China Bacosa of Herald, Calif.; two grandchildren; and his mother, Annie Kelley, and a sister, Kathy Verespy, both of Trumbull, Conn.

”Kelley had the unique ability to translate the music being played into these amazing images that captured the spirit of who we were and what the music was all about,” said the Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart. ”He was a visual alchemist — skulls and roses, skeletons in full flight, cryptic alphabets, nothing was too strange for his imagination to conjure.”