^Hey where is Stewart Copeland, the most famous Cal alumnus rock star ever?
bearister said:
bearister said:
Wow! You just taught a class there. I was a young teenager in the Bay Area during ground zero of Psychedelic Rock. I liked all your song postings. The bands I was familiar were Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother, Moby Grape, the Dead, Quicksilver, Iron Butterfly, and Strawberry Alarm Clock. I obviously overlooked a few.
Cal88 said:bearister said:
Wow! You just taught a class there. I was a young teenager in the Bay Area during ground zero of Psychedelic Rock. I liked all your song postings. The bands I was familiar were Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother, Moby Grape, the Dead, Quicksilver, Iron Butterfly, and Strawberry Alarm Clock. I obviously overlooked a few.
I'm pretty envious of you guys who grew up during that period, the quality and volume of music that came out between 1965-71 was phenomenal, the best of all time in terms of pop music (along with 1978-84, and to a lesser extent the early 2000s revival), I am a huge fan of the early psych genre, almost half of my ~110,000 song music library is from that era.
Part of the attraction is the sheer depth of the talent from that period, a lot of the very best material was made by bands that are virtually unknown, or a lot less known than the big names of the time, highly inspired teenagers getting together and putting out incredibly good music that never got too far commercially speaking, that got buried and forgotten.
...Until sometime around the early 2000s when high-speed internet became widespread, you had a lot of fans of early psychedelic music (as well as many other interesting niche genres) posting and exchanging rare material and exploring lost albums in interesting blogs, online playlists, indie labels and community/college radio shows (KPSU Portland St, WFMU in NY/NJ were particularly good). I spent a lot of time sifting through all this material, and did some live and community radio DJing that leaned heavily on that genre, along with other genres including early electronic, minimal/new wave, soundtracks, 65-75 American soul.
Nowadays you have more of this material online, spread by fans like the talented creator of the 4 videos above who does a great job pairing the music with vintage footage (like the first one which had scenes of the 1968 movie "More"), a good place to start exploring:
https://www.youtube.com/@heavenlyblueorange
bearister said:Cal88 said:bearister said:
Wow! You just taught a class there. I was a young teenager in the Bay Area during ground zero of Psychedelic Rock. I liked all your song postings. The bands I was familiar were Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother, Moby Grape, the Dead, Quicksilver, Iron Butterfly, and Strawberry Alarm Clock. I obviously overlooked a few.
I'm pretty envious of you guys who grew up during that period, the quality and volume of music that came out between 1965-71 was phenomenal, the best of all time in terms of pop music (along with 1978-84, and to a lesser extent the early 2000s revival), I am a huge fan of the early psych genre, almost half of my ~110,000 song music library is from that era.
Part of the attraction is the sheer depth of the talent from that period, a lot of the very best material was made by bands that are virtually unknown, or a lot less known than the big names of the time, highly inspired teenagers getting together and putting out incredibly good music that never got too far commercially speaking, that got buried and forgotten.
...Until sometime around the early 2000s when high-speed internet became widespread, you had a lot of fans of early psychedelic music (as well as many other interesting niche genres) posting and exchanging rare material and exploring lost albums in interesting blogs, online playlists, indie labels and community/college radio shows (KPSU Portland St, WFMU in NY/NJ were particularly good). I spent a lot of time sifting through all this material, and did some live and community radio DJing that leaned heavily on that genre, along with other genres including early electronic, minimal/new wave, soundtracks, 65-75 American soul.
Nowadays you have more of this material online, spread by fans like the talented creator of the 4 videos above who does a great job pairing the music with vintage footage (like the first one which had scenes of the 1968 movie "More"), a good place to start exploring:
https://www.youtube.com/@heavenlyblueorange
Nice post. If this song doesn't make you think of smoking pot and moving to the music, you are beyond redemption. What a great beat:
Hearing that music made me think of this blond woman that stood right in front of the speakers of every Rock band that played at lower Sproul for free during Spring Quarter my entire time at Cal (1972-1976). I got these photos from my Cal Yearbook (they were taken at lower Sproul):
*She seemed a few years older than me so if she is still kicking she is in her 70's now.
I believe the terminology back then to describe the group she was probably a part of was "Street People."
Quote:
The Red Krayola recorded The Parable of Arable Land which sold around 50,000 copies when it was first released. Pitchfork noted "listeners weren't sure whether the racket was the result of sharp intellectualism, sheer incompetence, or buzzed-out substance abuse." A retrospective review branded the Crayola's "stripped down simplicity and caustic lyrics" as a rarely acknowledged precursor to punk.
After the original pressing for The Parable of Arable Land sold out, promoters were attracted to the band and they were invited to perform in the Berkeley Folk Music Festival where instead of playing songs that they had written before, they generated feedback and drones via a guitar amp. The noise was so severe that band was accused of killing a dog due to sheer volume
prospeCt said:
~ post your score, if you dare . . .
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-opinion-google-ai-images-quiz/