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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



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Today in counterculture history (05/29) 2
#14529652 - 05/29/11 07:10 AM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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- 1966: Grateful Dead play "Aid The End Of Marijuana Prohibition" show
Quote:
Show Details LEMAR Benefit Ball - Aid the end of marijuana prohibition California Hall San Francisco, CA USA Grateful Dead May 29, 1966
(http://jerrygarcia.com)
- 1968: The movie Wild In The Streets debuts
Quote:
Wild in the Streets is a 1968 film featuring Christopher Jones, Hal Holbrook, and Shelley Winters. It was produced by American International Pictures and based on a short story by writer Robert Thom. The movie, described as both "ludicrous" and "cautionary," was nominated for an Academy Award (for Best Film Editing) and became a cult classic.
Background
Wild in the Streets was first released to theaters in 1968. Its storyline was a reductio ad absurdum projection of contemporary issues of the time, taken to extremes, and played poignantly during 1968 — an election year with many controversies (the Vietnam War, the Draft, Civil Rights, the population explosion, rioting and assassinations, and the baby boomer generation coming of age). The original magazine short story, titled "The Day it All Happened, Baby!" was expanded by its author to book length, and was published as a paperback novel by Pyramid Books.
The movie features cameos from several media personalities, including Melvin Belli, Dick Clark, Pamela Mason, Army Archerd, and Walter Winchell. Millie Perkins and Ed Begley have supporting roles, and Bobby Sherman interviews Max as President. In a pre-Brady Bunch role, Barry Williams plays the teenaged Max Frost at the beginning of the movie.
A soundtrack album was also successful, and the song "Shape of Things to Come" (written by songwriters Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil) and performed by the (fictional) band Max Frost and the Troopers, featured in the movie, became a #22 hit on the US Billboard charts.
"Wild in the Streets" was released on VHS home video in the late 1980s, and in 2005 appeared on DVD, on a twofer disc with another AIP movie, 1971's Gas-s-s-s.
According to filmmaker Kenneth Bowser, the part eventually played by Christopher Jones was first offered folk singer Phil Ochs.
Plot summary
Christopher Jones stars as rock singer and aspiring revolutionary Max Frost (born Max Jacob Flatow Jr.; his first public act of violence was blowing up his family's new car). Frost's band The Troopers live together with him, their women, and others in a sprawling Los Angeles mansion. The band includes his 15-year-old genius attorney Billy Cage (Kevin Coughlin) on lead guitar, ex-child actor/girlfriend Sally LeRoy (Diane Varsi) on keyboards, hook-handed Abraham Salteen (Larry Bishop) on bass guitar and trumpet, and anthropologist Stanley X (Richard Pryor) on drums.
When Max is asked to sing at a televised political rally by Kennedyesque Senate candidate Johnny Fergus (Hal Holbrook), who's running on a platform to lower the voting age from 21 to 18 (a genuine issue, not passed until 1971), he and the Troopers appear — but Max stuns everyone by calling instead for the voting age to become 14, then finishes the show with an improvised song, "Fourteen Or Fight!", and a call for a demonstration.
Max's fans (and other young people, by the thousands) stir to action, and within 24 hours protests have begun in cities around the United States. Fergus' advisors want him to denounce Max, but instead he agrees to support the demonstrations, and change his campaign — if Max and his group will compromise, accept a voting age of 15 instead, abide by the law, and appeal to the demonstrators to go home peaceably. Max agrees, and the two appear together on television, and in person the next day using the less offensive mantra "Fifteen and Ready".
Most states agree to lower the voting age within days, in the wake of the demonstrations, and Max Frost and the Troopers campaign for Johnny Fergus until the election, which he wins by a landslide. Taking his place in the Senate, Fergus wishes Frost and his people would now just go away, but instead they get involved with Washington politics. When a Congressman from Sally LeRoy's home district dies suddenly, the band enters her in the special election that follows, and Sally (the eldest of the group, and the only one of majority age to run for office) is voted into Congress by the new teen bloc.
The first bill Sally introduces is a Constitutional amendment to lower the age requirements for national political office — to 14, and "Fourteen Or Fight!" enters a new phase. A joint session of Congress is called, and the Troopers (by now joined by Fergus' son Jimmy, played by Michael Margotta) swing the vote their way by spiking the Washington water supply with LSD, and providing all the Senators and Representatives with teenaged guides.
As teens either take over or threaten the reins of government, the Old Guard (those over 40) turn to Max to run for President, and assert his (their) control over the changing tide. Max again agrees, running as a Republican to his chagrin, but once in office, he turns the tide on his older supporters. Thirty becomes a mandatory retirement age, while those over 35 are rounded up, sent to "re-education camps", and permanently dosed on LSD. Fergus unsuccessfully attempts to dissuade Max by contacting his estranged parents (Bert Freed and Shelley Winters), then tries to assassinate him. Failing at this, he flees Washington with his remaining family, but they are soon rounded up.
With youth now in control of the United States, politically as well as economically, and similar revolutions breaking out in all the world's major countries, Max withdraws the military from around the world (turning them instead into de facto age police), puts computers and prodigies in charge of the Gross National Product, ships surplus grain for free to third world nations, disbands the FBI and Secret Service, and becomes the leader of "the most truly hedonistic society the world has ever known". The final moments of the film indicate, however, that Max and his cohorts may face future intergenerational warfare from an unexpected source.
Directed by Barry Shear Produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff James H. Nicholson Written by Robert Thom Based on novella The Day It All Happened, Baby by Robert Thom Starring Christopher Jones Shelley Winters Richard Pryor Diane Varsi Hal Holbrook Music by Les Baxter Distributed by American International Pictures Release date(s) May 29, 1968 Running time 94 min. Language English Budget $700,000[1] Box office $4,000,000 (US/ Canada)
(https://en.wikipedia.org)
- 1969: Crosby, Stills & Nash release their self-titled debut album
Quote:
Crosby, Stills & Nash is the first album by Crosby, Stills & Nash, released in 1969 on the Atlantic Records label. It spawned two Top 40 hits, "Marrakesh Express" and "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," which peaked respectively at #28 the week of August 23, 1969, and at #21 the week of October 25, 1969, on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. The album itself peaked at #6 on the Billboard
History
The album was a very strong debut for the band, instantly lifting them to stardom. Along with the Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo and The Band's Music From Big Pink of the previous year, it helped initiate a sea change in popular music away from the ruling late sixties aesthetic of bands playing blues-based rock music on loud guitars. Crosby, Stills & Nash presented a new wrinkle in building upon rock's roots, utilizing folk, blues, and even jazz without specifically sounding like mere duplication. Not only blending voices, the three meshed their differing strengths, Crosby for social commentary and atmospheric mood pieces, Stills for his diverse musical skills and for folding folk and country elements subtly into complex rock structures, and Nash for his radio-friendly pop melodies, to create an amalgam of broad appeal. Eventually going multi-platinum, in addition to the abovementioned singles, Crosby, Stills & Nash features some of their best known songs in "Wooden Ships" and "Helplessly Hoping." "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" was composed for Judy Collins, and "Long Time Gone" was a response to the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.
This album proved very influential on many levels to the dominant popular music scene in America for much of the 1970s. The success of the album generated gravitas for the group within the industry, and galvanized interest in signing like acts, many of whom came under management and representation by the CSN team of Elliot Roberts and David Geffen. Strong sales, combined with the group's emphasis on personal confession in its writing, paved the way for the success of the singer-songwriter movement of the early seventies. Their utilization of personal events in their material without resorting to subterfuge, their talents in vocal harmony, their cultivation of painstaking studio craft, as well as the Laurel Canyon ethos that surrounded the group and their associates, established an aesthetic for a number of acts that came to define the "California" sound of the ensuing decade, including The Eagles, Jackson Browne, post-1974 Fleetwood Mac, and others.
In 2003, the album was ranked number 259 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
The album has been issued on compact disc three times: mastered by Barry Diament at Atlantic Studios in the mid-1980s; remastered by Joe Gastwirt at Ocean View Digital and reissued on August 16, 1994; reissued again by Rhino Records as an expanded edition using the HDCD process on January 24, 2006. [edit] Cover
The original vinyl LP was released in a gatefold sleeve that depicted the band members in large fur parkas with a sunset in the background on the gatefold (shot in Big Bear, California), as well as the iconic cover art. A long folded page inside displayed the album credits, lyrics, track listing, as well as a quasi-psychedelic pencil drawing.
The 2006 expanded edition of the CD features an additional four tracks, as well as a slight difference in the cover art. The face of drummer Dallas Taylor was added to the original as he was not present at the photoshoot. He can be seen looking through the window of the door on the rear of the sleeve. In the expanded edition, however, he is absent.
On the album cover the members are, left to right, Nash, Stills, and Crosby, a different order than the title of the album and band. The photo was taken by their friend and photographer Henry Diltz before they came up with a name for the group. They found an abandoned house across from a Santa Monica car wash that they thought would be a perfect fit for their “image”. They posed for the photo in the order of Nash, Stills, and Crosby (for no particular reason). A few days later they decided on the name “Crosby, Stills, and Nash”. To prevent confusion, they went back to the house a day or so later to re-shoot the cover in the correct order, but when they got there they found the house was reduced to a pile of timber.
Track listing
Side one
"Suite: Judy Blue Eyes" (Stills) – 7:25 "Marrakesh Express" (Nash) – 2:39 "Guinnevere" (Crosby) – 4:40 "You Don't Have to Cry" (Stills) – 2:45 "Pre-Road Downs" (Nash) – 3:01
Side two
"Wooden Ships" (Crosby, Stills, Paul Kantner [uncredited]) – 5:29 "Lady of the Island" (Nash) – 2:39 "Helplessly Hoping" (Stills) – 2:41 "Long Time Gone" (Crosby) – 4:17 "49 Bye-Byes" (Stills) – 5:16
Personnel
David Crosby – rhythm guitar, vocals Stephen Stills – lead guitar, bass, organ, vocals Graham Nash – vocals, percussion, acoustic guitar Dallas Taylor – drums, percussion
Jefferson Airplane guitarist Paul Kantner was finally credited as co-composer of "Wooden Ships" on the expanded edition, something long acknowledged on his group's version of the song from their Volunteers album, released the same year.
David Crosby singing an excerpt of "Come On in My Kitchen" between "Long Time Gone" and "49 Bye-Byes" was left off the 2006 reissue at the request of the late Robert Johnson's estate.
Released May 29, 1969 Recorded June 26, 1968 - April 3, 1969 at Wally Heider's Studio III, Los Angeles Genre Rock Folk rock Length 40:52 Label Atlantic Producer Bill Halverson David Crosby Graham Nash Stephen Stills
(https://en.wikipedia.org)
- 1970: The Zabriskie Point soundtrack is released
Quote:
Zabriskie Point is a soundtrack album to the Michelangelo Antonioni film of the same name. It was originally released in February 1970 and comprises songs from various artists. A 1997 re-release includes four bonus tracks each from Jerry Garcia and Pink Floyd that were used in the film, but not the original soundtrack. Jim Morrison of the Doors wrote the track "L'America" for the film, but was rejected by Antonioni ("L'America" was later released on the Doors album L.A. Woman). A Rolling Stones track, "You Got the Silver", is featured in the film but not present on this album.
Pink Floyd
Pink Floyd's contributions to the album were recorded in November and December 1969, after the release of Ummagumma. "Come in Number 51, Your Time Is Up" is a re-recording of "Careful with That Axe, Eugene," originally released as a b-side in December 1968. "Love Scene (Version 4)" is a Richard Wright solo piano composition. "Country Song" (also known as "The Red Queen") is a ballad filled with chess metaphors. "Unknown Song" (also known as "Rain in the Country") is a relaxed instrumental. "Love Scene (Version 6)" (also known as "Alan's Blues") is a bluesy instrumental. A track entitled "Fingal's Cave" and another called "Oenone" were recorded but did not appear on the finished album.
Pink Floyd also recorded other unreleased material during the same sessions. Most notable is a lengthy composition which at that time was known as "The Violent Sequence" (later released on Dark Side of the Moon Immersion Box Set). This piece is immediately recognisable as the basis of "Us and Them" from Dark Side of the Moon.
Track listing
No. Title Writer(s) Artist Length 1. "Heart Beat, Pig Meat" David Gilmour/Roger Waters/Richard Wright/Nick Mason Pink Floyd 3:12 2. "Brother Mary" David Lindley Kaleidoscope 2:42 3. "Excerpt from Dark Star" Jerry Garcia/Mickey Hart/Robert Hunter/Bill Kreutzmann/Phil Lesh/Ron "Pigpen" McKernan/Bob Weir Grateful Dead 2:32 4. "Crumbling Land" Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason Pink Floyd 4:16 5. "Tennessee Waltz" Pee Wee King/Redd Stewart Patti Page 3:03 6. "Sugar Babe" Jesse Colin Young The Youngbloods 2:13 7. "Love Scene" Garcia Jerry Garcia (Grateful Dead) 7:02 8. "I Wish I Was a Single Girl Again" Roscoe Holcomb Roscoe Holcomb 1:56 9. "Mickey's Tune" Lindley Kaleidoscope 1:42 10. "Dance of Death" John Fahey John Fahey 2:43 11. "Come in Number 51, Your Time Is Up" Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason Pink Floyd 5:01
Bonus disc from 1997 release
No. Title Artist Length 1. "Love Scene Improvisations (Version 1)" (Garcia) Jerry Garcia 6:18 2. "Love Scene Improvisations (Version 2)" (Garcia) Jerry Garcia 8:00 3. "Love Scene Improvisations (Version 3)" (Garcia) Jerry Garcia 7:52 4. "Love Scene Improvisations (Version 4)" (Garcia) Jerry Garcia 8:04 5. "Country Song" (Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason) Pink Floyd 4:37 6. "Unknown Song" (Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason) Pink Floyd 6:01 7. "Love Scene (Version 6)" (Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason) Pink Floyd 7:26 8. "Love Scene (Version 4)" (Gilmour/Waters/Wright/Mason) Pink Floyd 6:45
(https://en.wikipedia.org)
29 May 1970 The soundtrack to Zabriskie Point was released in the UK, and failed to chart. The tracklisting included three previously unreleased Pink Floyd songs: Come In Number 51 Your Time Is Up; Crumbling Land; and Heart Beat Pig Meat.
(www.pinkfloyd.com)
- 2015: Ross Ulbricht is sentenced to life without the possibility of parole
Quote:
Ross William Ulbricht (born 27 March 1984) created a darknet market named Silk Road and ran it until his 2013 arrest, under the pseudonym Dread Pirate Roberts.
Ulbricht was convicted of money laundering, computer hacking and conspiracy to traffic narcotics in February 2015. He is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole.
Arrest and trial of Ross Ulbricht
Ross Ulbricht was alleged by the FBI to be the founder and owner of Silk Road and the person behind the pseudonym "Dread Pirate Roberts". He was arrested on 2 October 2013 in San Francisco at 3:15 p.m. PST in Glen Park Library, a branch of the San Francisco Public Library.
Ulbricht was indicted on charges of money laundering, computer hacking, conspiracy to traffic narcotics, and attempting to have six people killed. Prosecutors alleged that Ulbricht paid $730,000 to others to commit the murders, although none of the murders actually occurred. Ulbricht ultimately was not prosecuted for any of the alleged murder attempts.
In a letter to Judge Forrest before his sentencing, Ulbricht stated that his actions through Silk Road were committed through libertarian idealism and that "Silk Road was supposed to be about giving people the freedom to make their own choices" and admitted that he made a "terrible mistake" that "ruined his life". On May 29, 2015, Ulbricht was given five sentences to be served concurrently, including two for life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. He was also ordered to forfeit $183 million. Ulbricht’s lawyer Joshua Dratel said that he would appeal the sentencing and the original guilty verdict.
(https://en.wikipedia.org)
Edited by Learyfan (05/29/21 07:24 AM)
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#14532368 - 05/29/11 06:59 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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Full CSN album.
Edited by Learyfan (05/28/13 09:19 PM)
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gzuf
٩(̾๏̮̮̃̾๏̃̾)۶



Registered: 07/13/09
Posts: 6,535
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#14532513 - 05/29/11 07:25 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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One of the greatest albums I own.
-------------------- +1 Post ٩(̾๏̮̮̃̾๏̃̾)۶
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: gzuf]
#14532564 - 05/29/11 07:34 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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That's March 11th. 
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Phred
Fred's son


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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: gzuf]
#14532788 - 05/29/11 08:19 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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In my opinion, Déja Vu is the quintessential Woodstock Era album. I played it to death when it first came out. One of the finest albums ever produced, despite the two dud cuts on it. And still one of my top ten favorite albums four decades later. Hard to say enough good things about it.
Phred
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Phred]
#14532816 - 05/29/11 08:26 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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Yeah, I remember you saying how much you like that album when I posted either "4+20" or "Almost Cut My Hair" one time.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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gzuf
٩(̾๏̮̮̃̾๏̃̾)۶



Registered: 07/13/09
Posts: 6,535
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#14532891 - 05/29/11 08:37 PM (12 years, 8 months ago) |
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I always loved "Helpless", too. Neil Young gives me a woody. I was going to see him down in Baltimore last year but the tickets were too expensive. One day...
-------------------- +1 Post ٩(̾๏̮̮̃̾๏̃̾)۶
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: gzuf]
#16299507 - 05/29/12 04:37 AM (11 years, 8 months ago) |
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Annual bump.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#18336849 - 05/29/13 05:09 AM (10 years, 8 months ago) |
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45th anniversary of Wild In The Streets today.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan] 2
#20054828 - 05/29/14 05:37 AM (9 years, 8 months ago) |
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45th anniversary of the first CSN album today!
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#21735738 - 05/29/15 06:23 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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45th anniversary of the Zabriskie Point soundtrack today. Instead of looking for each track, let me post this video, which is supposedly the complete Pink Floyd sessions for Zabriskie Point sessions.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#23284467 - 05/29/16 10:54 AM (7 years, 7 months ago) |
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One year since Ross Ulbricht was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole, in connection to the Silk Road website.

-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#24358570 - 05/29/17 10:10 AM (6 years, 7 months ago) |
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Annual bump.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Last seen: 51 minutes, 35 seconds
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan] 1
#25235479 - 05/29/18 06:31 AM (5 years, 7 months ago) |
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50th anniversary of Wild In The Streets. Here's a classic sixties anthem from the WITS soundtrack. Max Frost and The Troopers - "The Shape Of Things To Come".
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#26019913 - 05/29/19 05:43 AM (4 years, 7 months ago) |
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50th anniversary of the first CSN album today.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#26703588 - 05/29/20 06:28 AM (3 years, 7 months ago) |
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5th anniversary of Ross Ulbricht being sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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chronotope999
Explorer



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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan] 1
#26703726 - 05/29/20 07:41 AM (3 years, 7 months ago) |
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Reminds me that I've never seen 'Zabriskie Point'... I'm going to put that right. L'Avventura (also by Antonioni) is a masterpiece.
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: chronotope999]
#27327632 - 05/29/21 07:31 AM (2 years, 7 months ago) |
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I hope you enjoyed it! Anyway, today is the 55th anniversary of the Aid The End Of Marijuana Prohibition show by The Grateful Dead and The Charlatans today.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
Loc: High pride!
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#27797427 - 05/29/22 08:47 AM (1 year, 7 months ago) |
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Annual bump.
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whenmistweeps

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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: Learyfan]
#27797583 - 05/29/22 11:13 AM (1 year, 7 months ago) |
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he can survive the sentence like everyone else
-------------------- When I think of all the worries that people seem to find And how they're in a hurry to complicate their minds By chasing after money and dreams that can't come true I'm glad that we are different we've better things to do May others plan their future I'm busy loving you "I saw four angels standing at the four corners of the earth" How many corners does a sphere have? "Love does not gloat over other people's sins but takes its delight in the truth"
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Learyfan
It's the psychedelic movement!



Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,089
Loc: High pride!
Last seen: 51 minutes, 35 seconds
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Re: Today in counterculture history (05/29) [Re: whenmistweeps]
#28339173 - 05/29/23 08:12 AM (7 months, 28 days ago) |
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What do you mean? Well anyway, today is the 55th annniversary of Wild In The Streets.
-------------------- -------------------------------- Mp3 of the month: The Apple-Glass Cyndrome - Someday
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