Category Archives: tell your story

Oasis in Space

http://oasisinspace.spaces.live.com/

Driftin towards shiftin has its ups and downs detailed by Karen at www.whatsuponplanetearth.com (last 2 energy alerts) and I’m right there with those( the clunky parts). Here in 3D, I’ve had some serendipitous coincidences. Was (last gasp) trying to (once again) transcribe my book ( Manic-Depressive Tours) from notebooks to computer (daunting/what’s the point?) when RB sent me a blog link by a fellow Atlantean http://subgeniusslack.blogdrive.com  and it’s quite invigorating TSTL… especially the Byron Pop fest link (chapter on that in MDT) and the www.messyoptics.com has lots of pics of old friends too numerous to mention here BUT, the one of Norris at 15th street and the caption  inspires me to share part of that chapter:

I met Archie while I  was living at the “Chakra commune” of 15th Street in Atlanta. I moved there with some Chakra band members after returning from their Texas tour.  (Later on that story).This one-block neighborhood between the High Museum of Art and West Peachtree St. was a menage of lovely, forested* old Victorians housing- an esoteric mix of hippie communes with a spiritual bent.  On our immediate left were Krishnas, next to them The Children of God (hippie Christians), on our right Meher Babas, across the street The Theosophicals, ours was loosely TM-ers.  In the other houses and mixed in with all these were artists, musicians, actors and techies at the Museum.  Each house seemed to have a band. We’d often just close the block to have “battle of the bands” parties or jams.

After Texas and the wild events that led up to me landing on that bus, I was glad to be back in Hotlanta but feeling a bit disjointed though I loved this house and its illustrious inhabitants:

Through the screened porch and the ornate oval-glass door was the living room on left-home of Duckworth- artist, actor, street-theater magician and set designer at the Museum theater .Witty, wirey small but a ready spring of energy expressed in his head of dark spiral-coiled hair. He had a bunk bed in corner curtained by a billowing parachute tacked up here and there by his collection of oddities and works of art.

On the right a step up led to the room of Norris, black conga drummer in Chakra- his park attire colorful harem pants, rarely any shirt or shoes, a brilliant scarf on head turban style. He’s a most agile yogarian-full of generous joy and humor.

Next room on right housed Ted Levine, white drummer with a most amazing afro, his dark brows, piercingly intelligent, observant, amused eyes lit up his angular face. He had a picky, precise adherence to his monkish environment, diet and yoga/meditations routines which is why we moved to separate rooms as soon as we got back from Texas.

Remaining on right, next room housed 2 sweet dancer actresses/artist/jewelers whose names I forget as they were rarely there.

Across from them Jimmy Godwin, laughing  Chakra guitar man. An excellent player-he had long, strawberry-blond hair and an effervescent personality.

Working back up the hall, the large kitchen, our only communal space (other than the porches and half of the living room). We shared our macrobiotic meals there and other interactions. It had lots of aqua-blue open cabinets, butcher block counter tops, a great big gas stove and a large farm table-a cheerful, vibrant room.

My room was next up in what should have been the dining room.  It had only one window but the built in buffet and shelves above housed my collection of books, trinkets, autoharp, zither and dulcimer.  Only room for a single bed (which suited me as well-only room for me). My treasure was a beautiful old quilt I’d found at a funky antique store. It had silken and velvet patches that were embroidered and joined by colorful, decorative stiches. It was in wonderful condition and I was so enchanted by it. I wanted to know its history. …..and blah blah blah… (& that’s a whole other story).  …

(The turretted/balconied 2nd floor had it’s own cast of colorful characters…later on that -in MDT, not here)

First Pop Festival experience

Monday, August 31, 2009

I grew up in Griffin, GA; a small town south of Atlanta. I had the pretty normal life of a small town boy and as I grew into my teens I began listening to FM rock stations and hanging around with some of the musicians and others considered a little on the “hippy” side Then in 1969 Hampton, GA was invaded by thousands of people coming to attend the First Atlanta Pop Festival. I was working with 2 friends as a field hand at the Georgia Experiment Station for a summer job.

We decided that we would drive over to the raceway and check things out. So we loaded a truck with a few watermelons, other fruit – from the fields we were working, and some beers. (Being natives of the small town we knew where we could get beer, even under aged) and drove over. We were still somewhat naive about this culture but we were probably the hippest people in our town at the time. I guess by the time we arrived at the festival it had become a free concert because we ultimately found ourselves inside the field and walking around with our beer, sampling pot (my first time) and meeting people from all over.

We wound up staying for a very long time as I remember see several acts including Spirit, Janis Joplin, and others. We left late that evening and were the local heroes for having the guts to even go over.

At that time ROTC was mandatory in the high school which meant military haircuts etc. I spent the rest of my summer growing my hair and paying Saturday night visits to Atlanta and the strip. By the time school started in the fall my hair was not all that long, but much too long for the ROTC Sargent. I was advised if I did not cut my hair I would fail the class and could be expelled from school. I saved them the trouble and got with a couple of friends to head to California. Unfortunately we only made it as far as Starkeville, Mississippi before the car crapped out. A local minister helped us get it repaired and we returned to Atlanta.

By now my friends had had enough of the adventure and decided to return to Griffin. I decided to stay in Atlanta where I remained for the best part of the next 5 years or more.

I first visited The Strip on weekend visits from Griffin until the fall of 1969 when I left home. I began to form great friendships and lived in a “Crashpad” on 14th street. I would leave what few belongings I had at the Speckled Bird office for collateral and sell copies for food money. I ate a lot of Krystal burgers during that time because they were the cheapest meal to eat.

I experience acid for the first time at the Donovan concert at the Municipal Auditorium (now an admin building for Georgia State University.) It turned out the be somewhat of a bad trip and I learned quickly I did not like acid much after that.

I had a slight run in with the law and found myself back in Griffin for a while in 1970. But the call of the Byron festival rang out and I traveled there a week early to help build the stage etc. After staying in Byron through the event I returned to Atlanta where I continued to live and hold several short jobs between my “street pharmacist” endeavors.

I was living with several friends in a house on a small street of Piedmont (Mytle street, I think) when we were raided and I was arrested for possession (of less than an ounce of pot) and operating a dive. Oddly enough I wasn’t even in the room with the dope and my name was not on a lease but that did not matter. (I found out later that the GBI had been watching me and my friends from Griffin days.)

I was more careful after that with my drug activity and took various odd jobs. I finally landed a job as a cook at Tom Jones Fish & Chips on Peachtree street between 10th and 11th street. When the manager left town with the contents of the safe one night I was promoted to manager.

That is where I stayed until a bounty hunter came in and took me in for not appearing at a hearing. It turned out that the notice for the hearing had gone to the house I was living in at the time of the bust. I had since moved.

I took a plea bargain and agreed to return home and return to school to avoid jail. By then my mother had moved to Atlanta so that made complying with the law and still hanging on The Strip easy.

What was your best experience associated with The Strip and the hip community?

All the music. Piedmont Park had something happening almost every weekend. And when shows came to town you either got a job as an usher or new someone who did. I saw so many acts at the Municipal Auditorium for the price of a joint.

Second Atlanta Festival in Byron

The summer a friend and I hitchhiked to Washington, DC with a few hits of acid to sell and $50 each.

Later on, nights at Funochios, Richards and Eelectric Ballroom.

I had a few. Bad acid trips, living on the street not knowing where I would sleep or get my next meal, my arrest, beaten up and robbed of a half pound of weed (which I had to work off by selling more for no profit).

A night of depression where I was convinced suicide was a good move. Took 10 hits of acid with a guy named “Angel”.  When it kicked in I realized, “this was a bad move.” Was counceled by a guy in the house that, “I shouldn’t worry, the acid itself probably wouldn’t kill me.” He stayed with me through the evening to keep me on an even keel and keep me from freaking out. I never saw the guy again after that. I tend to call him my angel. That was the point where I never took acid again nor considered suicide.  I learned that Angel later shot himself on the back steps of Chili Dog Charlies.

Loves lost or let slip away by stupid acts and bad decisions.

Those experiences were the best and worst in my life. When they were up there was nothing like it. When down it could really drepress you. I have used my past as a testimony when working with teens and men in my church.

I always say that I don’t know that I would repeat them but I wouldn’t trade them for anything in the world

I went to a house on 14th street with some musician friends one night. There was a concert scheduled for the next day so people were starting their partying early. While in the basement of the house we were passing around joints and listening to some guys playing guitar and singing. I found out the next day it was Duane Allman and other members of the band but I was too high to know who they were the night before.

My street name was “Skinny”, a name that followed me from High School. I weighed about 130 pounds soaking wet and hung around with a 250 pound football player who’s nickname was “Uncle Heavy”. He had a reputation of taking the smaller weaker guys under his wing for protection. And when the counter culture hit Griffin he was right there along with me and others

I am now married to a wonderful woman who grew up in the Decatur suburbs. Her life was vastly different from mine. She grew up with both parents in the typical middle class home. She offered the grounding I needed and the faith in me that made me want to be a better person. We have raised 3 wonderful sons; twins 30 years old and their 27 year old brother. I just became a grandfather to a beautiful boy. I have worked for BellSouth (now AT&T) since 1976 in media and graphics production from multi-image slide to video & multi-media.
Mike Payne

 

Memories of The Dead in Piedmont Park 7/7/69

We were married  07/07/69 at the “Free Concert” in the park after  the 1st Atlanta POP.

Schroeder & Renée

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Schroder and his beloved Renee, Hippie love story – together till he recently died.

The Piedmont show which actually 2 or 3 days after, Tuesday I believe was the result of politics.  According to the Great speckled Bird, “How could we charge $$$ for music … even $13.50 a day.”  we had to do something to appease the social uproar over our commercialism.  Spirit, CTA, and Delaney and Bonnie stuck around for room and board.  And the Dead played for travel, rooms and beer.  So yes I was very involved in it as well as the rest of the team.

I remember Pigpen cracking two cases of beer, neatly arranging them on the balustrade around the pavilion, and calmly dosing each one with premium Owsley Acid.  Everyone around the pavilion was glowing.

 I would love to have a list of the people that attended the FREE concert in Piedmont Park after that Festival with Spirit, Chicago Transit Authority, Delaney and Bonnie and Friends (including Dave Mason and others), and THE GREATFUL DEAD.  That was the seminal moment.- Robin Conant

Delaney and Bonnie & Friends start off the afternoon.

 Very nice. I can tell you why there was no one there at 1:00PM. The performers who stayed after the last night of the Pop Festival were all invited to “The River House” a rather infamous hippie house on Riverside Drive. Quite a few made the trip, including “The Dead” Those memories are a bit fuzzy, so I’m not sure who all was there. I vaguely remember sitting outside on the ground watching the sun come up and singing folk songs with Jerry Garcia playing acoustic guitar. Seems like there was a bunch of people making music, but I couldn’t swear who was there. John Ivey & Ricky Bear, local studio musicians, lived nearby on the river. They may have been there; possibly Barry Bailey. Barry played a lot with John & Ricky. Studio work and just local jams. This was when “The Joint Effort” was changing its name to the Atlanta Rhythm Section. A PR decision. Anyhow, no one woke up before late afternoon and that threw the free concert behind schedule.

 If you hear from John Ivey or anyone else from the River House, please let me know.

 

If you were there, what are YOUR experiences

 

A Bus Stops in Piedmont Park July 7, 1969

A Bus Stops in Piedmont Park  July 7, 1969

July 7, 1969 Piedmont Park with The Grateful Dead

(c) 1998 Patrick Edmondson  (Excerpted from a longer work in progress)

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Ed Casady of Spirit in the Piedmont Park Pavilion 7/7/69. photo by mystere
Note the Dead’s equipment

You have to understand; it was the sixties. Things were different then. In Atlanta there had started to be free concerts held in Piedmont Park. At first they were only for special holidays, then there were concerts nearly every weekend. Soon someone figured out how to “liberate” electricity to the Pavilion and there was some music in the park almost everyday, officially permitted or not.

The quality varied widely from garage bands needing lots more practice to local heroes such as Radar or the unbelievable Hampton Grease Band, to up and comers The Allman Brothers.  National acts showed up, too; which brings me to the point of the story I’m setting up here.

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Mickey Hart with Mark Andes and Ed Casady of Spirit, Bonnie Bramlett of Delany and Bonnie & Friends

I have meant to write this down for a long time. Finally I did on 7/7/98. Days later I checked on the exact date of the concert. It was 7/7/69! (insert Twilight Zone intro here…)

The Atlanta International Pop Festival was held at Hampton Raceway in July 1969.  It was such a large crowd – in Atlanta!  Lots of famous musicans of that day and all days performed. A great time was had by all.

We were about to leave and saw a guy in a leather jacket. Painted on the back was, “I came from England to hear Led Zeppelin!”.  Somehow it impressed us enough to stay to hear the unknown Led Zeppelin close the show; amazing performance!

People began to wind their way slowly back to the campground just lingering in the vibe of the evening, the music, and there being SO MANY HIPPIES; we aren’t alone!

Passing among the crowd were leaflets declaring simply, “Come to Piedmont Park Monday 1 PM”. Another band trying to get started we thought; but we had a feeling…and no one had work or classes Monday afternoon .

Monday about lunchtime we loaded up the Celestial Omnibus with our small circle of friends and headed off to the park, joining lots of other small circles of friends coming together in a temporal free-zone, our community, beginning to coalesce  around the park. The Strip was for commerce with straights and all; the Park was for letting your freak flag fly without fear of the attacks still common from rednecks. Here, if only for the moment, weirdness was the standard, and we reveled in it.

The Celestial Omnibus  was a hippie VW bus. My fourth bus experience.  My first bus experience had been when a fellow Beatle maniac’s mother had agreed to drive the two of us 30 miles to the theatre showing “A Hard Day’s Night” a year before it would drag to our town. We went in a VW van, rare in South Georgia. On the way home we were in dreams of being the Beatles going to a gig; a great time! I thought this was the coolest mother to appreciate how much it meant to the two of us, even if adults sneered at her stupidity in indulging us. It wasn’t normal.

My second “bus” experience was years later.  Not too much out of the ordinary happened in Tifton. The expressway was a new link to the outside world bringing  the outside world in greater force than old Highway 41. I was killing time  waiting on my friend Fred to finish work at the Royal Castle, currently THE In spot for burgers and fries after school, just off Interstate 75.  Our band was to practice that night and I was impatient for him to come on.

“Man, you gotta come see these guys! “, a friend rushed in  yelling. “A wild old school bus full of crazy people and loud music is stopped for gas next door. Hurry before they leave! You gotta see this!”

We all ran over to see. A commotion  seemed to be erupting from this strange old traveling bus that was gassing-up at the Phillips 66 station. The bus itself was colored like a circus vehicle, which was what I had naturally assumed it was since this was still living under the spell of the button-down fifties.  Anything so colorful just had to be part of a circus or a fair. And there were certainly people that looked like they were in a circus swarming out of and all over the bus. Most wore these coveralls. People would probably have been scared since they were acting so unusual if they hadn’t assumed from the vehicle and clothes that they were entertainers headed somewhere on the expressway. I just remember these weird expressions and some kind of excitement they generated.

Was it…?  I wondered when I later read “The Electric Kool-aid Acid Test”. The chronology seems to fit but I am unsure, it was at least similar minded folks; still it was a seed. I thought how it would be neat to carry your friends in a rolling  party.

Christmas after starting college came the third bus experience, Christmas 1968. A VW bus driven by Martin the beatnik gnome, the Cassidy figure in my life, spirited me from home.  Friends from college  headed to the Miami Pop Festival, living on the fringes. Incredible adventures. I lived them and I barely believe it all.

Now I acquired my first car. A 1959 VW microbus that cost $100 and came with $150 worth of camping equipment, but could barely climb a big bump; my long bus trip begins. With Martin’s mechanical wizardry we gave it a motor and everything else transplant. My part was to paint the bus.

The name in psychedelic bubble smoke letters was “The Celestial Omnibus”.  In Senior year English class we had read an E.M. Forster story, “The Celestial Omnibus”, about a bus that literally took you to literary heaven ; it remained corporeal as long as you didn’t doubt , but if you had doubt. It would come crashing back to normal life.  That was much the aim I had for this vehicle.

Two fish twirled in the yin-yang replaced the VW circle to lead the way. The driver’s door got the zig-zag man, still hip code then. The opposite side doors got a reclining Mr. Natural with a speech balloon declaring, “Mr. Natural says…”.  Fill in your own sage advice if you have any, Mr. Natural said only a fool would follow his advise anyway. We were subtle stealth hippies. We loaded up the bus and headed for the hills of Piedmont, park that is.

Upon arriving at the Park and parking by the Pavilion, we found…nothing happening. A beautiful July afternoon even if it had been a hoax. We were grooving on the park as other groups of our friends and acquaintances arrived.  Many folks were left over from the Pop Festival still meandering onward.

The crowd was growing.  Drizzling rain was welcomed. A community formed. Someone brought out a giant clear plastic tarp and threw it out for people to crowd under.  The edges were tucked down and, this being the sixties, joints came out everywhere.  Vision was soon obscured and it became a personal challenge to see how long you could stay before scrambling to the edge, poke out your head and gulp purer air before returning under the plastic.

The rain stopped and on a count the plastic was quickly pulled back at once. A smoke signal was released to Atlanta and everything began to shift.

Lovely hippie women in long skirts swirled and danced through the crowd stopping at various individuals. “Please open your mouth.”, they beatifically smiled. A bit of paper was placed on the tongue & and with a cheery, “Enjoy!” they would sashay away. There were also jugs marked “acidophilus cider” being offered for swigs.

Legend has it that this was a going away party for a certain teddy bear that had to be held a coast away from local authorities.  After twenty minutes it was indeed a party with the only music coming from someone’s portable  eight-track in the pavilion.

“Make way for equipment!” The crowd was parted so trucks and funky vans could drive up to the pavilion.  As they were unloaded we watched for stencils to identify the bands.  The Allman Brother’s mushroom, of course; Spirit; Delaney and Bonnie and Friends; the Chicago Transit Authority; The Hampton Grease Band; and some lighting bolt through a skull design.

When our friend Dan, just back from Fran Sanfisco,  saw this,

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Jerry Garcia in Piedmont Park. Phot by Arlo Forbes

he lazily smiled  slyly beneath his round blue-smoked glasses and droopy ended mustache. His laconic drawl informed us, “Ya’ll are in for a treat. It’s the Dead.”

The Dead! San Francisco musicians, emissaries from the Tribes on the West Coast, free, here on a Summer Day in Piedmont Park! The Dead were of our culture, but we really considered them as of us rather than stars, an antithesis to the new culture.

Sixties roadies really worked. From installing the exact setup on varied stages once or twice a day, they evolved the process into balletic precision.  Zen masters at work in a dance of their own devising. Barely giving each other a notice, they knew just when to put out a hand needed to help get amps, cords, drums and all into place.  Everything seemed to grow almost organically as layer after layer of equipment was installed for various bands.

Soon Glenn Phillips prescient-electronica guitar yelps and Harold Kelling’s sweet melodies wove threads around sonic blues riffs from attacked guitars. Mike Greene, now the president of the Grammies, played and sang sweet harmonies to counter Bruce Hampton’s fabled screamed/sung dada linguistics and insane stage antics.  Hampton and Martin had first met when they had been the weird kids at Georgia Military Academy where their parents had sentenced both to do time for being weird; a threat I also received.

With a little help from their friends with the paper and cider, this crowd was really getting into the music driving the musicians to redoubled efforts. Everyone was dancing and strolling about meeting or just smiling at people.  Some sat in groups and communed with the music.

The Allman Brother’s blues flowed in accompaniment to a glorious sunset. The multi-rhythms of Berry, Jaimoe, and Butch set waves of energy moving through the people. Duane’s heartbreaking solos merging with Greg’s plaintive vocals touched your soul.

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Spirit

Strange trap set on stage; two big bass drums mounted slanted sideways over the regular trap set. Older bald head, eyes electric- Ed Casady pounded like a spirit possessed wailing the enigmatic Spirit lyrics.  “Fresh Garbage” introduced by stepson Randy California’s tasty guitar licks interwoven with keyboards and mingled voices created a feeling like a strange and enveloping tapestry.

IMG_4082_2Bonnie Bramlett with husband Delaney led a band of friends. The Friends featured Jim Keltner’s horn section and Merry Clayton leading the backup vocal trio.  Excellent Gospel tinged southern rock.

The party was in full swing as Chicago Transit Authority’s brass led melodies created “Saturday in the Park” on a Monday evening.

With the night came more magic. Dan got a cot from the Celestial Omnibus and lay in the open with a sign saying “Feed Me.”. Throughout the rest of the evening innumerable paper bits, a few joints, and a few female breasts were inserted in his smile.  Gabi and I being purists who endured eating Morning Glory seeds to get to the natural source, passed on over five hits to he and Ronnie.

Now the Dead began to tune.  Word spread through the telephone pipeline to the suburbs; A beckoning from the bathhouse pay phones.

As the crowd grew the officers of the law had at first grown tense. Since the crowd was all peaceful and grooving together; a gathering of the tribes, they relaxed.

Love really began to prevail. Dealer’s opened their stores and set phalanxes of joint rollers to work.  Cops asked for some of the cider, were warned and tried it anyway. They let pretty women try on their hats. They danced and let people decorate them with flowers and incense. They winked at people passing joints and even took mostly ceremonial hits at first. Cops got kissed. Soon cops were joining the circles around water pipes.

“I can’t do this any more!” yelled one young cop as he tore off his uniform.  For his trouble two hippie women soothed him under a hedge by the stonewalls. Giggle, moans, and body parts occasionally protruded from the shrubbery during the rest of the evening.

The Dead began playing I watched a skinny longhaired guy in hanging jeans climb a scraggly elm in front of the Pavilion. He sat on the one branch protruding vertically about 15 ft. from the ground. It didn’t look like it could possibly hold even his weight.  We watched in expectation of his imminent descent

The rhythm seemed to get him before gravity.  Unbelievably he let go of the main part of the tree and stood erect on the limb. He began to sway with the music and shift from foot to foot.  Then he jerked still and stayed as paralyzed for a few minutes. Just as suddenly he began to prance and gyrate wildly breaking laws of physics.

I glanced at him every few minutes from then on. He continued to be a marionette pulled by every chord Jerry played. Finally I looked back and he was gone without a trace. I asked but no one around saw him ever come down…

It was midnight and Dead had played most of the songs for which they were becoming known and they stopped after about three hours. But now more equipment was added to the stage?!

Most of the musicians retook the stage to play with the Dead.  Big horn section, background singers, eight drummers, a bass quintet, and Harold Kelling, Glenn Phillips, Duane Allman and Dickie Betts, Delaney Bramlett, Chicago’s guitarist, Randy California, and Jerry Garcia trading and interlacing lead lines.

This was a two-hour shakedown song before they settled into “Dark Star” experimentation. This became a rock symphony full of the once and future hits of all concerned.

About 3:30 AM Jerry’s guys shifted to their closing song. Coda after coda rang into the darkness of Atlanta’s late July night stillness.

The musicians hung out a while. No one wanted to leave and break the spell. We watched the roadie’s performance as they prestidigitate loads of equipment into their small spots within the trucks and vans. When loaded, these spirited away into the night. Only naked bulbs over the pavilion competed with the moon.  Light around both seemed to hang in solid Van Gogh visions of colors streaks.

Cops and the crowd felt the shift back almost to the normality we had forsaken for a while.  All our faces had been stolen.

We collected our stimulated to satiation group into the Celestial Omnibus. Dan’s face became animated, “Was I right?” He had been. it had been a night to live in memories. We’d forever know that skull split by a lightning bolt.

 

(c) 1998 Patrick Edmondson

(First published in Smash magazine, Excerpted from a longer work in progress)

Tripping on the Strip, 1967

                Tripping on the Strip, 1967

  – Rupert Fike

 Even though we knew the real hippies were far away,

on Haight Street, we took comfort in at least being freaks

to the white-bread gawkers who cruised the Strip

every weekend, whole families pointing from station wagons,

and then later came the worse-off cars with drunks leaning out –

Hey . . . Commie! You a boy or a girl?

(look out for that beer can!)

We knew we weren’t Commies either

because, for one thing, Communists didn’t take acid,

which was pretty much our job along with faking

the Southern accent of local winos

(Midtown at that time was very much poor-white),

so yeah we got high, we paraded,

we crashed,

we woke up groggy and started it all again . . .

taking to these city blocks when our cat-box stinky rooms

became suffocating, when the need for milk or bread or papers

propelled us out into danger, onto the Strip

where we exposed ourselves for hassles

and sometimes violence, not to mention the occasional

arrests for “violation of pedestrian duties”

if we so much as put one foot off the curb while selling the Bird.

Then came Jail. Where you sat . . . until somebody

tracked down Alley Pat Patrick, the one Decatur Street

bondsman who bailed out protestors and hippies.

 

 

For spiritual guidance we had two choices –

Mother David of the Catacombs with his pagan,

maternalistic embrace of all mixed-up hippie waifs . . .

Mother David, queer of course,

but in those pre-gaydar days he was simply

the matriarch of  our hard-core 14th street scene.

Meanwhile . . .  over on 10th St. was Jesus and Bruce Donneley

with his suburb-friendly 12th Gate coffee house –

paisley evangelicals offering tea, cider, the blues,

and an upstairs poster shop which was a great place

to hit on weekend hippie-chicks

who might possibly agree to come check out

your collection of black-light posters.

 

Midway between the Catacombs and the 12th Gate

was Henry and Sue Bass’s Workshop in Non-Violence,

the politics of peace working hard to sprout

in this backwater of a great confused country torn by war,

Henry and Sue, who tried to guide us toward activism,

who helped find us a room at 174 13th Street –

home to an unlikely collective of street-theatre types,

SCLC workers and fellow freaks who lived

to stick their heads between Iron Butterfly speakers

in the basement of that craftsman house

where politicos and lotus-eaters had been thrown together

by necessity . . .  unlike Cambridge and Berkeley where

activists and hippies kept their distance  . . . what was

not an option in Atlanta at that time.

So some of us who had grown up in Georgia were now

breaking bread each night with the very people

our fathers had called, Outside Agitators!

horn-rimmed civil-rights workers like Jim Gehres

who came south from Oberlin College to register voters,

but who instead became Dr. King’s chauffer

because the great man felt safe with Jim.

And really, we shouldn’t have given Jim that acid . . .

but we did, we did

 

(what rendered him incapable of driving the next day),

and we got into trouble with some SCLC types

who said that we had become

part of the problem not part of the solution

(the unkindest cut of all).

But, No, it hadn’t been our fault – the real problem was

those orange double domes cut with truck-stop speed

that were out on the Strip – That was what had messed

us up so bad, That was what had kept

our tribe of wannabe Buddhists

wandering the early morning Atlanta streets

like Sadhus, Indian holy men with no home,

only a vision, and yeah,

we had a vision all right,

but after six hours we just wanted our vision gone . . .

enough already with the oneness thing!

And as we walked the side streets of the Strip that night,

all we could see was concrete, a paved-over planet,

humankind’s connection to the Earth cut off

by aggregate, same as our mental pathways were cut off.

Around 2 am we saw a redneck drag queen hailing a cab,

her accent revealing her Appalachian roots,

Y’all are some fucked-up flower-children.

Y’all’s eyeballs are fixing to pop!

And when a Blue and Grey cab stopped,

we saw that the taxi was being driven

by a coyote in a sports shirt, so we started running,

running down 12th Street into the park,

but it was scary there, too full of cop cars

and cruising high school jocks looking to gay-bash.

Yet we so needed some neutral dirt,

a place we could root our butts to

and allow this terrible energy to go back to ground . . .

we walked deeper into the city night to a corner

on Juniper with grass, bushes, a place to sit,

and as dawn brought up its stage lights we saw

we’d grouped around a Georgia historical marker,

James Andrews

(some of us could now read)

for it was on or near this spot in June 1862

that he and five others were hung

by the neck until dead (and we thought we had troubles) –

Andrews Raiders . . . the Great Locomotive Chase . .

the Congressional Medal of Honor created

for the men marched here,

likely to muffled drumbeats,

and the scaffolding – it must have been on that little rise,

its trap door waiting . . . .waiting to spring,

and when it sprang what were the noises . . .

squeaks then crowd gasps, that’s how it goes isn’t it,

what was much worse than our little

chemically-induced spiritual crisis.

Gradually it became fully light.

People were going to work in cars.

It had made sense that we were All One a few hours ago.

But now it didn’t.

We were tired. We were confused.

We so wanted to come down.

Rupert Fike’s poems and short fiction have appeared in Rosebud (Pushcart nominee), The Georgetown Review, Snake Nation Review (winner 2006 single poem competition), The Atlanta Review (forthcoming), Natural Bridge, FutureCycle, Borderlands, storySouth, The Cumberland Poetry Review, and others. A poem of his has been inscribed in a downtown Atlanta plaza, and his non-fiction work, Voices From The Farm, accounts of life on a spiritual community in the 1970s, is now available in paperback. 

A Story from the Strip – Rupert Fike

A Story from the Strip

– Rupert Fikerupert

We thought we were such hippies on the Strip

even though we knew the real hippies were on Haight Street,

still we prided ourselves on at least being freaks,

because why else would the Sandy Springs and Cobb gawkers

keep cruising on weekend nights,  whole families,

wide-eyed, pointing from station wagons,

before, later, came worse-off cars, the ones full of drunks

hollering, “Hey . . . Commie! You a boy or a girl?”

(look out for that beer can!)

 

But same as we realized we had a ways to go

to become visionary Bay Area digger-hippies.

we knew for sure we were in no way communists

because for one thing communists don’t take acid,

and it was acid that kept us freaky, or rather,

acid was what kept making normal people look grotesque.

Which is the way we liked it, having straights look scary,

so we tripped, we hung out, we got high . . .

we talked in fake Southern accents . . .  then we crashed,

woke up groggy and started it all again . . .

we walked these same city blocks when

our cat-box stinky rooms became suffocating,

when the need for milk or bread or rolling papers

propelled us out onto the Strip

where we presented ourselves for ridicule

and sometimes violence, not to mention occasional

arrests for “violation of pedestrian duties,”

where we would sit in jail same as we did

for any political arrest because no Decatur St. bondsmen

except Alley Pat Patrick would ever go our bail.

 

For spiritual guidance we had two choices –

Mother David of the Catacombs with his

pagan, maternalistic embrace of all hippie waifs,

Mother David, queer of course,

but in our pre-gaydar lives he was simply loveable.

Mother David, matriarch of the hard-core 14th street scene,

while, over on 10th St. was Bruce Donnelley

with his suburb-friendly 12th Gate coffee house,

paisley evangelicals offering tea, cider,

the blues, an upstairs poster shop, and okay, okay,

a place to hit on hot weekend hippies-chicks

who might possibly want to see your black-light poster

in your 3rd-floor apartment across the hallway

from the elderly sisters who had lived there forever.

And somewhere between the Catacombs and the 12th Gate

was Henry and Sue Bass’s Workshop in Non-Violence,

middle ground, the politics of peace trying hard

to sprout in a great confused country torn by war.

.

We lived at 174 13th Street, behind the Bird house,

A collective of street-theatre types, SCLC workers

and, of course, the freaks, rabble who lived to get high

and put our heads between Iron Butterfly speakers,

a house-full of politicos and lotus-eaters thrown together

united in this community where, in the Haight or Berkeley,

the two would have been separate, judgmental,

but here on the strip, in-fighting was a luxury we could not afford,

so confused acid-heads took turns cooking dinner

on our “kitchen nights” – spaghetti, salad and bread

at a big table, eating with those very people our fathers

had warned us against – the dreaded “outside agitators”,

horn-rimmed activists like Jim Gehres from Oberlin college

who came South to become Dr. King’s chauffer

because the great man resonated with Jim’s sobriety,

and sometimes we did Jim’s dish night

because he was driving Dr. King, and sure,

one night we gave Jim a too-strong hit of acid,

what rendered him unable to function for two days,

what produced an blue-overalled circle of SCLC faces

telling us we had become part of the “problem” not the “solution”.

 

We walked to the park Sunday afternoons

to hear those guys from Macon play on the stone steps,

all of us agreeing that the Purple Paisly Spaceship

would be a much better name that the Allman Brothers

a name that sounded too much like those kids

on Andy Williams, the Osmond brothers.

But most days we only came out at night,

unless there was a demonstration like the morning

we supported Tom Houck’s induction refusal

over on Ponce at the Ford factory Square,

30 of us with Rev Lowry getting our picture taken

By Atlanta cops as morning rush hour traffic

screamed obscenities until Houck emerged

a free man because he was too fat to go in the Army.

 

And on one particular night, after a hideous dose,

orange double domes cut with truck-stop speed,

our squad of messed-up wannabee beat-buddhists

wandered these early morning 1968 Atlanta streets

like sadhus, Indian holy men with no home,

only a vision, and yeah, we had a vision all right,

but mostly we wanted our vision gone!

Enough already with the oneness thing!

And as we wandered the side streets off the Strip,

all we saw was concrete and asphalt,

a paved-over planet, our human connection

to the Earth destroyed by layers of aggregate,

same as our old mental pathways were destroyed.

How could we possibly go back to regular life

saddled by this new unsupportable awareness

that humans were mere ants divorced from all dirt,

and when oh when would our egos ever return?

Could someone please answer us that?

And when we saw human life, a redneck drag queen

hailing a cab, she looked somehow normal to us,

even though her thick Appalachian twang

gave her roots away when she laughed,

“No siree, honey,” to our requests of,

‘Do you have any reds? Seconals?  A Tuinal?

anything, please. Just help us make it stop.’

“Y’all are some fucked-up flower-children,” she said.

“Looks like y’all’s eyeballs are fixing to pop!”

And when the Blue and Grey cab stopped for her,

we all saw that the taxi was being driven

by a coyote in a sports shirt, so we started running,

first down Twelfth St. then into the park,

but it was way too scary in there,

far too full of cruising cop cars and sedans

bulging with suburban jocks looking to gay bash,

yet we so needed a neutral patch of dirt,

a place directly connected to the greater planet,

a place we could root our butts to

and perhaps allow some of this terrible energy

to go back to ground, so we kept walking,

the speed helping us now,

we walked deeper into the city night

even though it was nothing like the city it is today,

and finally, at the corner of Juniper and Third,

we found a patch of land with some bushes,

a small habitat that perhaps no one cared about,

because we knew that this was going to be

one of those trips you just had to ride out,

that initial exhilaration of Oneness

now a tooth-ache, a pain you wanted so much to be over,

please be over, please, I’ll never take acid again,

we all promised even though we knew we were all lying.

and as dawn began to slowly bring up

its stage lights we saw that the hard sapling we’d

grouped around in the bushes was actually

a State of Georgia historical marker,

a few of us now suddenly, miraculously able to read,

repeating the inscription to the others –

“James Andrews,” for it was on or near this spot

in June 1862, barely a 100 years ago,

he and five others were hung by the neck until dead –

Andrews Raiders . . . the Great Locomotive Chase . . .

then capture, the Congressional Medal of Honor

created by Abraham Lincoln for these men

who were marched here, on or near this spot

to breathe their last breaths likely to muffled

beats of drums, and the scaffolding,

we all began to come down a bit figuring

out where it must have been – over there,

on that little rise going back up to the Fox,

its hinged trap door waiting to spring,

and that’s how we finally returned to our old souls,

guessing about that trap door of death,

where exactly had it been,

somewhere in the air, perhaps out in traffic,

and when it sprang open, what was the sound like,

the squeak of hinges yes,

a gasp from the crowd, for sure,

and above it all the sounds of strangulations,

last bursts of life caught, never to be released.

Rupert Fike’s poems and short fiction have appeared in Rosebud (Pushcart nominee), The Georgetown Review, Snake Nation Review (winner 2006 single poem competition), The Atlanta Review (forthcoming), Natural Bridge, FutureCycle, Borderlands, storySouth, The Cumberland Poetry Review, and others. A poem of his has been inscribed in a downtown Atlanta plaza, and his non-fiction work, Voices From The Farm, accounts of life on a spiritual community in the 1970s, is now available in paperback. 

Jeani Jessen

I think it was pre-68 when the Bird did a class-action suit because the postal service tried to shut them down for running ads for abortion centers.  I was one of the “class” with about 6 other women, but we never had to go to court, cause the PO just let it die.

And pre-67, before they tore down al lot of DT housing–dated a Tech guy who lived right on 75/85, and we would climb out on his roof, thru the kitchen window, smoke, and groove on the cars on the freeway.

My daughter was born in 1970, and I do remember taking her to a Jerry Rubin thing at Piedmont park–she couldn’t have been a year old, cause we dropped her out of her stroller, and she still brags she is the youngest person with her pix taken by the FBI.

Jeani Jessen

Larry Ortega

When I was 15 years old, my dad, who worked at Emory University in Atlanta, gave my friend Cynthia and me two tickets to see this guy named Pete Seeger, a folk singer who I had never heard of. (I think that my dad thought that folk singers were wholesome!). Cynthia and I piled into a small auditorium on campus, and sat on the floor. As we sat there, a college student came to the microphone and told us that earlier that day, the National Guard had shot and killed four students at a little college in Ohio called Kent State, during a protest against the war in Vietnam. Then, Pete Seeger came out and sang his heart out, and we all sang with him. That night my life changed, and I have never been the same. I have been to his concerts since then, but I don’t think that anything will ever match the power, and the sadness, and the awe that we all felt that night. Pete Seeger and I share this stupid belief that children should be nurtured, and not shot down by their own government. The last couple of times that I have seen Mr. Seeger on television, he has mentioned that he was losing his voice in his advanced age. He isn’t losing his “voice,” at all. It’s right here.

 

Suzanne

While I had spent most of my life in Atlanta, I left to go to school in Macon, GA.  There I found a whole new world.  I had always liked “different” music, but a lot of it was being made in Macon.  I had gone to the Municipal Auditorium in Atlanta, sat in the “white only” balcony to see Jimmy Reed, Ray Charles, and many others while in high school. But,  I was introduced to The Magnolia Ballroom and Peacock Lounge during college.  In Macon, we hung out at the gay bar, the biker’s bar, the black jazz club, the trucker’s lounge & really listened to R & B, and the beginnings of Southern Rock.  I let my hair grow — and got rid of the bleached blond look.  T-shirts and jeans, brighter colors and pierced ears entered my life, along with opposition to our involvement in Vietnam, and actively trying to integrate my college and Macon.

During a visit home — Atlanta— I discovered the Illien (sp?) Gallery and then, the Stein Club. After meeting a lot of people at the Stein, I decided to move back to Atlanta, and go to grad school at GA State.  Living just off Piedmont, I could walk home at 2 AM from the Stein with no problems.  I knew the folks at the A & P, the hardware store, the bakery and the deli.  It was small town life, but, oh, so different !

Music was available all up and down the Strip.  The Atlanta Pop Festivals, seeing Stevie Winwood and the “British Invasion” at the old Fulton Stadium, Little Feat on 10th St., shows at the Sports Arena, the Great Southeastern Music Hall—-such great music ! Then, there was soccer at the Stadium —- and those pre-game parties– and rugby games and parties ! The big Atlanta Snow 1972 left about 15-20 of us “trapped” in a house on Piedmont, across from the Park.  Survival parties would set out for the liquor store at Ansley Mall, and come slipping and sliding back with cases of beer, etc.

During all of this, there was the Stein.  My home away from home where I could always count on finding friends, something interesting to talk about, meeting people from all over the States and elsewhere, discovering new places to go, finishing a pitcher while my clothes were washing/drying at the Laundromat…….the place where, when some of us started having kids, getting married, etc., the management built a beer garden with swings and a sandbox !  Both my children learned to walk at the Stein, rolling around in their little yellow walker, and then being helped out of the walker and picked up a million times by all their friends there at the Stein.  The Stein spawned other parties —- Orphan’s Thanksgiving, the Opera Party, 4th of July, the Halloween Costume Party, the Kentucky Derby Party — all fun and a little crazy.  We would wander off to Rose’s Cantina, the Chinese place on the corner of 10th, down to the Fox to see The Grateful Dead, to “the Park” where I heard the Dead and the Allman Bros. playing together about 10 feet away from me, but always coming back to the Stein to start the evening, end the evening, or both !  Suzanne

 

Sallie

I don’t know if you are still collecting stories, etc., but on the off chance you are I thought I’d send mine along with the poster.

1. I first moved to Atlanta in the summer of 1968.

2. I moved to Atlanta to see what the whole Hippie movement was about and also to spread my wings and fly after two years of Jr. College in Bradenton, FL.  Five of us drove to Atlanta from Bradenton.  We got there in the early evening and started looking for a place to “crash.”  We tried house after house on 14th St.  Finally we went to the Catacombs, a blues bar on the corner of 14th St. and Peachtree St.  We ran into a man called PaPa John.  He invited us to dinner at his home way out somewhere.  He had about 3 or 4 children and his wife made spaghetti for supper.  We went back to the Catacombs after that and met a biker named Monkey who said we could crash at his apt. because he wasn’t going back there.

The next day I rented an efficiency apt. at 181 14th St.  I met a lot of very nice people living there.  While there I sold The Great Speckled Bird at various street corners.  I also would spare change people for some cash.  I remember meeting a guy named Beano who was somehow my cousin many times removed.  He was from Mississippi.  Two guys named Charlie and Stevie were acquaintances of mine then as well.  I remember going to a 4th of July Parade and a bunch of us stopping the parade in a protest.

3. My best experience associated with the strip was the people.  There was a community there that was caring and felt safe like a family.

4. My worse experience was moving out of the community to Peachtree Hills.

5. I learned from that time in my life that all people are family members waiting to be met.

6.  Like I mentioned above, I lived at 181 14th St. for several months.

Peace,

sally