Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death

54
HeavenIsInYrBeard wrote: Wed Aug 25, 2021 8:55 amAs someone who was a first hand witness to the misguided idealism of hippiedom going horribly awry at Altamont...
Holy smokes, you were there?? That's nuts!

Am reminded of how Ray Davies was quoted as saying "the sixties were a lie" after the decade passed, though not having read any of his biographies/the interview in question, am not 100% sure what he meant by that, or who/what exactly he was reacting to.

Anyway, Watts, even to a casual observer, always seemed like the stoic drummer type, the sort who let slip the occasional smirk while holding down the song, but kept his cool for the most part, never one to "over-play."
ZzzZzzZzzz . . .

New Novel.

Re: RIP v2 - still no cure for death

55
DaveA wrote: Wed Aug 25, 2021 9:12 am
HeavenIsInYrBeard wrote: Wed Aug 25, 2021 8:55 amAs someone who was a first hand witness to the misguided idealism of hippiedom going horribly awry at Altamont...
Holy smokes, you were there?? That's nuts!
Thankfully not! I was still eleven months away from being born then. I was referring to Charlie - I meant that I could understand how the experience of playing there and seeing all the carnage unfold might have turned him off the whole hippie culture and the experience of playing festivals generally. I've seen the film about a dozen times though.

And yeah, that's something I could imagine Ray Davies saying - it's telling that the Kinks - unlike some of their contemporaries like the Troggs and the Small Faces - never really attempted to ride the psychedelic gravy train, even if "Village Green Preservation Society" accidentally chimed in quite well with the whole English pastoral / whimsical zeitgeist that was becoming popular over here at the time
I hate music, it's got too many notes.

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