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This programme contains very strong language and some scenes which some viewers may find upsetting | 0:00:02 | 0:00:08 | |
-MUSIC: "Born In The USA" -The golden age of American rock, | 0:00:08 | 0:00:11 | |
when singers were gods, guitarists were axemen | 0:00:11 | 0:00:13 | |
and songs were anthems. | 0:00:13 | 0:00:15 | |
# Born in the USA | 0:00:15 | 0:00:18 | |
# I was born in the USA... # | 0:00:18 | 0:00:23 | |
The soundtrack of a nation forged one stadium at a time. | 0:00:23 | 0:00:26 | |
# Welcome to the Hotel California... # | 0:00:26 | 0:00:29 | |
For three decades from the late '60s, | 0:00:29 | 0:00:32 | |
rock music was the sound of America, | 0:00:32 | 0:00:34 | |
taking over virtually every mainstream radio station in the country | 0:00:34 | 0:00:37 | |
and then its TV screens. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:40 | |
# Welcome to the jungle We got fun and games | 0:00:41 | 0:00:45 | |
# We got everything you want... # | 0:00:45 | 0:00:48 | |
Rock music that became the embodiment of America at its most brash | 0:00:48 | 0:00:51 | |
was born during the protest movement of the late '60s. | 0:00:51 | 0:00:55 | |
This programme explores the emergence of American rock | 0:00:58 | 0:01:01 | |
at the end of the decade - the era of flower power, | 0:01:01 | 0:01:04 | |
mass protests, Vietnam and LSD. | 0:01:04 | 0:01:07 | |
Inspired by the experimental sounds of the Beatles, | 0:01:07 | 0:01:10 | |
some of the biggest names in US rock released their first albums in 1967. | 0:01:10 | 0:01:15 | |
# Break on through to the other side | 0:01:15 | 0:01:18 | |
#Break on through to the other side... # | 0:01:18 | 0:01:21 | |
They were musicians who not only sang about the social revolution, | 0:01:21 | 0:01:25 | |
they were the revolution. | 0:01:25 | 0:01:28 | |
It was just great to be part of it. You felt part of something. | 0:01:28 | 0:01:32 | |
I think that the youth finally had a voice. | 0:01:32 | 0:01:34 | |
Make love, not war. | 0:01:34 | 0:01:36 | |
It was as if someone had lifted up a giant flat rock | 0:01:36 | 0:01:38 | |
and everyone crawled out from underneath it. | 0:01:38 | 0:01:40 | |
It was pretty crazy, yeah. It was madly, wonderfully crazy, though. | 0:01:40 | 0:01:45 | |
Thank God. | 0:01:45 | 0:01:46 | |
MUSIC: "Born To Be Wild" | 0:01:46 | 0:01:49 | |
This is the story of classic American rock told by | 0:01:49 | 0:01:52 | |
the people who were there and made the music that shaped a generation. | 0:01:52 | 0:01:58 | |
# Born to be wild | 0:01:58 | 0:02:02 | |
# Born to be wild... # | 0:02:05 | 0:02:11 | |
# You shake my nerves And you rattle my brain | 0:02:11 | 0:02:14 | |
# Too much love Drives a man insane | 0:02:14 | 0:02:17 | |
# You broke my will But what a thrill | 0:02:17 | 0:02:20 | |
# Goodness gracious Great balls of fire... # | 0:02:20 | 0:02:23 | |
Classic American rock has its roots in the rock 'n' roll era | 0:02:23 | 0:02:27 | |
of the late '50s, when the US was enjoying | 0:02:27 | 0:02:29 | |
an unprecedented cultural and economic boom. | 0:02:29 | 0:02:32 | |
Growing up through the end of the decade, | 0:02:32 | 0:02:34 | |
our fledgling '60s rockers were all turned on by the new craze. | 0:02:34 | 0:02:38 | |
# Hm, feels good... # | 0:02:38 | 0:02:41 | |
When I was growing up in the '50s, | 0:02:41 | 0:02:42 | |
what was on the charts was hard-ass rock 'n' roll. | 0:02:42 | 0:02:49 | |
It was Little Richard. | 0:02:49 | 0:02:51 | |
It was Elvis Presley. | 0:02:51 | 0:02:52 | |
# Everybody in the whole cell block | 0:02:52 | 0:02:55 | |
# Was dancing to the jailhouse rock... # | 0:02:55 | 0:02:57 | |
Rock 'n' roll took the '50s by storm, | 0:02:57 | 0:03:00 | |
blowing away the austerity of the post-war years. | 0:03:00 | 0:03:03 | |
For the first time in history, teenagers had a voice. | 0:03:03 | 0:03:06 | |
But not everyone was seduced by the sexual awakening of the baby-boomer generation. | 0:03:06 | 0:03:11 | |
# Everybody let's rock... # | 0:03:11 | 0:03:13 | |
I think the DJs got wise to it | 0:03:13 | 0:03:17 | |
that the girls are getting moist, shall we say? | 0:03:17 | 0:03:22 | |
The boys are hard. | 0:03:22 | 0:03:25 | |
Again. Constantly. | 0:03:25 | 0:03:28 | |
And things were going on that were untoward, that were not allowed. | 0:03:28 | 0:03:31 | |
Rock 'n' roll has got to go and go it does. | 0:03:31 | 0:03:34 | |
That's the best way I know to get rid of them. | 0:03:34 | 0:03:36 | |
The USA entered the '60s in a self-confident and optimistic mood. | 0:03:36 | 0:03:41 | |
That was expressed by the election of a 43-year-old president, John F Kennedy, in 1960. | 0:03:41 | 0:03:46 | |
JFK's message of hope reflected the liberation felt by the Fifties teenyboppers. | 0:03:46 | 0:03:52 | |
But rock 'n' roll's original spirit was already in danger of burning out. | 0:03:52 | 0:03:56 | |
Chuck Berry were sent off to jail. | 0:03:56 | 0:03:57 | |
Little Richard wanted to be a preacher. | 0:03:57 | 0:04:00 | |
Um, Elvis was in the Army. | 0:04:00 | 0:04:03 | |
Then, all of a sudden, we had this, what I call, the pretty-boy singer era. | 0:04:03 | 0:04:08 | |
# I love, I love, I love my little calendar girl | 0:04:08 | 0:04:12 | |
-# Every day -Every day | 0:04:12 | 0:04:15 | |
-# Every day -Every day | 0:04:15 | 0:04:17 | |
# Of the year... # | 0:04:17 | 0:04:18 | |
There was very white bread kind of music, you know. | 0:04:18 | 0:04:20 | |
Rock 'n' roll kind of very clean | 0:04:20 | 0:04:24 | |
and, um, you know, formulised. | 0:04:24 | 0:04:28 | |
# Who wears short shorts? | 0:04:28 | 0:04:30 | |
# We wear short shorts | 0:04:31 | 0:04:35 | |
# They're such short shorts | 0:04:35 | 0:04:37 | |
# We like short shorts... # | 0:04:39 | 0:04:42 | |
Kind of soft, melodic pop. | 0:04:42 | 0:04:44 | |
And young girls, you know, loved that, | 0:04:44 | 0:04:48 | |
but for people who wanted some meat on the bone, what happened? | 0:04:48 | 0:04:53 | |
# Round, round Get around, I get around | 0:04:53 | 0:04:56 | |
# Yeah Get around, round, round... # | 0:04:56 | 0:04:59 | |
Bands like the Beach Boys reflected the happy-go-lucky, | 0:04:59 | 0:05:02 | |
cash-rich lives of the country's teenagers. | 0:05:02 | 0:05:04 | |
Two bonus burgers, a vanilla shake and some French fries. | 0:05:07 | 0:05:11 | |
Under the spell of Kennedy's vision, | 0:05:11 | 0:05:13 | |
there seemed to be no limits to the country's ambition. | 0:05:13 | 0:05:16 | |
I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving | 0:05:16 | 0:05:19 | |
the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon | 0:05:19 | 0:05:24 | |
and returning him safely to the Earth. | 0:05:24 | 0:05:26 | |
# We shall overcome. # | 0:05:26 | 0:05:31 | |
JFK also challenged America's younger generation | 0:05:31 | 0:05:34 | |
to look at the inequalities in their country. | 0:05:34 | 0:05:36 | |
And when the Civil Rights Movement, led by Martin Luther King, marched on Washington | 0:05:36 | 0:05:40 | |
in August 1963, it resonated with young people of all races. | 0:05:40 | 0:05:46 | |
The First Amendment deals with certain basic freedoms, | 0:05:46 | 0:05:49 | |
such as freedom of assembly, freedom of speech, freedom of press | 0:05:49 | 0:05:52 | |
and the right to protest for rights. | 0:05:52 | 0:05:54 | |
The failure on the part of the government to protect these rights | 0:05:54 | 0:05:58 | |
is one of the great failures that we face. | 0:05:58 | 0:06:01 | |
Frustrated by the failures of the older generation | 0:06:01 | 0:06:04 | |
and inspired by their new charismatic leaders, | 0:06:04 | 0:06:07 | |
young people were no longer afraid to voice their opinions | 0:06:07 | 0:06:10 | |
on everything from civil rights to impending war in Vietnam. | 0:06:10 | 0:06:14 | |
Kids are just getting to the point where they just say, | 0:06:14 | 0:06:17 | |
"Forget you, Mom and Dad, I don't want your society." | 0:06:17 | 0:06:21 | |
# Baby love, my baby love... # | 0:06:21 | 0:06:24 | |
One clear sign of the changes in American society | 0:06:24 | 0:06:27 | |
was the growing commercial success of black artists with young white audiences. | 0:06:27 | 0:06:31 | |
# I never loved no-one but you... # | 0:06:31 | 0:06:34 | |
Yet much of American popular music of the early '60s | 0:06:34 | 0:06:37 | |
was still preoccupied with teenage love. | 0:06:37 | 0:06:40 | |
But when folk singer Bob Dylan stepped into the spotlight in 1963 from the booming folk circuit, | 0:06:40 | 0:06:46 | |
his thoughtful, intelligent songs articulated the baby boomers' concerns | 0:06:46 | 0:06:51 | |
with the slow pace of change in modern America. | 0:06:51 | 0:06:54 | |
# How many years could a mountain exist | 0:06:54 | 0:07:00 | |
# Before it's washed to the sea? # | 0:07:00 | 0:07:05 | |
When we first start hearing some Bob Dylan, that was a different voice. | 0:07:05 | 0:07:10 | |
What we liked is the message, more than anything, from Dylan. | 0:07:10 | 0:07:14 | |
He was one of... He was a symbol for change. | 0:07:14 | 0:07:17 | |
# The answer, my friend is blowing in the wind | 0:07:17 | 0:07:23 | |
# The answer is blowing in the wind. # | 0:07:23 | 0:07:30 | |
As Americans faced the increasing threat of their country's involvement in Vietnam, | 0:07:30 | 0:07:34 | |
the younger generation still hoped that their dynamic president would be the catalyst | 0:07:34 | 0:07:39 | |
for a peaceful, fairer country. | 0:07:39 | 0:07:41 | |
But, in November 1963, their hopes were dashed. | 0:07:44 | 0:07:49 | |
After President Kennedy's assassination, Sir Winston Churchill | 0:07:49 | 0:07:52 | |
said that the loss to the United States and to the world is incalculable. | 0:07:52 | 0:07:57 | |
'The bright promise of the Kennedy administration has been replaced by doubt and apprehension. | 0:08:00 | 0:08:06 | |
'Most, when you ask about the days to come, have no answer, or a shake of the head.' | 0:08:06 | 0:08:11 | |
Kennedy's short presidency had captured the imagination of America's youth | 0:08:11 | 0:08:16 | |
and when four cheeky musicians from Liverpool landed in New York, | 0:08:16 | 0:08:19 | |
three months after his funeral, | 0:08:19 | 0:08:22 | |
they found a country that was eager to build on his legacy. | 0:08:22 | 0:08:24 | |
# She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah | 0:08:24 | 0:08:30 | |
# She loves you Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah | 0:08:30 | 0:08:37 | |
# You think you've lost your love | 0:08:37 | 0:08:40 | |
# Well, I saw her... # | 0:08:40 | 0:08:41 | |
They were like our gods. | 0:08:41 | 0:08:43 | |
Wow, every two weeks there was a new record, both sides were fantastic. | 0:08:43 | 0:08:48 | |
The Beatles led us all. | 0:08:48 | 0:08:50 | |
Musically, we all looked to the Beatles | 0:08:50 | 0:08:52 | |
and the Beatles were the pied pipers and they took us down that road. | 0:08:52 | 0:08:56 | |
# It's been a hard day's night | 0:08:56 | 0:08:59 | |
# And I've been working like a dog | 0:08:59 | 0:09:02 | |
# It's been a hard day's night... # | 0:09:02 | 0:09:05 | |
Suddenly, kids like me, that were 15 years old, | 0:09:05 | 0:09:08 | |
that was going to go to work in a car wash, decided to start bands. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:12 | |
And it scared the other generation to death, | 0:09:12 | 0:09:15 | |
because, all of a sudden, this generation | 0:09:15 | 0:09:19 | |
was getting creative. | 0:09:19 | 0:09:21 | |
I was an Elvis fan. | 0:09:21 | 0:09:22 | |
It didn't seem like an attainable thing to be a rock star. | 0:09:22 | 0:09:28 | |
But when I saw a self-contained unit, like the Beatles were - | 0:09:28 | 0:09:34 | |
they were making the music together, they were singing the music together, | 0:09:34 | 0:09:38 | |
writing the music - then you went, "Ah, I see. | 0:09:38 | 0:09:43 | |
"I see how this can be done." | 0:09:43 | 0:09:46 | |
In the wake of Beatlemania, new bands formed all over the US. | 0:09:46 | 0:09:50 | |
# Hey, Mr Tambourine Man play a song for me... # | 0:09:50 | 0:09:56 | |
In California, The Byrds were pioneers of folk rock, | 0:09:56 | 0:10:00 | |
playing traditional and folk material on electric instruments. | 0:10:00 | 0:10:04 | |
They reached the top of the American charts in April 1965 | 0:10:04 | 0:10:07 | |
with a radical cover version of a Dylan song that was influenced | 0:10:07 | 0:10:11 | |
by the new sounds of the Beatles. | 0:10:11 | 0:10:14 | |
# In the jingle-jangle morning I'll come following you. # | 0:10:14 | 0:10:21 | |
When we first heard it was like 2/4 time. | 0:10:21 | 0:10:24 | |
# Hey, Mr Tambourine Man play a song for me | 0:10:24 | 0:10:28 | |
# I'm not sleepy | 0:10:28 | 0:10:29 | |
# And there is no place I'm going to... # | 0:10:29 | 0:10:32 | |
-I took it and I put a Beatle beat to it, like... -PLAYS MORE SLOWLY | 0:10:32 | 0:10:39 | |
# Hey, Mr Tambourine Man | 0:10:39 | 0:10:42 | |
# Play a song for me | 0:10:42 | 0:10:45 | |
# In the jingle-jangle morning I'll come following you... # | 0:10:45 | 0:10:52 | |
Hot on the heels of the Beatles was another British outfit, | 0:11:06 | 0:11:09 | |
the Rolling Stones. | 0:11:09 | 0:11:12 | |
The band made a huge impression on white American audiences | 0:11:12 | 0:11:15 | |
with their cover versions of songs by largely unknown blues artists, | 0:11:15 | 0:11:19 | |
such as Howlin' Wolf's Little Red Rooster. | 0:11:19 | 0:11:22 | |
# I'm the little red rooster, babe | 0:11:22 | 0:11:25 | |
# Too lazy | 0:11:25 | 0:11:27 | |
# To crow for day... # | 0:11:27 | 0:11:30 | |
The Stones started bringing the blues back, | 0:11:30 | 0:11:34 | |
our blues back to us. | 0:11:34 | 0:11:36 | |
There were people who had never even heard | 0:11:36 | 0:11:38 | |
of most of the blues musicians they were playing | 0:11:38 | 0:11:41 | |
a lot of their songs. | 0:11:41 | 0:11:43 | |
# Upset in every way... # | 0:11:43 | 0:11:46 | |
When these guys came from England, playing American rock 'n' roll | 0:11:52 | 0:11:56 | |
and playing it really, really well, adding a whole new life to it, actually, | 0:11:56 | 0:12:00 | |
thank God for that. | 0:12:00 | 0:12:03 | |
As we used to say, "I love the limeys for what they're doing." | 0:12:04 | 0:12:08 | |
To their everlasting credit, it was the Stones | 0:12:08 | 0:12:10 | |
who insisted on Howlin' Wolf appearing with them on Shindig. | 0:12:10 | 0:12:14 | |
You know, they said, "He doesn't get to play, we don't play." | 0:12:14 | 0:12:18 | |
I was in Chicago a little while ago | 0:12:18 | 0:12:19 | |
and I came across this restaurant and I went in and I found | 0:12:19 | 0:12:23 | |
a chap singing the blues, I thought he was fantastic, so I booked him. | 0:12:23 | 0:12:27 | |
-And, er... -"Jolly good chap. He's on." | 0:12:27 | 0:12:29 | |
And it turned out to be somebody you know about, in fact he's quite famous, isn't he? | 0:12:29 | 0:12:34 | |
-Yes, he was the first one who recorded Little Red Rooster. -Was he? | 0:12:34 | 0:12:38 | |
Up until that time, most white kids... "Who are these guys?" | 0:12:38 | 0:12:43 | |
Well, they're the ones who laid the groundwork | 0:12:43 | 0:12:45 | |
for that music that cool music that you love so much. | 0:12:45 | 0:12:48 | |
# How many more years | 0:12:48 | 0:12:52 | |
# Have I got to let you dog me around? | 0:12:52 | 0:12:56 | |
# How many more years | 0:12:59 | 0:13:02 | |
# Have I got to let you dog me around? # | 0:13:02 | 0:13:08 | |
The difference between the Rolling Stones and us is they idolised | 0:13:08 | 0:13:13 | |
all these great old blues guys, | 0:13:13 | 0:13:15 | |
but we could actually go see these guys. | 0:13:15 | 0:13:17 | |
We'd have to sneak in, but, you know, we did, | 0:13:17 | 0:13:21 | |
and Jimmy Reed and Howlin' Wolf and all these people we got to see. | 0:13:21 | 0:13:26 | |
While the first wave of the British invasion inspired | 0:13:28 | 0:13:30 | |
the emerging American rockers to look closer at home for musical direction, | 0:13:30 | 0:13:35 | |
when the Beatles returned to the US in 1965, | 0:13:35 | 0:13:38 | |
they'd become politicised pot-smokers, who had a huge influence | 0:13:38 | 0:13:42 | |
on the way young people thought and behaved. | 0:13:42 | 0:13:45 | |
MUSIC: "Tomorrow Never Knows" by the Beatles | 0:13:45 | 0:13:48 | |
It's hard to imagine, if you didn't live through it, | 0:13:48 | 0:13:52 | |
when the records came out, how important it was - | 0:13:52 | 0:13:54 | |
culturally, how much we all went to someone's house | 0:13:54 | 0:13:57 | |
to listen to that album come out that day and all the bands followed, | 0:13:57 | 0:14:00 | |
and when the Beatles said something, you listened. | 0:14:00 | 0:14:03 | |
As the Beatles pushed the boundaries of popular music, | 0:14:03 | 0:14:06 | |
they inspired young American bands to believe | 0:14:06 | 0:14:08 | |
that rock 'n' roll could be much more than pure entertainment. | 0:14:08 | 0:14:12 | |
Suddenly, they had a voice. | 0:14:13 | 0:14:14 | |
Now they felt, "Well, if the Beatles and Bob Dylan can protest the war, so can we." | 0:14:14 | 0:14:20 | |
And that's when the whole thing ruptured, I think. | 0:14:20 | 0:14:23 | |
Energised by the British invasion and Bob Dylan's social commentary, | 0:14:24 | 0:14:28 | |
American bands branched out in many directions, | 0:14:28 | 0:14:31 | |
taking influences from the blues, folk, country and rock 'n' roll. | 0:14:31 | 0:14:36 | |
# Get your motor running | 0:14:36 | 0:14:39 | |
# Head out on the highway | 0:14:39 | 0:14:41 | |
# Looking for adventure | 0:14:43 | 0:14:45 | |
# And whatever comes our way... # | 0:14:45 | 0:14:49 | |
What began to emerge was a distinct American rock style | 0:14:49 | 0:14:52 | |
that was heavier and louder than the bubble-gum pop that had dominated the charts in the early '60s. | 0:14:52 | 0:14:58 | |
Songs such as Born To Be Wild by Steppenwolf captured | 0:14:58 | 0:15:01 | |
the spirit of rebellion and freedom | 0:15:01 | 0:15:03 | |
at the heart of the new wave of rock bands. | 0:15:03 | 0:15:06 | |
# We were born, born to be wild... # | 0:15:06 | 0:15:09 | |
And as bands all over the country added their own local flavours to the mix, | 0:15:09 | 0:15:14 | |
classic American rock was born. | 0:15:14 | 0:15:16 | |
# Born to be wild | 0:15:16 | 0:15:20 | |
# Born to be wild. # | 0:15:22 | 0:15:26 | |
Many early American rock tracks were as much about attitude as social awareness. | 0:15:26 | 0:15:31 | |
But when the US Marines were dispatched to Vietnam in March 1965, | 0:15:31 | 0:15:36 | |
it marked the beginning of the ground war, and the message changed. | 0:15:36 | 0:15:40 | |
# I see the bad moon arising | 0:15:40 | 0:15:43 | |
# I see trouble on the way... # | 0:15:45 | 0:15:48 | |
For teenage boys in the mid-'60s, including those in rock bands, | 0:15:48 | 0:15:52 | |
the threat of being called up was a constant worry. | 0:15:52 | 0:15:55 | |
That unease was captured by the foreboding lyrics of songs | 0:15:55 | 0:15:58 | |
such as Creedence Clearwater Revival's Bad Moon Rising. | 0:15:58 | 0:16:02 | |
# It's bound to take your life | 0:16:02 | 0:16:05 | |
# There's a bad moon on the rise... # | 0:16:05 | 0:16:08 | |
President Lyndon B Johnson's government drafted 400,000 ordinary teenagers into the Army every year. | 0:16:10 | 0:16:17 | |
By 1967, half a million young Americans | 0:16:19 | 0:16:22 | |
were fighting on the other side of the world in Vietnam. | 0:16:22 | 0:16:26 | |
-Name? -Raymond Daniel Manzarek. | 0:16:27 | 0:16:29 | |
-Age? -Born 2.12.39. | 0:16:29 | 0:16:33 | |
Here come the politicians. | 0:16:33 | 0:16:34 | |
"You boys are going to have to go off to war to go fight Vietnamese." | 0:16:34 | 0:16:40 | |
"What's a...? Excuse me? | 0:16:40 | 0:16:42 | |
"Where is it Vietnam, first of all, and what's a Vietnamese? | 0:16:42 | 0:16:44 | |
-Name? -John Densmore. | 0:16:44 | 0:16:47 | |
-Age? -23. | 0:16:47 | 0:16:49 | |
We certainly were all educated, | 0:16:49 | 0:16:52 | |
so we quickly learned that the Vietnam War was not where it's at. | 0:16:52 | 0:16:57 | |
It was, in our eyes, a very unjust war. | 0:17:05 | 0:17:06 | |
We had no business being there. | 0:17:06 | 0:17:08 | |
This was the first time everybody looked at America | 0:17:08 | 0:17:12 | |
as a country where God was no longer on our side. | 0:17:12 | 0:17:16 | |
It just didn't fly the way... | 0:17:16 | 0:17:17 | |
For example, nobody had to question why we were fighting | 0:17:17 | 0:17:21 | |
after Pearl Harbor, | 0:17:21 | 0:17:22 | |
in World War II, that just didn't come up. | 0:17:22 | 0:17:25 | |
When it became clear to this younger generation that it could be | 0:17:27 | 0:17:31 | |
drafted and sent to Vietnam, to be blown up, or to kill | 0:17:31 | 0:17:37 | |
maybe harmless people, | 0:17:37 | 0:17:39 | |
this started to become a rallying cry for our generation | 0:17:39 | 0:17:45 | |
in a way that might not have been if it hadn't been for the draft. | 0:17:45 | 0:17:49 | |
Guys didn't want to go. Guys said, "No way, man. Hell, no, | 0:17:49 | 0:17:53 | |
"we won't go." There were big protests in the street. | 0:17:53 | 0:17:56 | |
ALL CHANT: Hell, no, we won't go! | 0:17:56 | 0:18:00 | |
Inevitably, the draft impacted the newly formed rock acts. | 0:18:00 | 0:18:03 | |
Creedence Clearwater Revival singer John Fogerty | 0:18:03 | 0:18:06 | |
and drummer Doug Clifford were both drafted in 1966 | 0:18:06 | 0:18:10 | |
and their sense of injustice in the system was expressed in Fortunate Son. | 0:18:10 | 0:18:16 | |
# And when you ask 'em How much should we give? | 0:18:16 | 0:18:19 | |
# The only answer More, more, more | 0:18:19 | 0:18:23 | |
# It ain't me, it ain't me | 0:18:23 | 0:18:26 | |
# I ain't no military son. # | 0:18:26 | 0:18:28 | |
A lot of the people - the elected officials' kids somehow managed to not go. | 0:18:28 | 0:18:34 | |
They were able to buy a favour, or knew somebody, so it was obvious. | 0:18:34 | 0:18:42 | |
It was the working class and the middle class | 0:18:42 | 0:18:44 | |
that did the dirty work. | 0:18:44 | 0:18:48 | |
# More, more | 0:18:48 | 0:18:49 | |
# It ain't me, it ain't me | 0:18:49 | 0:18:52 | |
# I ain't no fortunate one. # | 0:18:52 | 0:18:54 | |
With more young men called up, | 0:19:02 | 0:19:04 | |
dodging the draft became a game of cat and mouse. | 0:19:04 | 0:19:07 | |
The image of unruly '60s kids head-to-head with the US Army | 0:19:07 | 0:19:11 | |
became ingrained in the American psyche. | 0:19:11 | 0:19:14 | |
These encounters were captured in the black humour | 0:19:14 | 0:19:17 | |
of the 1978 cult movie Big Wednesday. | 0:19:17 | 0:19:19 | |
This is your induction visit. | 0:19:19 | 0:19:25 | |
Now if you pass today, you will be a member of the United States Army. | 0:19:25 | 0:19:32 | |
I hope you brought your toothbrushes. | 0:19:34 | 0:19:37 | |
When I was in the Army psychiatrist's office, | 0:19:37 | 0:19:39 | |
I pulled my chair over to the corner and sat with my back to the man. | 0:19:39 | 0:19:45 | |
Er, this is amusing now - I was terrified, let me tell you. | 0:19:45 | 0:19:50 | |
And he yelled at me and I said, "I am not good material for the Army. I took LSD." | 0:19:50 | 0:19:57 | |
And he said, "Great, you're going in." | 0:19:57 | 0:20:00 | |
Oh, thank you very much(!) | 0:20:00 | 0:20:02 | |
And so on the way out, this wonderful, elderly, large black woman, | 0:20:02 | 0:20:08 | |
who was taking the forms looked at me | 0:20:08 | 0:20:12 | |
and she could tell I was just so shattered, I could barely function | 0:20:12 | 0:20:16 | |
and she pointed to the "homosexual tendencies" box. | 0:20:16 | 0:20:21 | |
And implied that if I checked that, I wouldn't be in. | 0:20:21 | 0:20:24 | |
And this was back when they didn't even have the word "gay", | 0:20:24 | 0:20:30 | |
it was more derogatory. | 0:20:30 | 0:20:33 | |
And, you know, um, I checked that box. | 0:20:33 | 0:20:37 | |
Thank God. | 0:20:37 | 0:20:39 | |
Sent to fight or left at home, the baby-boomer generation | 0:20:39 | 0:20:43 | |
was desperate to escape from the reality of war. | 0:20:43 | 0:20:46 | |
Thousands of young Americans flocked to San Francisco, | 0:20:46 | 0:20:49 | |
attracted by the city's liberal attitude to sex and drugs. | 0:20:49 | 0:20:53 | |
It also boasted one of the most dynamic music scenes in the country, | 0:20:53 | 0:20:57 | |
where acts such as Country Joe and Janis Joplin provided the soundtrack to 1967's Summer of Love. | 0:20:57 | 0:21:04 | |
# I need a man to love me | 0:21:04 | 0:21:07 | |
# Don't you understand me, baby? | 0:21:08 | 0:21:12 | |
# Why | 0:21:12 | 0:21:14 | |
# I need a man to love... # | 0:21:14 | 0:21:17 | |
San Francisco's always been a liberal place, where there's so much going on. | 0:21:17 | 0:21:21 | |
And when I grew up here, there was the beatniks and the jazz cats, | 0:21:21 | 0:21:25 | |
so it was a natural place for something to ferment. | 0:21:25 | 0:21:28 | |
Everybody's wearing feathers and beads and long dresses | 0:21:28 | 0:21:31 | |
and wild hats. | 0:21:31 | 0:21:33 | |
And it was as if someone had lifted up a giant flat rock | 0:21:33 | 0:21:37 | |
and everyone crawled out from underneath it. | 0:21:37 | 0:21:39 | |
And it was kindred spirits. | 0:21:39 | 0:21:41 | |
Let's face it, we were all a bunch of dope-smokers, | 0:21:47 | 0:21:50 | |
so that was against the law. | 0:21:50 | 0:21:52 | |
And nobody wanted to drink | 0:21:52 | 0:21:53 | |
and they didn't want to do what the straight people did. | 0:21:53 | 0:21:56 | |
# I'm stuck on the LA freeway | 0:21:56 | 0:22:00 | |
# Got rainwater in my boots... # | 0:22:00 | 0:22:04 | |
We call upon the world to help us celebrate the infinite holiness of life. | 0:22:04 | 0:22:09 | |
We ask all who come here to come here in love | 0:22:09 | 0:22:12 | |
and we ask all who live here to greet all men with love. | 0:22:12 | 0:22:15 | |
There was this great love vibe, everybody loved everybody. | 0:22:18 | 0:22:22 | |
I don't know, everybody slept with everybody, as far as I know. | 0:22:22 | 0:22:26 | |
# I went flying | 0:22:26 | 0:22:31 | |
# And high... | 0:22:31 | 0:22:33 | |
For the first time it was, "Wow, we are united." | 0:22:33 | 0:22:36 | |
And it was sort of us against them, but we wanted to bring the straights into the freak scene. | 0:22:36 | 0:22:42 | |
It wasn't like we were... We were hoping to... That we could all become one. | 0:22:42 | 0:22:46 | |
It was all very much to do with that kind of belief that | 0:22:46 | 0:22:50 | |
we can overcome any negative bullshit with music and loving each other | 0:22:50 | 0:22:55 | |
and it was sincere. | 0:22:55 | 0:22:56 | |
The city's rock scene grew hand-in-hand | 0:22:58 | 0:23:01 | |
with the flower-power generation's experimentation with LSD. | 0:23:01 | 0:23:04 | |
The Fillmore Ballroom became home to a new breed of psychedelic bands, such as Jefferson Airplane. | 0:23:04 | 0:23:11 | |
# It's no secret | 0:23:11 | 0:23:15 | |
# When you' got me jumping up and down | 0:23:15 | 0:23:19 | |
# It's no secret | 0:23:19 | 0:23:22 | |
# Cos my heart is chained and bound | 0:23:22 | 0:23:25 | |
# I love you | 0:23:25 | 0:23:27 | |
# Yes, I love you, yeah | 0:23:27 | 0:23:29 | |
# It's no secret... # | 0:23:29 | 0:23:33 | |
At the gigs in the ballrooms, we had this barrel of apples | 0:23:33 | 0:23:37 | |
and every apple was syringed with acid. | 0:23:37 | 0:23:40 | |
And we had a big fruit bowl, you know, punch when you come up the stairs in the Fillmore, | 0:23:40 | 0:23:45 | |
you know, laced with acid. | 0:23:45 | 0:23:47 | |
So the audience is having a good time, too, you know, | 0:23:47 | 0:23:51 | |
and they got very loose with us. | 0:23:51 | 0:23:53 | |
# See that girl barefootin' along | 0:23:53 | 0:23:56 | |
# Whistling and singing She's a-carryin' on... # | 0:23:56 | 0:24:00 | |
The legendary shows at the Fillmore by bands such Jefferson Airplane, | 0:24:00 | 0:24:03 | |
Quicksilver Messenger | 0:24:03 | 0:24:05 | |
and Grateful Dead were mirrored in other parts of the country | 0:24:05 | 0:24:08 | |
as kids fell under the influence of flower power and its soundtrack. | 0:24:08 | 0:24:13 | |
People my age and, you know, from 15 to 20, just rocking out, | 0:24:13 | 0:24:19 | |
dancing, loving each other, carrying flowers and incense around, | 0:24:19 | 0:24:23 | |
smoking a lot of pot and feeling like part of a community, | 0:24:23 | 0:24:27 | |
part of a revolution that was brewing. | 0:24:27 | 0:24:30 | |
And the music had everything to do with it. | 0:24:30 | 0:24:33 | |
The words the musicians were singing, the way they looked, | 0:24:33 | 0:24:38 | |
it was brand-new, it was fresh and exciting. | 0:24:38 | 0:24:41 | |
Jefferson Airplane was the first San Francisco psychedelic outfit | 0:24:52 | 0:24:56 | |
to hit the big time. | 0:24:56 | 0:24:58 | |
And lead singer Grace Slick's White Rabbit captured | 0:24:58 | 0:25:01 | |
the experimental spirit of flower power. | 0:25:01 | 0:25:05 | |
# One pill makes you larger | 0:25:05 | 0:25:08 | |
# And one pill makes you small | 0:25:08 | 0:25:13 | |
# And the ones that Mother gives you | 0:25:13 | 0:25:17 | |
# Don't do any thing at all | 0:25:17 | 0:25:21 | |
# Go ask Alice | 0:25:21 | 0:25:25 | |
# When she's ten feet tall... # | 0:25:25 | 0:25:28 | |
As LSD became widespread in the music scene, | 0:25:28 | 0:25:31 | |
even heavier rock bands of the era, such as LA-based Steppenwolf, | 0:25:31 | 0:25:35 | |
experimented with atmospheric songs and abstract sounds. | 0:25:35 | 0:25:40 | |
In San Francisco, they were stretching out, | 0:25:40 | 0:25:42 | |
they were jamming, they were psychedelic, | 0:25:42 | 0:25:45 | |
they tried things and, since a lot of the ballroom audience | 0:25:45 | 0:25:51 | |
was on the same trip with them, it was not only tolerated, | 0:25:51 | 0:25:56 | |
it was kind of, "Wow, it's really far out, man." | 0:25:56 | 0:25:59 | |
It was that kind of experience. | 0:25:59 | 0:26:01 | |
And we started to do likewise, to see whether it can create | 0:26:01 | 0:26:05 | |
a mood, some kind of mental picture that we can generate in your mind. | 0:26:05 | 0:26:12 | |
Steppenwolf's Magic Carpet Ride. | 0:26:12 | 0:26:14 | |
# You don't know what we can find | 0:26:23 | 0:26:25 | |
# Oh, why don't you come with me, little girl | 0:26:26 | 0:26:29 | |
# On a magic carpet ride...? # | 0:26:29 | 0:26:31 | |
It wasn't only in the studio where musicians explored with new psychedelic sounds. | 0:26:31 | 0:26:36 | |
When Jimi Hendrix burst onto the American scene | 0:26:36 | 0:26:38 | |
at the legendary Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, | 0:26:38 | 0:26:42 | |
he transformed the possibilities of rock music | 0:26:42 | 0:26:45 | |
and the first American guitar hero was born. | 0:26:45 | 0:26:48 | |
Come on, man! | 0:26:57 | 0:26:59 | |
# Wild thing | 0:26:59 | 0:27:02 | |
# You make my heart sing | 0:27:04 | 0:27:07 | |
# You make everything groovy... # | 0:27:09 | 0:27:13 | |
Hendrix was alien to me. | 0:27:14 | 0:27:16 | |
I listened to it and I went, "What is he doing, how is it happening?" | 0:27:16 | 0:27:19 | |
He took a Stratocaster, plugged it into a Marshall stack | 0:27:19 | 0:27:22 | |
and did something that was not designed to ever happen before and transferred a language. | 0:27:22 | 0:27:26 | |
He is somebody that, I think, | 0:27:36 | 0:27:38 | |
best expressed what electric lead guitar sounds like. | 0:27:38 | 0:27:44 | |
MUSIC: "Purple Haze" | 0:27:44 | 0:27:47 | |
He was the first one that really put that screaming element into it. | 0:28:05 | 0:28:09 | |
A lot of people are experimenting and stuff and checking out | 0:28:09 | 0:28:13 | |
new sounds and new techniques, all kinds of great stuff. | 0:28:13 | 0:28:16 | |
But when he came out, it really came from the heart and he heard music | 0:28:16 | 0:28:21 | |
played with that sound and he went after it and fucking created it. | 0:28:21 | 0:28:24 | |
I've never seen anything like that since, never. That creativity. | 0:28:36 | 0:28:42 | |
I mean, there's the great Jeff Becks and Claptons, | 0:28:42 | 0:28:44 | |
but nobody was that sexy, you know. | 0:28:44 | 0:28:49 | |
I see guys all the time, "Hey, I can play Purple Haze, but they don't play it like the way Hendrix... | 0:28:49 | 0:28:55 | |
I mean, he fucked every note, you know. | 0:28:55 | 0:28:58 | |
With their often outlandish image, and open use of illegal substances, | 0:29:05 | 0:29:09 | |
rock musicians were inevitably associated with hedonistic lifestyles. | 0:29:09 | 0:29:14 | |
Yet, for many of this generation, it wasn't just an excuse to smoke pot. | 0:29:14 | 0:29:19 | |
There was a growing sense of empowerment, | 0:29:22 | 0:29:24 | |
new lifestyles were butting up against conservative lifestyles | 0:29:24 | 0:29:29 | |
and establishment, and the counter-culture began to be | 0:29:29 | 0:29:33 | |
better defined as opposing forces. | 0:29:33 | 0:29:35 | |
The generation's values that had been inspired by JFK | 0:29:35 | 0:29:39 | |
at the turn of the decade, were given a huge boost when his younger brother, | 0:29:39 | 0:29:43 | |
the charismatic 40-year-old figure of Bobby Kennedy, joined the race | 0:29:43 | 0:29:47 | |
to become the Democratic nominee for the 1968 presidential election. | 0:29:47 | 0:29:51 | |
# Excuse me while I kiss the sky... # | 0:29:53 | 0:29:55 | |
We can start to work together. We are a great country, | 0:29:59 | 0:30:02 | |
an unselfish country and a compassionate country | 0:30:02 | 0:30:04 | |
-and I intend to make that my basis for running. -CHEERING | 0:30:04 | 0:30:09 | |
With his baby-faced looks and positive vision, | 0:30:09 | 0:30:12 | |
Kennedy expressed the generation's hopes for a peaceful future. | 0:30:12 | 0:30:15 | |
But not everyone viewed the country through the same rose-tinted glasses. | 0:30:15 | 0:30:19 | |
Formed in Los Angeles, in 1965, on Venice Beach | 0:30:22 | 0:30:26 | |
by four middle-class college boys, The Doors expressed a very different vibe. | 0:30:26 | 0:30:32 | |
Their combination of free-form jazz, flamenco and poetry | 0:30:32 | 0:30:36 | |
acted as a dark counterpoint to the San Francisco hippy scene. | 0:30:36 | 0:30:42 | |
# Carry me, caravan Take me away | 0:30:42 | 0:30:48 | |
# Take me to Portugal Take me to Spain | 0:30:48 | 0:30:53 | |
# Andalusia | 0:30:53 | 0:30:56 | |
# With fields full of grain | 0:30:56 | 0:31:00 | |
# I have to see you | 0:31:00 | 0:31:02 | |
# Again and again... # | 0:31:02 | 0:31:05 | |
They were LA's sex music, | 0:31:05 | 0:31:06 | |
whereas San Francisco had a groovy, | 0:31:06 | 0:31:09 | |
"Let's all get together in the park and smoke marijuana | 0:31:09 | 0:31:13 | |
"and listen to Country Joe And The Fish," you know. | 0:31:13 | 0:31:17 | |
The Doors were this other entity. | 0:31:17 | 0:31:20 | |
They were kind of this dark, sexy entity. | 0:31:20 | 0:31:23 | |
The band was fronted by the enigmatic Jim Morrison, | 0:31:31 | 0:31:34 | |
whose film-star looks | 0:31:34 | 0:31:35 | |
and brooding stage presence fascinated everyone who saw him. | 0:31:35 | 0:31:39 | |
You couldn't take your eyes off Morrison, because you didn't know | 0:31:39 | 0:31:42 | |
if he was going to jump off the stage, | 0:31:42 | 0:31:44 | |
if he was going to collapse - he was totally unpredictable. | 0:31:44 | 0:31:49 | |
-Your name? -Er, Jim. | 0:31:49 | 0:31:52 | |
-Occupation? -Um... | 0:31:52 | 0:31:55 | |
Morrison's stream-of-conscious poetry | 0:31:57 | 0:32:00 | |
was as unpredictable as his behaviour, | 0:32:00 | 0:32:02 | |
and pushed the boundaries of rock lyrics in epic songs | 0:32:02 | 0:32:05 | |
such as The End. | 0:32:05 | 0:32:07 | |
# This is the end | 0:32:07 | 0:32:10 | |
# Beautiful friend | 0:32:10 | 0:32:14 | |
# This is the end | 0:32:16 | 0:32:19 | |
# My only friend, the end | 0:32:19 | 0:32:23 | |
# Of our elaborate plans The end... # | 0:32:23 | 0:32:28 | |
He sort of expressed the underlying angst the teenagers were feeling at the time | 0:32:28 | 0:32:34 | |
and I remember very vividly his darkness. | 0:32:34 | 0:32:37 | |
He had a dark quality and it was very sexy. | 0:32:37 | 0:32:41 | |
And the stuff he sang about was pretty profound and deep. | 0:32:41 | 0:32:44 | |
# Lost in a Roman wilderness of pain | 0:32:44 | 0:32:51 | |
# And all the children | 0:32:54 | 0:32:59 | |
# Are insane... | 0:32:59 | 0:33:02 | |
"Lost in a Roman wilderness of pain and all the children are insane." | 0:33:02 | 0:33:09 | |
# Are insane... | 0:33:09 | 0:33:13 | |
"Waiting for the summer rain." | 0:33:13 | 0:33:15 | |
# Waiting for the summer rain... # | 0:33:15 | 0:33:20 | |
Whoa, wait a second, man, is that Rimbaud? What is that? | 0:33:23 | 0:33:26 | |
That's not rock 'n' roll lyrics. | 0:33:26 | 0:33:29 | |
In the late '60s, radio was still the dominant medium for broadcasting music, | 0:33:30 | 0:33:34 | |
but the constraints dictated by commercial radio was ill-equipped | 0:33:34 | 0:33:38 | |
to deal with the changing face of rock. | 0:33:38 | 0:33:40 | |
Songs such as The End were too long and lyrically challenging | 0:33:40 | 0:33:44 | |
to be played on the singles-dominated radio stations. | 0:33:44 | 0:33:47 | |
In San Francisco, all that was about to change. | 0:33:47 | 0:33:51 | |
Prior to April of 1967... | 0:33:53 | 0:33:55 | |
..there was no FM radio, no FM rock radio. | 0:33:56 | 0:34:01 | |
It was Top 40 bubble gum, AM, mono. | 0:34:01 | 0:34:07 | |
And that was fine, you know, for the '50s, | 0:34:07 | 0:34:10 | |
but, now, the Beatles had come along and the Stones were here. | 0:34:10 | 0:34:17 | |
And Bob Dylan had arrived. | 0:34:17 | 0:34:20 | |
And The Doors, you know. | 0:34:20 | 0:34:24 | |
So along comes Tom and Raechel Donahue, | 0:34:24 | 0:34:27 | |
who are sitting in their apartment in San Francisco one night. | 0:34:27 | 0:34:32 | |
We're playing cards and drinking iced water, | 0:34:32 | 0:34:36 | |
and butterscotch candy and taking acid, | 0:34:36 | 0:34:39 | |
and, all of a sudden, we hear "Father, I'm going to kill you!" | 0:34:39 | 0:34:44 | |
"What, what? Did he just...? What did he just say?" | 0:34:44 | 0:34:47 | |
# Father Yes, son | 0:34:48 | 0:34:49 | |
# I want to kill you | 0:34:49 | 0:34:51 | |
# Mother | 0:34:57 | 0:35:01 | |
# I want to... | 0:35:02 | 0:35:05 | |
Agggghhhh! | 0:35:05 | 0:35:08 | |
# Come on Oh... # | 0:35:08 | 0:35:10 | |
The length alone, the construction of the song, it's scary. | 0:35:13 | 0:35:19 | |
And it was dark and it was not anything like anything anybody else was doing. | 0:35:19 | 0:35:24 | |
And Tom asked the fateful question, "Why don't we hear this on the radio?" | 0:35:24 | 0:35:29 | |
Next day, he gets up, Tom and Raechel get their VW van, | 0:35:29 | 0:35:32 | |
or whatever they're driving at the time, and they find a radio station | 0:35:32 | 0:35:37 | |
who is so poor their phone has been disconnected. | 0:35:37 | 0:35:40 | |
So Tom and Raechel go back to their place. | 0:35:40 | 0:35:43 | |
They pack up their own albums in cardboard boxes, go back to the station | 0:35:43 | 0:35:48 | |
turn it on and that was it. Like, instantly, Haight-Ashbury lit up. | 0:35:48 | 0:35:55 | |
People were putting their stereo speakers out on the balcony, "Hey, listen to this!" | 0:36:02 | 0:36:07 | |
It was so completely different, because, suddenly, | 0:36:09 | 0:36:13 | |
you're getting all of this extraordinarily rich culture coming at you, | 0:36:13 | 0:36:19 | |
delivered from people who you could relate to. | 0:36:19 | 0:36:23 | |
What we want to do is everybody working together to make it as cool | 0:36:23 | 0:36:26 | |
and groovy a trip as we can and to make it as happy a party as we can. | 0:36:26 | 0:36:30 | |
You had disc jockeys | 0:36:30 | 0:36:31 | |
that were kind of making up their own mind what they played. | 0:36:31 | 0:36:35 | |
They were taste-makers. | 0:36:35 | 0:36:37 | |
If you have a guy who had good taste, | 0:36:37 | 0:36:39 | |
you had a really great radio show. | 0:36:39 | 0:36:42 | |
This is KSAN in San Francisco, Tom Donahue and Raechel | 0:36:42 | 0:36:45 | |
and lots of other people tonight, lots of friends until midnight. | 0:36:45 | 0:36:48 | |
The DJ just went, "I've got all these albums, | 0:36:48 | 0:36:50 | |
"I've got these glut of music. | 0:36:50 | 0:36:52 | |
"I can play Quicksilver Messenger Service for 12 minutes." | 0:36:52 | 0:36:56 | |
You wouldn't play the same song from an album, you'd work your way through an album. | 0:36:56 | 0:37:00 | |
So if there was a new Jimi Hendrix album, | 0:37:00 | 0:37:03 | |
when the new Cream album came out, | 0:37:03 | 0:37:04 | |
we'd work our way through all the cuts, so that | 0:37:04 | 0:37:07 | |
the audience could hear everything on it before deciding to buy it. | 0:37:07 | 0:37:10 | |
With the arrival of FM radio, | 0:37:10 | 0:37:12 | |
many of the protest movement's ideas on tackling poverty, | 0:37:12 | 0:37:15 | |
ending sexual and racial inequality started to be embraced more widely. | 0:37:15 | 0:37:20 | |
They were able to relate what was going on in the street to the music. | 0:37:20 | 0:37:25 | |
So, suddenly, | 0:37:25 | 0:37:27 | |
they could tie in what Dr King was saying with a Bob Dylan song. | 0:37:27 | 0:37:33 | |
and now you got something more powerful than the two separately. | 0:37:33 | 0:37:37 | |
Now you're starting to think about this stuff in a whole different way, | 0:37:37 | 0:37:40 | |
and it spread like wildfire, | 0:37:40 | 0:37:43 | |
and it started spreading across the country. | 0:37:43 | 0:37:46 | |
In a country as vast as the US, each city had distinct political | 0:37:46 | 0:37:50 | |
and social issues and these were reflected in the local music scene. | 0:37:50 | 0:37:55 | |
The industrial city of Detroit was home to some of the loudest, | 0:37:55 | 0:37:59 | |
wildest bands in the country, such as the Stooges and MC5. | 0:37:59 | 0:38:03 | |
# Love is like a ramblin' rose | 0:38:04 | 0:38:06 | |
# The more you feel it The more it grows... # | 0:38:10 | 0:38:12 | |
It was a far cry from the love vibes of flower power. | 0:38:12 | 0:38:16 | |
Detroit was a dynamic city at that time | 0:38:16 | 0:38:19 | |
and working in the factory was portrayed as bang, bang, bang, bang. | 0:38:19 | 0:38:24 | |
And it was sort of a bang, bang, bang, bang. | 0:38:24 | 0:38:27 | |
And that got into their music. | 0:38:27 | 0:38:29 | |
You know, the hard, driving rhythm, "Kick 'em out, don't give up." | 0:38:29 | 0:38:34 | |
# Kick out the jams, motherfuckers... # | 0:38:34 | 0:38:37 | |
The four working-class boys that were the MC5 | 0:38:38 | 0:38:41 | |
added some urban grit to the Summer of Love soundtrack | 0:38:41 | 0:38:44 | |
with high-energy tracks, such as Kick Out The Jams. | 0:38:44 | 0:38:48 | |
# Well, I'm feelin' pretty good | 0:38:50 | 0:38:52 | |
# And I guess that I could Get crazy now, baby | 0:38:52 | 0:38:56 | |
# Cos we all got in tune | 0:38:57 | 0:38:59 | |
# When the dressing room Got hazy now, baby | 0:38:59 | 0:39:03 | |
# I know how you want it, mama Hot, quick and tight | 0:39:04 | 0:39:07 | |
# The girls can't stand it When you're doin' it right | 0:39:07 | 0:39:10 | |
# Get me up on the stand | 0:39:10 | 0:39:13 | |
# And let me kick out the jams... # | 0:39:13 | 0:39:16 | |
There's an old saw | 0:39:16 | 0:39:17 | |
that the Summer of Love didn't make a stop in Detroit. | 0:39:17 | 0:39:21 | |
We tried. We had our hippies. | 0:39:21 | 0:39:25 | |
We believed that peace and love were better than hate and violence. | 0:39:25 | 0:39:31 | |
If you wanted the peace and love, you could get it here, too. | 0:39:31 | 0:39:34 | |
There were, you know, "We love you, peace." | 0:39:34 | 0:39:38 | |
Well, there was also... | 0:39:38 | 0:39:40 | |
# Kick out the jams! # | 0:39:40 | 0:39:45 | |
In Detroit, there was a different vibe. | 0:39:47 | 0:39:50 | |
Here people wanted, like, a little bit harder | 0:39:50 | 0:39:53 | |
rock 'n' roll than that. | 0:39:53 | 0:39:55 | |
We're not that laid-back here! | 0:39:55 | 0:39:58 | |
San Francisco bands, to me, | 0:40:02 | 0:40:03 | |
they all sounded like folk guitar players with electric guitars. | 0:40:03 | 0:40:08 | |
The rhythm sections were always terribly weak | 0:40:08 | 0:40:12 | |
and they just didn't... They didn't have that...that drive. | 0:40:12 | 0:40:15 | |
At the heart of the Motor City music scene was one of the craziest venues on the circuit, | 0:40:19 | 0:40:24 | |
the Grande Ballroom. | 0:40:24 | 0:40:25 | |
It was just a fabulous place where anything could happen | 0:40:29 | 0:40:34 | |
any given night. There were scandalous amounts of sex happening in the ballroom | 0:40:34 | 0:40:40 | |
in the course of the evening. | 0:40:40 | 0:40:42 | |
Drugs - psychedelic drugs, marijuana. | 0:40:42 | 0:40:46 | |
On stage, it was like an orgasm. | 0:40:46 | 0:40:49 | |
Yeah, it was. | 0:40:49 | 0:40:51 | |
People would come in their... After the show, we'd find little wet spots | 0:40:51 | 0:40:54 | |
where the audiences were, sometimes. | 0:40:54 | 0:40:56 | |
The ladies got too carried away. I'm sorry, but that's the truth. | 0:40:56 | 0:41:00 | |
As well as MC5's celebration of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, | 0:41:02 | 0:41:06 | |
they also promoted a very different message. | 0:41:06 | 0:41:10 | |
Along with many young black people, | 0:41:10 | 0:41:12 | |
MC5's members were frustrated at the slow pace of change on civil rights. | 0:41:12 | 0:41:17 | |
In Detroit, the Black Panther Party organised community projects | 0:41:17 | 0:41:21 | |
in addition to protecting black people from police brutality. | 0:41:21 | 0:41:24 | |
And the MC5 were sympathetic to their militaristic stance. | 0:41:24 | 0:41:29 | |
The White Panther Party grew out of our frustration with the slow pace of change. | 0:41:29 | 0:41:34 | |
We were young and we wanted things to happen now. Now, now, now. | 0:41:34 | 0:41:40 | |
And, um, one of our friends was in jail | 0:41:40 | 0:41:44 | |
and he read in the Black Panther newspaper | 0:41:44 | 0:41:47 | |
that the Black Panthers had asked for a group of white people | 0:41:47 | 0:41:50 | |
to come forward to do parallel work in the white community, | 0:41:50 | 0:41:55 | |
that they were doing in the black community. | 0:41:55 | 0:41:57 | |
And we said, "Hey, that's us. "They've got guns, we've got guns. | 0:41:57 | 0:42:01 | |
"They're revolutionaries, we're revolutionaries." | 0:42:01 | 0:42:04 | |
And, um, even though they were kind of more serious | 0:42:04 | 0:42:10 | |
and we were, like, more crazy. HE LAUGHS | 0:42:10 | 0:42:13 | |
We were, like, stoned out. | 0:42:13 | 0:42:15 | |
I mean, the White Panther Party was kind of like a bunch of guys | 0:42:15 | 0:42:19 | |
sitting around a table smoking a lot of reefer, laughing their ass off! | 0:42:19 | 0:42:23 | |
On generational, racial and social grounds, | 0:42:27 | 0:42:30 | |
American society was divided. | 0:42:30 | 0:42:33 | |
Viewed by many as the embodiment of the hippy generation, | 0:42:33 | 0:42:36 | |
the sight of long-haired musicians on the road in the American heartlands | 0:42:36 | 0:42:40 | |
was often met with suspicion. | 0:42:40 | 0:42:43 | |
People would chase you, come after you, | 0:42:43 | 0:42:46 | |
throw things at you, say things to you. | 0:42:46 | 0:42:50 | |
It was very, you know... For us it was great, you know. | 0:42:50 | 0:42:54 | |
We were disturbing these people. | 0:42:54 | 0:42:57 | |
We'd come to disturb the comfortable and make the comfortable disturbed. | 0:42:57 | 0:43:01 | |
Even members of bands steeped in American roots music, | 0:43:02 | 0:43:05 | |
such as Creedence Clearwater Revival, weren't safe on their travels. | 0:43:05 | 0:43:10 | |
# When I was just a little boy | 0:43:10 | 0:43:14 | |
# Standing to my daddy's knee... # | 0:43:14 | 0:43:17 | |
We did Johnny Cash television summer show in Nashville | 0:43:17 | 0:43:21 | |
and I wanted to buy a country shirt, a Western shirt, from Nashville. | 0:43:21 | 0:43:26 | |
And it was lunchtime. I went out. I asked where I could buy one. | 0:43:28 | 0:43:33 | |
Somebody said, "Two blocks this way four blocks that way, you can get... | 0:43:33 | 0:43:38 | |
"There's a big store, you can get all the shirts you want." | 0:43:38 | 0:43:42 | |
So I went down to buy one. | 0:43:42 | 0:43:43 | |
Went by a bar and I heard this commotion | 0:43:43 | 0:43:45 | |
and the next thing I know, I'm up against the wall | 0:43:45 | 0:43:48 | |
and there are five guys that had me pinned against the wall. | 0:43:48 | 0:43:52 | |
And, er, "So, what have we got here, what have we got here? | 0:43:52 | 0:43:56 | |
"We've got us a hippy boy. | 0:43:56 | 0:43:59 | |
"Well, I don't know whether to fuck it or to shoot it." | 0:43:59 | 0:44:02 | |
I mean, that's what they're saying. But I'm dead. | 0:44:02 | 0:44:05 | |
I am going to certainly get the crap kicked out of me. | 0:44:05 | 0:44:09 | |
Then I have this deep voice. "Hey, boys, what the hell are you doing? | 0:44:09 | 0:44:12 | |
"Let that man go." It was Johnny Cash. | 0:44:12 | 0:44:15 | |
Thank God he was going out to... I don't know where he was going, | 0:44:16 | 0:44:20 | |
but he passed by that bar and saved my ass. | 0:44:20 | 0:44:23 | |
And, er... I said. "I'm going to be staying in the studio from now on." | 0:44:23 | 0:44:28 | |
The culture clashes experienced by bands on the road | 0:44:29 | 0:44:32 | |
were a sign that the paradise dreamt | 0:44:32 | 0:44:35 | |
by the peace-and-love generation was turning sour. | 0:44:35 | 0:44:38 | |
By the end of the decade, America was out of control at home and abroad. | 0:44:38 | 0:44:43 | |
The body count went through the roof | 0:44:43 | 0:44:45 | |
as the news carried daily images of the horror in Vietnam. | 0:44:45 | 0:44:50 | |
The brutal assassination of Martin Luther King ended hopes of a non-violent solution | 0:44:50 | 0:44:56 | |
to the civil rights campaign. | 0:44:56 | 0:44:58 | |
And when Bobby Kennedy was shot on the campaign trail | 0:44:58 | 0:45:00 | |
in June in 1968, the generation's hopes | 0:45:00 | 0:45:03 | |
of electing a sympathetic figure that would end the war died with him. | 0:45:03 | 0:45:08 | |
When Robert was assassinated, that was a real sinker, emotionally, | 0:45:08 | 0:45:14 | |
because a lot of us | 0:45:14 | 0:45:15 | |
had hoped that he was the guy that was going to, | 0:45:15 | 0:45:20 | |
with his youthful charisma and energy, | 0:45:20 | 0:45:23 | |
was going to pull the whole country forward. | 0:45:23 | 0:45:26 | |
Shocked by the loss of their charismatic leader | 0:45:26 | 0:45:29 | |
and frustrated by the lack of progress on Vietnam, | 0:45:29 | 0:45:32 | |
the frustration of the peace-and-love movement | 0:45:32 | 0:45:35 | |
boiled over onto the streets and into the music. | 0:45:35 | 0:45:37 | |
You could not disconnect the social movement from the music, | 0:45:37 | 0:45:42 | |
it was that important. | 0:45:42 | 0:45:44 | |
Again, you tasted it, you knew it. | 0:45:44 | 0:45:46 | |
# Looks what's happening out in the streets | 0:45:46 | 0:45:49 | |
# Revolution | 0:45:49 | 0:45:51 | |
# Hey, I'm dancing Down the streets... # | 0:45:51 | 0:45:54 | |
Jefferson Airplane, who'd captured the spirit of flower power, | 0:45:54 | 0:45:57 | |
was one of the many bands who shed their psychedelic skins in favour | 0:45:57 | 0:46:01 | |
of political anthems that reflected the tensions on the streets. | 0:46:01 | 0:46:06 | |
# And now it's time for you and me | 0:46:06 | 0:46:08 | |
# Got a revolution... # | 0:46:08 | 0:46:12 | |
The hippy generation's mantra had been the freedom | 0:46:12 | 0:46:15 | |
to experience alternative lifestyles in peace. | 0:46:15 | 0:46:18 | |
As the Summer of Love turned into 1968's winter of discontent, | 0:46:18 | 0:46:22 | |
the message changed from peace and love | 0:46:22 | 0:46:25 | |
to a revolutionary call to arms. | 0:46:25 | 0:46:27 | |
# Got a revolution... # | 0:46:27 | 0:46:29 | |
'68 was a scary time. It was dark. Ugh. | 0:46:29 | 0:46:32 | |
'67 was beautiful and then '68 was dark, you know. | 0:46:32 | 0:46:37 | |
It was such a sudden change. | 0:46:37 | 0:46:40 | |
Things that had started out in a much more benign way, | 0:46:40 | 0:46:43 | |
er, started to get heavy. | 0:46:43 | 0:46:45 | |
People weren't seeing things happen quickly enough. | 0:46:45 | 0:46:48 | |
And so violence started to creep into all the movements. | 0:46:48 | 0:46:51 | |
Some of the worst riots were in Detroit, | 0:46:53 | 0:46:55 | |
home of revolutionary band the MC5, | 0:46:55 | 0:46:58 | |
where a police raid of an unlicensed bar | 0:46:58 | 0:47:01 | |
triggered five days of violence... | 0:47:01 | 0:47:03 | |
# You know the Motor City's burning, babe | 0:47:03 | 0:47:08 | |
# There ain't a thing in the world they can do... # | 0:47:08 | 0:47:13 | |
..culminating in 46 deaths, 7,000 arrests | 0:47:13 | 0:47:17 | |
and 2,000 buildings destroyed. | 0:47:17 | 0:47:20 | |
Detroit was at war for a week with the Detroit police | 0:47:20 | 0:47:25 | |
and, in the end, the United States Army came into separate everybody | 0:47:25 | 0:47:30 | |
and calm things down, because the police had gone mad. | 0:47:30 | 0:47:34 | |
40 or 50 people that were killed in that riot, | 0:47:34 | 0:47:37 | |
they weren't snipers, Black Panther snipers, picking off police. | 0:47:37 | 0:47:42 | |
They were just regular people that the police shot and killed. | 0:47:42 | 0:47:47 | |
And when the Democratic Party convention in Chicago | 0:47:49 | 0:47:52 | |
gathered to nominate a presidential candidate to take on | 0:47:52 | 0:47:55 | |
the bruising figure of Richard Nixon, | 0:47:55 | 0:47:58 | |
it was a disaster waiting to happen. | 0:47:58 | 0:48:00 | |
The event that should have been Bobby Kennedy's coronation turned nasty | 0:48:00 | 0:48:04 | |
when the other anti-war candidate, Eugene McCarthy, | 0:48:04 | 0:48:08 | |
was beaten by Vice President Hubert Humphrey. | 0:48:08 | 0:48:11 | |
'I don't know what's going on but these are security people, apparently.' | 0:48:11 | 0:48:15 | |
But the scenes in the convention took second place | 0:48:15 | 0:48:17 | |
to the running battles between demonstrators and the police | 0:48:17 | 0:48:21 | |
on the streets of Chicago. | 0:48:21 | 0:48:23 | |
The convention in Chicago was disastrous, absolutely insane, | 0:48:23 | 0:48:29 | |
wild, crazed. | 0:48:29 | 0:48:31 | |
It was like a teenage movie, a political rebellion, | 0:48:31 | 0:48:35 | |
except it was actually happening right on TV. | 0:48:35 | 0:48:38 | |
There was a girl starting a fire and I was walking by, and they... | 0:48:38 | 0:48:43 | |
they asked the girl what she was doing. | 0:48:43 | 0:48:45 | |
She said she was starting a fire. | 0:48:45 | 0:48:46 | |
This was this one man, | 0:48:46 | 0:48:48 | |
short, fat guy in a green plaid jacket, and he said, "Really?" | 0:48:48 | 0:48:51 | |
and he pulled out a black can | 0:48:51 | 0:48:52 | |
and he just put it right up to her face and shot her. | 0:48:52 | 0:48:55 | |
Are you kidding me? Is this going on in America? | 0:48:55 | 0:48:58 | |
When what we basically have | 0:48:58 | 0:49:01 | |
are hundreds and hundreds of thousands of hippies smoking pot. | 0:49:01 | 0:49:07 | |
When Republican candidate Richard Nixon | 0:49:08 | 0:49:11 | |
was inaugurated as President in 1969, | 0:49:11 | 0:49:14 | |
the flower power generation knew that their ideals had been rejected | 0:49:14 | 0:49:18 | |
by the majority of Americans. | 0:49:18 | 0:49:21 | |
But not everyone wallowed in self-pity. | 0:49:21 | 0:49:23 | |
In upstate New York, | 0:49:23 | 0:49:24 | |
an ambitious idea of a festival of peace and music | 0:49:24 | 0:49:27 | |
near the quiet hamlet of Woodstock gathered momentum. | 0:49:27 | 0:49:31 | |
Really what we were trying to do was bring everybody together. | 0:49:31 | 0:49:34 | |
We wanted to have an event | 0:49:34 | 0:49:36 | |
which celebrated the positive side of our experiences. | 0:49:36 | 0:49:39 | |
# We can be together | 0:49:39 | 0:49:43 | |
# Ah-ahh, you and me... # | 0:49:43 | 0:49:47 | |
We conceived it as this gathering of the tribes to sort of... | 0:49:47 | 0:49:51 | |
get ourselves together and see if we could actually live, you know, | 0:49:51 | 0:49:55 | |
the kind of... even for that brief period of time, | 0:49:55 | 0:49:58 | |
in the kind of relationships and the way that we aspired to. | 0:49:58 | 0:50:03 | |
What does it cost to put one of these things together? | 0:50:03 | 0:50:06 | |
-A fortune. -A fortune? -Right. | 0:50:06 | 0:50:07 | |
I planned Woodstock for 200,000 people. That was our real number. | 0:50:07 | 0:50:12 | |
We built for it, we thought we were providing for it | 0:50:12 | 0:50:15 | |
in terms of food, you know, capacities for toilets. | 0:50:15 | 0:50:18 | |
Everything was based on that number, 200,000, | 0:50:18 | 0:50:20 | |
cos I thought, you know, "How ridiculous can it get?" | 0:50:20 | 0:50:23 | |
Maybe that ridiculous. | 0:50:23 | 0:50:24 | |
We were standing on the kerbs watching them come in last night, | 0:50:24 | 0:50:27 | |
all the townspeople. | 0:50:27 | 0:50:29 | |
It was just like an army invading your town! | 0:50:29 | 0:50:32 | |
On the grass! | 0:50:32 | 0:50:34 | |
Please walk on the grass! | 0:50:34 | 0:50:36 | |
At some point, somebody observed that during that weekend, | 0:50:38 | 0:50:42 | |
Woodstock was the third largest city in New York State. | 0:50:42 | 0:50:46 | |
And we had expected one-twentieth the size of this crowd. | 0:50:46 | 0:50:52 | |
American rock legends Jefferson Airplane, | 0:50:52 | 0:50:55 | |
Creedence Clearwater | 0:50:55 | 0:50:56 | |
and Woodstock residents The Band were among an A-list of acts | 0:50:56 | 0:51:00 | |
hellbent on putting on an unforgettable show. | 0:51:00 | 0:51:03 | |
# I was feeling 'bout half past ten | 0:51:03 | 0:51:07 | |
# I just need to find some place where I can lay my head... # | 0:51:08 | 0:51:14 | |
From the beginning, we all agreed. | 0:51:14 | 0:51:18 | |
We did not want to make a political statement. | 0:51:18 | 0:51:20 | |
We felt the biggest statement we could make was, | 0:51:20 | 0:51:22 | |
this is going to work, we don't have to say anything. | 0:51:22 | 0:51:24 | |
# Take a load off, Fanny | 0:51:27 | 0:51:31 | |
# Take a load for free | 0:51:31 | 0:51:32 | |
# Take a load off, Fanny | 0:51:34 | 0:51:36 | |
# And you put the load right on me | 0:51:38 | 0:51:41 | |
# And you put the load right on me... # | 0:51:41 | 0:51:44 | |
Woodstock was really, really special. | 0:51:48 | 0:51:51 | |
You could feel the love. I mean... | 0:51:51 | 0:51:54 | |
I don't mean to be cliched but, I mean, I can't think of anything... | 0:51:54 | 0:51:57 | |
That's what it was, was pure love. | 0:51:57 | 0:52:00 | |
Morning, people! | 0:52:00 | 0:52:01 | |
I was playing cards with Janis and Jimi Hendrix and Pete Townshend, | 0:52:06 | 0:52:11 | |
and whoever kept losing, and Janis would say, "OK, you go next." | 0:52:11 | 0:52:15 | |
She was calling the shots, you know. | 0:52:15 | 0:52:18 | |
And we didn't get on till, like, seven in the morning, you know. | 0:52:18 | 0:52:21 | |
By that time, God, we'd been drunk and sobered up so many times. | 0:52:21 | 0:52:25 | |
# Won't you try? | 0:52:26 | 0:52:30 | |
# Won't you try? | 0:52:30 | 0:52:33 | |
# Come on and try | 0:52:33 | 0:52:36 | |
# Won't you try? | 0:52:36 | 0:52:40 | |
# Find a way to need someone | 0:52:41 | 0:52:44 | |
# Find a way to see... # | 0:52:44 | 0:52:47 | |
What nobody talked about out loud a lot | 0:52:47 | 0:52:49 | |
was the possibility of civil disorder. | 0:52:49 | 0:52:52 | |
Otherwise known as rioting! | 0:52:52 | 0:52:54 | |
We just kept our fingers crossed | 0:52:55 | 0:52:57 | |
and, sure enough, the audience, | 0:52:57 | 0:53:00 | |
recognising that it was up to them to recreate civilisation... | 0:53:00 | 0:53:03 | |
..reached inside and, out of some sense of... | 0:53:06 | 0:53:11 | |
of integrity or decency or golden rule or community, really, | 0:53:11 | 0:53:17 | |
and love, recreated society themselves. | 0:53:17 | 0:53:21 | |
What you have here is this culture and this generation | 0:53:21 | 0:53:23 | |
away from the old culture and the older generation, | 0:53:23 | 0:53:27 | |
and you see how they've bunched in on their own, | 0:53:27 | 0:53:29 | |
without cops, without guns, without clubs, without hassles. | 0:53:29 | 0:53:33 | |
Everybody pulls together and everybody helps each other. | 0:53:33 | 0:53:35 | |
And it works. It's been working since we got here. | 0:53:35 | 0:53:38 | |
And it's going to continue working. | 0:53:38 | 0:53:39 | |
No matter what happens when they go back to the city, | 0:53:39 | 0:53:41 | |
this thing is happening and it proves that it can happen. | 0:53:41 | 0:53:44 | |
MUSIC: "Star Spangled Banner" by Jimi Hendrix | 0:53:44 | 0:53:47 | |
On the fourth morning, Jimi Hendrix closed the festival | 0:53:52 | 0:53:55 | |
with his haunting version of the national anthem. | 0:53:55 | 0:53:57 | |
Yet, instead of providing a platform | 0:54:06 | 0:54:08 | |
for re-energising the social movement | 0:54:08 | 0:54:10 | |
and inspiring a new wave of revolutionary music, | 0:54:10 | 0:54:14 | |
the legacy of Woodstock was, instead, | 0:54:14 | 0:54:16 | |
hijacked by record moguls and money men who were waiting at the gates. | 0:54:16 | 0:54:21 | |
It was always about, you know, | 0:54:21 | 0:54:23 | |
fuck the establishment and we're not buying it, and... | 0:54:23 | 0:54:26 | |
and that started to change, you know. | 0:54:26 | 0:54:28 | |
When the music business, after Woodstock, | 0:54:28 | 0:54:31 | |
became the music industry, when great labels like Atlantic | 0:54:31 | 0:54:37 | |
got taken over by these big corporations | 0:54:37 | 0:54:39 | |
who had year-end reports and stockholders | 0:54:39 | 0:54:42 | |
and things had to happen according to a schedule, all of it changed | 0:54:42 | 0:54:46 | |
and, suddenly, | 0:54:46 | 0:54:48 | |
bands who would never have thought about taking a sponsor on, | 0:54:48 | 0:54:51 | |
for example, and "selling out" in that way | 0:54:51 | 0:54:56 | |
were saying, "That's what the business is." | 0:54:56 | 0:54:59 | |
And so, as time went on, it became more and more of the reality of... | 0:54:59 | 0:55:04 | |
..the world of rock 'n' roll. | 0:55:05 | 0:55:07 | |
Suddenly you have lawyers, you have accountants and investment | 0:55:07 | 0:55:10 | |
and managers and road guys and roadies and this and that, | 0:55:10 | 0:55:13 | |
and everybody's telling you what to do | 0:55:13 | 0:55:15 | |
and everybody's got their own big head | 0:55:15 | 0:55:16 | |
and their egos and their drugs, and it's very boring, you know. | 0:55:16 | 0:55:20 | |
I mean, every time the Airplane would try to get together, | 0:55:20 | 0:55:22 | |
after we were popular, you know, if we had a rehearsal, | 0:55:22 | 0:55:25 | |
lawyers would come, the accountants would... | 0:55:25 | 0:55:27 | |
It's the only time they could get us all together. | 0:55:27 | 0:55:29 | |
It was like, "Hey, we're trying to rehearse here," you know, | 0:55:29 | 0:55:32 | |
"We're trying to put something new together." | 0:55:32 | 0:55:35 | |
It took an element of its independence away | 0:55:35 | 0:55:37 | |
and it took an element of its... | 0:55:37 | 0:55:40 | |
um... | 0:55:40 | 0:55:42 | |
value... | 0:55:42 | 0:55:43 | |
..to young people away. | 0:55:44 | 0:55:46 | |
Just a few months after Woodstock, | 0:55:47 | 0:55:49 | |
the anything goes, peace-loving ethos of the flower power generation | 0:55:49 | 0:55:53 | |
was delivered a fatal blow | 0:55:53 | 0:55:55 | |
when a black music fan was killed by a member of the Hells Angels | 0:55:55 | 0:55:59 | |
who were policing a Rolling Stones festival at Altamont, California. | 0:55:59 | 0:56:03 | |
Although much had changed socially and politically | 0:56:03 | 0:56:06 | |
in a short space of time, | 0:56:06 | 0:56:08 | |
America ended this turbulent decade in its history as it began, | 0:56:08 | 0:56:12 | |
the world's undisputed superpower, even delivering on JFK's promise | 0:56:12 | 0:56:16 | |
to land a man on the moon by the end of the '60s. | 0:56:16 | 0:56:19 | |
But with a conservative presence in the White House, | 0:56:19 | 0:56:22 | |
the war still raging in Vietnam | 0:56:22 | 0:56:24 | |
and civil rights battles still being fought, | 0:56:24 | 0:56:27 | |
had the Woodstock generation | 0:56:27 | 0:56:29 | |
and the rockers who provided the soundtrack to their ideals blown it? | 0:56:29 | 0:56:32 | |
This generation that we're talking about... | 0:56:32 | 0:56:34 | |
..did change the world. Let me emphasise that. | 0:56:35 | 0:56:39 | |
The seeds of civil rights, feminism, peace movement, anti-war, | 0:56:39 | 0:56:45 | |
were planted in the '60s. | 0:56:45 | 0:56:48 | |
Now, these are deep, serious issues that need a lot of water, | 0:56:48 | 0:56:54 | |
maybe 50 or 100 years of water, I don't know, | 0:56:54 | 0:56:57 | |
but they were planted and the fruition is slowly coming. | 0:56:57 | 0:57:01 | |
That revolutionary time, I hope it comes... | 0:57:03 | 0:57:06 | |
I hope someone can make a dent like that in the future, | 0:57:06 | 0:57:10 | |
but it hasn't happened yet. | 0:57:10 | 0:57:12 | |
I think the spirit goes on. It doesn't change, you know. | 0:57:15 | 0:57:18 | |
The soul of people doesn't change, you know. | 0:57:18 | 0:57:22 | |
We all want love, we all want peace. | 0:57:22 | 0:57:24 | |
We all want to make something happen in this world, | 0:57:24 | 0:57:27 | |
and I have a feeling that we're going to. | 0:57:27 | 0:57:29 | |
By the end of 1971, three of America's biggest rock stars - | 0:57:31 | 0:57:35 | |
Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix - | 0:57:35 | 0:57:38 | |
would be dead in their 20s, all unable to control their drug habits. | 0:57:38 | 0:57:43 | |
Their deaths marked the end of an era | 0:57:43 | 0:57:45 | |
when rock music genuinely challenged the establishment | 0:57:45 | 0:57:48 | |
with its celebration of alternative lifestyles | 0:57:48 | 0:57:51 | |
that embodied the generation's spirit of revolution. | 0:57:51 | 0:57:54 | |
In the next part, we tell the story of the acts | 0:57:59 | 0:58:02 | |
who followed in the wake of America's rock pioneers... | 0:58:02 | 0:58:05 | |
I saw the '70s as starting down the road of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. | 0:58:05 | 0:58:10 | |
We stopped the war, now we're going to party. | 0:58:10 | 0:58:13 | |
# School's out for summer... # | 0:58:13 | 0:58:17 | |
..a decade when cocaine replaced LSD... | 0:58:17 | 0:58:20 | |
The emotional feel of the love, love, love | 0:58:20 | 0:58:23 | |
became much more up in your head because of the... | 0:58:23 | 0:58:26 | |
that particular drug. | 0:58:26 | 0:58:28 | |
..when the protest was replaced by indifference | 0:58:28 | 0:58:31 | |
and when rock music became the safe music of middle America. | 0:58:31 | 0:58:34 | |
I mean, you want rock 'n' roll to be dangerous, we were dangerous. | 0:58:34 | 0:58:38 | |
I said, "When you're in this band, three things are for sure. | 0:58:38 | 0:58:40 | |
"You're going to see the world, you're going to get paid, | 0:58:40 | 0:58:43 | |
"you're going to get stitches." | 0:58:43 | 0:58:44 | |
# For the music is your special friend | 0:58:44 | 0:58:49 | |
# Dance on fire as it intends | 0:58:50 | 0:58:55 | |
# Music is your only friend | 0:58:55 | 0:58:59 | |
# Until the end... # | 0:59:00 | 0:59:04 |