A buzz was going
around town. Every day I hawked my bundle of “underground” papers (The Berkeley
Barb, The Berkeley Tribe, The Good Times, The Oracle) for a quarter each. A
Sexual Freedom League pamphlet also sold great at a buck each because of the
graphic erotic illustration on its cover; similar to the one’s later made
popular in Alex Comfort’s The Joy of Sex. I stood nightly at the corner where
Broadway, Grant and Columbus crossed each other with a mad display of “Topless”
bars like Big Al’s. My Mecca, the City Lights
bookstore, at the top and other end of China Town
from the St Charles Hotel was down a half block across the alley from the
Vesuvius bar. The buzz that was going around town was that the Rolling Stones
were going to give a free concert like they did in Hyde
Park when Brian Jones died. It was being touted as “Woodstock
West”. All the West Coast, and some East Coast, bands would be playing;
Jefferson Airplane, Santana, Crosby, Stills and Nash … and so on.
Rumors were thick.
Some thought it would be out at Sears
Point. Others had hoped
it would be in Golden Gate
Park. The freeways were
clogged with traffic headed one-way towards where everyone thought it was going
to be held at every change of venue. Finally, last minute, the spot was fixed
at Altamont Speedway.
And so it happened
that, as I was vending my “underground” papers at Broadway and Grant, I agreed
with an acquaintance, Randy … a six foot-five, long-scraggly-haired, bearded
fellow vender with a cleft palette and breath so foul that it could stop a
freight train… to head out to Altamont Speedway by way of the thumb. It was
madness at every freeway entrance. Every hippie in San Francisco was cued-up and decked-out with
thumbs out in the freak styles of the late Haight Ashbury. By late 1969 the
Haight had become a sewer of runaways, junkies, and their constant consorts,
those who preyed on them. The rest took up on the street fashion of the day. It
was hippie-chic but chic took having a job and working for a living to pull it
off. The lifestyle was the other part of chic that just plain didn’t make
sense. I’d actually witnessed one hipster park his Corvette down on Union Street to
panhandle on Broadway to be part of “the scene”. I was sure of my own lies but
these lies helped to betray my only hope for a generation… the generation that
brought Woodstock
to the world’s attention. What was it about these kinds of lies that was to
insure Altamont was to crush that hope? …
… Randy’s lanky
form towered over me. I’m sure we resembled a hippy version of Mutt and Jeff as
we put out our thumbs at the entrance to the freeway at the bottom of Broadway.
There were several others at the entrance going the same way. The site of the
concert was settled the day before it was to start. Everyone was headed towards
the hills beyond Oakland to a site between
Livermore and Tracy: A free concert just like Woodstock,
only better because this was California and we
know California
is the birthplace of psychedelia.
We
jumped into the bed of a pick-up among a half a dozen others. Things went
smoothly enough until the truck passed Livermore
and traffic started to back up. Cars were at first parked along side of the
freeway (smart ones, who knew the area, took the old Altamont Pass Rd. from Livermore). We neared the speedway, cars were
abandoned on the freeway and all traffic came to a halt. Hiking the last two or
three miles Randy and I arrived at the top of the hill overlooking the mad
scene below as the sun was setting. The crimson sky was highlighted by fires
started in cardboard trash barrels burning. Those not being burned were used as
improvised conga drums.
The conga rhythms
pounded out anticipation that made way only for the calls of hawkers; “Acid! I
have acid! Orange Sunshine! Barrel Acid! Two bucks a hit!” Dealers shouted
through the din as we passed, calling out and competing with calls for, “Pot….
Maarrriiiijuana! … I got some Mary Jane for ya… a nickel a lid!”
Randy saw me
craning my neck to the calls and pointed out, “Don’t buy anything; it’ll all be
free by tomorrow.”
Down in the bowl
of a valley was centered the stage between twin sentinels of amp towers. A
chain link fence separated the new arrivals from the lucky ones (or unlucky
ones as morning would tell) who had been there all day helping to set up the
equipment and stage. There was also handful of Hells Angels down there too: it
was rumored that they were serving as security for the event. Smoke from camp
fires dotting the area set up an eerie blue haze contrasting the crimson sky.
It was a hellish vision equal to any painting by Hieronymus Bosch, not unlike
siege-fires burning… foreboding events to come the next day. No one tried to
cross the chain-link fence into that arena as the night drew on until first
morning light. “Pleased to meet you… Hope you guessed my name!”
Rumors made it
around saying the Grateful Dead dropped out of the performance… that the
Rolling Stones were backing out too. Others said that The Airplane and Santana
were already there and that the rumors were just that… rumors making room for
more. I didn’t care… at last I was where it was happening. I’d joined the Navy
and left San Francisco before the
acid-tripping-hippy deal got going and when I returned after four years San Francisco had turned
into just one more dirty city: Alioto’s city where you had to watch where you
stepped for the dog shit on the sidewalks. The free love of the Haight Ashbury
was gone; if it’d ever been there in the first place. I was beginning to think,
and would soon find out, that all of this talk of peace, love and understanding
was just that…. talk.
First thing in the
morning an announcement (some say it was Sam Cutler, manager of the Stones)
came from the stage area. The folks who were on the ground in front of the
stage in their sleeping bags were kindly asked to wake up and make room for the
mob waiting to get in. Most had been up all night setting up the amps and the
equipment usually trusted to roadies. I watched in horror from outside the
chain-link fence on the hill above as Hells Angels went from bag to bag with
cue sticks beating the crap out of any and all late risers. They came out of
their bags with hands out-stretched, fending off the relentless thumps of the
cues on their helpless bodies. The announcer’s pleas for peace met deaf ears
from the Angels and the beatings only subsided when the last malingerer had
escaped. As the chain-link fence gates were opened I was swept along by the
rush of the crown down into the bowl of the arena next to the race track. Randy
and I made it past the stage area where Hells Angels warned people away and we
settled on a spot halfway down between the speaker tower on the right and the
stage. Disregarding the earlier melee as a fluke, we spread out our sleeping
bags like picnic blankets eagerly awaiting the early beginnings of the concert.
I dropped two or three hits of acid.
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