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@Calyxander can tell you. Stand by. He’s lurking around somewhere.
Blessings.
I think I got it now…
Remember those days when you would go with your buddies into someones house with black lights, posters, and extra headphones? And, somebody had enough pot to get red eyed, and you would all lay back against the wall with the headphones on, black lights and neon posters only, and listen to relly long jam songs? heh, heh… yeah, me too.
Remember going to Deep Purple concerts on acid in '72? heh, yeah, me, too.
and, this one…'73… the bands were tripping a lot of the time, too. lol
Hippies be rocking on the Smoke on the Water tune… careful, your me-maw and paw paw might be in there!
Everybody tripped at one of the Yes concerts.
@GMan
Those sure were the days (this is what all old codgers say about bygone days).
Late ‘60s to early ‘70s is when I started taking a keen interest in music.
This of course coincided with my growing fondness for herbal delights as well.
I would listen to Cream’s Disraeli Gears (1967) over and over again in blissful rapture.
We inhabited a reality far removed from the current state of being.
I am not sure why, but I fixed 'em for ya.
Yeah, I was copying the URL in the address bar. So, right click on the vid, and “copy video URL” Done. lol
Everybody had the Cream album. That was the early stuff. My first concert was a “battle of the bands” put on by the local AM radio station, ha. I saw Vanilla Fudge, Every Mothers Son, Strawberry Alarm Clock, The 4 Seasons, I’m forgetting a couple. I was so young that my sister took me.
My next and first real concert, my cousin took me to a John Kay and Stepennwolf show in Mobile. We were on around row 8 or so… what an expereince. I tried to see every show I could after that… Birmingham and Atlanta had all of the shows back then. $6 tickets. Man, nobody can imagine how cool it was back then and the music is still easy to listen too… That was some really innovative times in music. So happy I was there.
…oh, and Lovin’ Spoonful, lol…