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Dawn
of the Dead
& the rise of the San Francisco underground
In the
mid-1960s a new twist on contemporary rock music emerged out of San Francisco.
Known as 'psychedelia', it was pioneered by a close-knit community of
local bands who merged traditional American forms such as folk, country,
blues and rock & roll with new sounds often developed under the influence
of psychedelic drugs. Bound up with the social and cultural changes for
which San Francisco was also the focal point, it was a combination that
made for a radical re-imaging of youth culture.
This
film traces the movements, events and sounds of those heady days, and
traces the story of the definitive band of the psychedelic age, The Grateful
Dead. Giving time too for the involvement of Frisco's other lead players
such as Big Brother & The Holding Company, Jefferson Airplane, The Charlatans
and Quicksilver Messenger Service, the program explores what it was that,
for a while, turned San Francisco into a 1960s Shangri-La. Featuring brand
new interviews with Grateful Dread manager Rock Scully; the Dead's experimental
professor, Tom 'T.C.' Constanten; Big Brother's Peter Albin; Mike Willlhelm
from The Charlatans; publicist and official Dead biographer, Dennis McNally;
Counter-Culture and Dead author and journalist (and host of 'The Grateful
Dead Hour'), David Gans; Merry Prankster and best friend of the late Ken
Kesey, Ken Babbs, plus comment, criticism and review from Rolling Stone's
Anthony De Curtis, Village Voice's Robert Christgau and Mojo's Ritchie
Unterberger.
Also
including the rarest archive in existence, live and studio footage of
Grateful Dead and the other Frisco bands, vintage interviews, location
shoots, news reports plus the music that soundtracked the entire movement,
which all together make for the most detailed overview yet of the social
upheaval on America's West Coast which ultimately changed the world forever.
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