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Wistful over lost dreams at Summer of Love Festival
Adam Tanner
SAN FRANCISCO—Some of the biggest musical stars of the 1960s
counterculture gathered in San Francisco on Sunday for a concert to
celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Summer of Love, yet backstage many
voiced disappointment about the era’s unfulfilled ideals.
The Summer of Love of 1967 made San Francisco a magnet for youth who
wanted to experiment with sex, drugs, rock and roll and an alternative
hippie lifestyle.
“We thought, this is it, we’re going to change the world, actually we’re
going to become the Christian world of love,” Ray Manzarek, 68,
keyboardist for The Doors, told Reuters. “Of course, it didn’t happen.
Here we are 40 years later and we are still at war.”
“It was a great disappointment,” said Manzarek, who attended the famed
San Francisco January 1967 “Human Be-In,” credited with drawing young
people to the city, with Doors singer Jim Morrison and other bandmates.
The ‘60s lived again as Manzarek, Jefferson Starship and other legends
performed, thousands of fans donned tie-die shirts and bell bottom pants
and the smell of marijuana wafted through the air. Two women wandered
through the crowd in Golden Gate Park offering free hugs.
In keeping with the spirit of those times, the concert was free.
‘I FEEL BETRAYED’
In the 1960s, many in the counterculture felt they could change the
world by removing societal constraints and ending the Vietnam War.
Fito De La Parra, drummer for the band Canned Heat, said his generation
never lived up to its ideals.
“On the whole, I feel betrayed,” he said backstage after playing before
what organizers estimated was 40,000 fans. “I feel that a lot of the
ideals that we held valuable in the 1960s were betrayed by their own
people, by their own hippies. Many of them betrayed themselves because
they went for the buck, and they became rich yuppies and Republicans.”
Barry Melton, best known by his nickname “The Fish” and his partnership
with Country Joe McDonald, said the 1960s social movements deserve
credit for advancing issues such as women’s and gay rights and
environmental consciousness, but the youth of the day went overboard
with drugs.
“There are things I cringe about,” said Melton, now a public defender
criminal lawyer. “For one thing we had an absolute benign attitude about
drugs that was pretty naive. We made some significant mistakes.” |