Haight-Ashbury in the Sixties, Part 3: Human Be-In Summer of Love

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2015
  • Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s Part 3: The Human Be-In and the Summer of Love 1967. Scenes from the "Haight-Ashbury in the Sixties" CD-ROM released in 1996, featuring music, interviews, clips, light shows, poster art, and narration by Allen Cohen, produced by Tony Bove. (www.rockument.com/Haight/)
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Комментарии • 74

  • @wmanadeau7860
    @wmanadeau7860 11 месяцев назад +10

    Peter Coyote nailed it, don't let anyone fool you, we changed the world, for the better. Imagine what it could be like here now if this whole movement hadn't happened...

  • @sumchi3690
    @sumchi3690 3 года назад +7

    Thanks for this story of hope ....

  • @joeshoe6184
    @joeshoe6184 2 месяца назад

    This is quality product.

  • @mickymantle3233
    @mickymantle3233 4 года назад +8

    Yeah I get flash backs ! but trouble is... they're so Damn hard to hang onto !

  • @Jazzgriot
    @Jazzgriot 3 года назад +4

    That was great. The struggle to evolve collectively, and as individuals continues to grow, it's just that Evolution works very slowly, and in fits and starts. :-)

  • @bernardboulay9996
    @bernardboulay9996 4 месяца назад

    fascinating era

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 3 года назад +4

    For my friends in North Beach (1964 -- 1967). Thank you.

  • @MyBenzoHell
    @MyBenzoHell 2 года назад

    Thanks for the upload !

  • @digitalSixer
    @digitalSixer 3 года назад +3

    Wow, I just had a sensorial flashback with the iconic love fragrance of patchouli after tripping on this vid.
    I remember the early 70's with the long hair that was considered so rebellious and yet felt so freeing and self actualizing, the women in granny dresses and army boots and unshaven armpits and I fondly remember being offered and shared free joints and a sense of universal acceptance in the ritual of that shared experience of highness. Free love was NEW and liberating and refreshing until AIDS in the 80's.
    I was a child of the 60's but by the end of the 70's, nobody freely shared with just anyone any more and women's dress was trending glam like the Pointer Sisters and the men like Elvis knockoffs, then everyone my age got jobs and got sucked into the slavery of the soulless establishment. TAXATION IS THEFT AND SLAVERY!!!
    **Also I was raised in an extremely restrictive fundamentalist religious family and remember in the 60's and early 70's that everyone we knew in church thought that we were truly living in the biblical "end times" and approaching the "Rapture" because of the anarchist and immoral breakdown of society all around us and everyone in church lived in abject fear and terror of being "Left Behind" by the slightest sin. LOL
    Now I know God was giving time and mercifully shifting society towards being more spiritual and a Great Awakening of profound God consciousness.

    • @dorothydromgoole8040
      @dorothydromgoole8040 2 года назад

      Ya, I grow up in the late '60s and early '70s. I was in highschool in the mid to late '70s and yes I do remember how things changed. I like to think that God is everywhere and in everything. I mean isn't God all around?

  • @cathygiuliana9089
    @cathygiuliana9089 10 месяцев назад

    Love your content Sweetie! Just subscribed ! I’m 71 yrs old and this is my story too!!❤️✌️☮️🕊️😌

  • @scorpiorising3741
    @scorpiorising3741 3 года назад +3

    Out on the road today; I saw a Deadhead sticker on a cadillac!
    The hippies become yuppies. With freedom comes reponsibility and they just didn't want the responsibiliy. Just free stuff.

    • @TonyBove1
      @TonyBove1  3 года назад +2

      The Diggers played with "free" and we all learned from the experience.

    • @jensandersen7011
      @jensandersen7011 2 года назад

      @@TonyBove1 ruclips.net/video/nlO47o8d9QU/видео.html

    • @if6was929
      @if6was929 Год назад

      The counterculture was a very small part of the Baby Boom generation, most Boomers were as straight as their parents! There was no connection between yuppies and freaks so no, the hippies didn't become yuppies.

  • @laserlithuanian
    @laserlithuanian 3 года назад

    fascinating !!

  • @headwall07
    @headwall07 7 лет назад +13

    What is edwardschlosser1 smoking, must be bad. I grew up during that period too. I majored in philosophy and gout out in 4 years, went to grad school. I marched for civil rights and to end the war in Vietnam. The music and the movement became one and spawned the misbegotten appropriation of the scene, stadium rock. Another example of how the zeal and greed for profit killed a spark of creativity through commercialization.

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Год назад

    Grew up down the peninsula from SF. I was ten in 1967 however my brother was 18. He knew SF. Including Haight Ashbury. His recollection is the era died when amphetamine use became prevalent. The original hippies moved out. Up HWY 101. To grow MJ.

  • @classygary
    @classygary 3 года назад

    I can still smell The Sixties .

  • @J0hnC0ltrane
    @J0hnC0ltrane 5 месяцев назад

    The ending jam must be the Jefferson Airplane. Ty

  • @TheHypnotstCollector
    @TheHypnotstCollector Год назад +1

    I was there. And for the first Sadie Hawkins Day celebration, Over a 100 seniors and underlings skipped school for it. Los Altos...A bunch of us saw Allen Ginsburg and smoked a J with him. Same bunch went to Lime Kiln Creek in April 68/Easter. 3 teachers too! A lot of Acid. We ran The Poppycock in 1969, corner of High and University. did the light shows too. And lived at Medway Forest 1969-1973, an Electric Kool Aid Acid test house near Skylonda/skyline...Rubin etc were not successfull in exorcizing the Pentagram. The WTC/911 Mega Ritual is proof of that

  • @michaelrinaldi558
    @michaelrinaldi558 Год назад

    What’s the song in the opening tried lyric searches but might be to old to find :(

  • @hasf525
    @hasf525 7 лет назад +2

    Would LOVE to show this Part 3 non-stop at the corner of Haight and Ashbury for FREE to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love. It would make sense to do so from in front of the Psychedelic History Museum (since the museum is open only in conjunction with the Haight Ashbury Flower Power Walking Tour). I just need some technical assistance to make it happen. Tony, Ann, you on board? Certain Allan would be/is! XO

    • @TonyBove1
      @TonyBove1  7 лет назад +2

      Hi Pam, it should be easy to do, and the video is already free on RUclips. All we would need is a computer or tablet showing it full-screen. Maybe the museum has a projector for a computer screen? Then it would be even larger.

    • @1142VS
      @1142VS 5 лет назад

      @@TonyBove1 thanks ever s much for posting all three parts on RUclips, it was very pleasing and soothing to see a documentary of that time that didn't glamorize nor demonize that period and place. I've watched the videos several times now and each time it never fails to touch something deep inside of me. At the website it noted the CD is out of print but do you know of any way, any way possible, that I or others might be able to grab a copy of the CD?
      Also Pam I hope you were able to show this during the summer of 2017!

    • @kayly6777
      @kayly6777 5 лет назад

      Travis Thrower .

  • @impalaman9707
    @impalaman9707 Год назад

    At 8:30---Blue Cheer---MY BOYS!😛

  • @bobquack1
    @bobquack1 4 года назад +2

    Is that Wavy Gravy at 11:34?

    • @TonyBove1
      @TonyBove1  4 года назад +4

      Yes it is. Hugh Romney was his name before he called himself Wavy Gravy.

    • @Jazzgriot
      @Jazzgriot 3 года назад +1

      @@TonyBove1 I recognised him in the clown face. I read his autobiography, he gives a good account of what the scene was like, an amazing book.

  • @sjain8111
    @sjain8111 10 месяцев назад

    ☮️🌸🪬🌻☸️🌺

  • @zonalibrer3357
    @zonalibrer3357 3 года назад

    13:40 What kind of Sect?

  • @mackdeen7021
    @mackdeen7021 5 лет назад +5

    That background music.drowns out the interesting dialogue. And it is not from the time period, it’s post 80s generic jam Band samples and annoying.

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 4 года назад +3

      Probably because the globalist corporations who bought out all of the copyrights over the years, charge too much for music license rights, which is the same thing as censorship. After all, the 60s music was very powerful and its messages were anti-establishment. Just saying.

    • @bobquack1
      @bobquack1 4 года назад +1

      costs too much to license the original 60s music

    • @neilphelan145
      @neilphelan145 3 года назад +1

      My father was a clinical and industrial psychologist starting in 1946 after WWII. He knew Leary and didnt think much of him or his theories. My dad was very open minded so his opinions wernt clouded by the mainstream political, religious, or right wing teaching or urgings. He taught me to step back and look at things from both sides before I make conclusions. ✌

  • @rogeeeferrari
    @rogeeeferrari 4 года назад +6

    The Hippie's were right about everything...

    • @tomlehr861
      @tomlehr861 3 года назад +1

      Or left😎

    • @JuanCarrionHappiness
      @JuanCarrionHappiness 3 года назад +3

      It's No wonder why the babyboomers during the mid & late 60's wanted to revolutionacise the way americans way of life have always been. Freedom, Family, Jobs, Peace, Community of good neigbohrs, Free markets, Prosperity. Yet the Dems of today's wanna turn it into Big government Control. Socialism Utopia, No respect to the elderly, to teachers, to authorities. Too much Rebellion to one another. That's why I believe pres Trump must be re-elected again for president till 2024.

    • @rev.jimjonesandthekool-aid4488
      @rev.jimjonesandthekool-aid4488 3 года назад +3

      @@JuanCarrionHappiness you believe in a historical fantasy.

    •  3 года назад

      No. look what they have done to our culture.

  • @RealRosieRuiz
    @RealRosieRuiz 4 года назад +2

    OK boomer.

  • @mistamycall
    @mistamycall 2 месяца назад

    This didn`t end well with names like Janis Joplin, Brian Jones, or Jimi Hendrix. It was an utopia of middle class white kids who grew up well off and got bored with their parent's households. What a joke ... smh

    • @joeshoe6184
      @joeshoe6184 2 месяца назад

      Gross oversimplification^