The
1/8/66 Acid Test at the Fillmore has long been notorious as the
earliest circulating live tape of the Dead, and an example of the
chaos of the Acid Tests, full of malfunctions, raving Pranksters, and
confused cops. There is even a Deadcast devoted to it:
Recent
investigations, though, have revealed that the tape is not what it
seems, and the Dead's music may not be from the Fillmore at all.
The
audio comes from the Acid Test video put out by Key-Z Productions; no
independent tape of the Fillmore show has appeared. The Acid Test
video has been released in a few different iterations as it's been
re-edited over the years. Michael Lestatkatt writes: "There are
three different audio edits for the official Acid Test DVD that is
sold by Key-Z.com. I purchased my first copy in 1990, the 2nd in 1996
when it was remade...and now the DVD edition. Each one has a
different edit, and each has little bits and pieces of audio not on
the other versions."
Lestatkatt
put together a compilation of all of the audio material from the
different versions of the video:
Nick
Meriwether wrote:
"Bits
and pieces of this tape have circulated since the 1990 release of the
video The Acid Test, by Ken Kesey's Key-Z Productions. Assembled by
Zane Kesey, the video is a hybrid of several sources, and the result
is a classic piece of Prankster psychedelia - in part because of the
difficulty in differentiating which elements came from where... The
boxes housing the reels were cryptically labeled 'Fillmore Acid Test'
- the source of all the audio - and 'L.A. Acid Test.' Most if not all
of the Fillmore Acid Test was recorded, apparently on four 12-inch
reels. Of the video footage marked 'L.A.', nothing more was written
on those reels or boxes, and nothing else in the archives has shed
any light thus far... Both Bear and Dick Latvala encountered the same
problem with Prankster tapes, as Latvala recalled in a recent
interview: 'The labeling was terrible. They taped a lot of stuff and
labeled it very poorly.' In fact, even what we have is a lot, as Zane
noted: 'For the Pranksters, that much of a label was doing well -
generally you'd be lucky if they wrote anything at all on it...'
Since many tapes...have disappeared over the years from the Prankster
archives, it may well be that we will get no more from the Keseys."
(Deadhead's Taping Compendium p.91)
Per
the 1998 Taping Compendium, the footage came from the Muir Beach Acid
Test on 12/18/65; but this labeling was incorrect. For one thing, the
Muir Beach Acid Test was on 12/11; the next Acid Test on 12/18 was at
the Big Beat in Palo Alto. Also, looking more closely, there are two
different Dead performances shown in the video - color footage of
"King Bee," and a black & white performance, along with
various bits of audience shots in color from unknown locations, and
scenes of the Pranksters setting up and leaving a venue.
A
partial earlier edit of the color footage was included on the "Haight
Street Chronicles vol. 2" bootleg DVD (labeled "December
11, 1965, Muir Beach Lodge," and apparently copied from VHS).
Though grainy, this is mainly notable for being in somewhat brighter
quality than the Youtube video, so a few more details are apparent
(especially in the Hells Angels scene).
The
2011 film Magic Trip, drawn from Kesey's reels of his 1964 bus trip,
includes a minute of the Acid Test footage that shows how pristine
the original reels look. The Youtube copies are quite dark in comparison. One trailer:
The
silent b&w footage later became available on its own as the "Pico
Acid Test" (thought to be from the Carthay Studios on Pico Blvd,
3/19/66). A partial poor-quality copy is here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9AhIuVl2gD0
(has a later Viola Lee dubbed on)
A
longer, better-quality 25-minute copy was also added as a bonus on an
illicit DVD of Kesey footage from the 1978 Egypt shows (etree ID
172503). This copy has a timestamp on it but the shots are out of
order and jump back and forth, so the chronology is somewhat
scrambled.
Other
copies are available as well. The tape has circulated as both 3/12
and 3/19, causing debate over what the actual date was. My theory was
that it came from 3/12, a regular Dead show at the Danish Center, due
to the absence of any Prankster chatter or audible Acid Test
goings-on. But as we'll see, the tape's origin was more
complicated...
ACID
TEST TIMELINE
One
thing making it harder to trace which Acid Tests were filmed is that
there are almost no photographs from any of the Acid Tests. It's
often assumed that the Pranksters were regularly taping & filming
events, but if this was the case, most of their reels have been lost
or never made public. Indeed, there are no circulating tapes, films,
or photos from most of the Acid Tests - only a few. We don't know
what most of them looked like, or even what many of the venue
interiors looked like.
Here
is a brief list of the Acid Tests where the Dead played:
12/4/65
Big Nig's House, 43 S. 5th St, San Jose
(Oddly, a handbill has surfaced giving the Acid Test address as 38 S. 5th St,
across the street, a true prankster mystery.)
(Photo
at the new address - the house itself was moved to a new location in
2003 to build a new city hall on the block.)
12/11/65
Muir Beach Lodge, 19 Seascape Dr, Muir Beach
(Photo circa 1967. The Muir Beach Tavern was torn down in 1970.)
12/18/65
Big Beat Club, 998 San Antonio Rd, Palo Alto
(Photo
taken 2009 - the building was torn down in 2011.)
1/1/66?
Beaver Hall, 1510 SE 9th St, Portland, OR (possibly 12/25/65)
(The 1922 Red Men Hall building - the location now has a Clever Cycles &
a Helium comedy club.)
1/8/66
Fillmore Auditorium, 1805 Geary St, San Francisco
(Photo from 2010. Still a music venue.)
1/22-23/66
Longshoreman's Hall, 400 N. Point St, San Francisco
The
"Trips Festival" - the Pranksters had an Acid Test as part
of this event.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvoWhRdpIOQ
(clip from Ben van Meter's short film)
(2020 photo. More photos of the Trips Festival.)
The
Dead and Pranksters then moved down to Los Angeles:
2/6/66
Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, 9550 Haskell Ave, North Hills
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkaxDv_SZlg
(partial tape may or may not be from this date)
2/12/66
Youth Opportunities Center, 9027 S. Figueroa St, Los Angeles
https://archive.org/details/gd1966-XX-XX.sbd.GEMS.81254.flac16
(partial tape: tracks 6-9)
(The
building was later renovated and became the Prince Hall Grand Lodge &
Memorial Auditorium in 1986. Apparently it looked even more grim in
the '60s.)
2/25/66
Empire Studios, 7417 Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles (moved from the
Cinema Theatre)
(I
don't know if the building still exists.)
3/19/66
Carthay Studios, 5907 W Pico Blvd, Los Angeles (moved from the
UCLA Ballroom)
(Recent photo. The
building was demolished in 2019.)
Jerrybase
adds an extra Acid Test:
3/4/66
Unicorn Theater, 7456 La Jolla Blvd, La Jolla
This
is a recently added date - a poster exists, but nothing else is known
of the event. I am skeptical it took place with the Dead, since it
meant driving down to San Diego and is totally unreported in accounts
of the Acid Tests or the Unicorn Theater. It's also an unlikely
location: the Unicorn was a tiny theater in the back of a bookstore.
"A
unique art house and La Jolla’s first real “indie” movie
theater opened in 1964...in the back of a small bookshop called
Mithras Bookstore. Seating only about 200, the small space was dubbed
the Unicorn Theatre and quickly became known for showing avant-garde
and experimental films from all over the world... Although small and
tucked into a somewhat out-of-the-way location (not to mention in the
basement), The Unicorn developed a cult following early on,
especially among younger residents."
However,
there was a Kesey connection: per histories of the theater, "Ken
Kesey and the Merry Pranksters made a stop here as part of their
cross-country trip in the bus named Further," and the theater
showed some of Kesey's films from the bus. It's likely the Pranksters
visited in March '66 to show their movies, though perhaps not with
the Dead. Tom Wolfe briefly says (at the end of chapter 20 of The
Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test) that some Pranksters went with Ken Babbs
to La Jolla, perhaps holding "a Test of their own" there,
but doesn't give any details.
The
Dead also played a couple of other shows during their stay in Los
Angeles. Owsley recalled, "The band played several Acid Tests as
well as at least two non-Prankster shows, one at the Hollywood
Trouper's Hall and the other one at a small venue called Danish Hall
upstairs over a block of stores in L.A."
3/3/66
AIAA Hall, 7660 Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles
(I
couldn't find a photo of the building, which has since been
demolished.)
3/12/66
Danish Center, 607 S. Western Ave, Los Angeles
(Recent photo. The building now holds the Westmor Dance Studio & Ballroom.)(The Dead played in the auditorium in back. The buildings have been demolished and a new apartment complex was built
on the site in 2007.)
After
that, having flopped in L.A., the Dead returned to San Francisco for
the second Trips Festival at the Longshoreman's Hall on April 22-24 -
but this event was not an Acid Test per se.
(For
older background and memories of the Acid Tests, see:
For
another list of the timeline, see:
TAPE
MYSTERIES
The
Dead songs heard in the Acid Test video are King Bee, Hog For You
Baby, Caution, Death Don't Have No Mercy, and a partial Tastebud
(over the end credits of the video). Given that the songs are
surrounded by narration announcing the Fillmore location, as well as
stage chatter and a chaotic shutdown that are clearly from the event,
it has generally been assumed that the music is from the Fillmore
Acid Test on Jan 8. (Although Deadlists had a note of caution: "It
could be from a different date and several shows.")
Ken
Babbs loudly & clearly announces on tape that this is the
Fillmore Acid Test and acts as a kind of stagemaster throughout.
Although the video itself is clearly from multiple places, you might
accept that the Dead's songs in the audio were played at the
Fillmore. However, Zane Kesey writes: "Everything was mixed and
mislabeled... The narration says Fillmore...but the actual sound and
footage is from LA."
Video
detective Archduke, on Lossless Legs, took a close look at the Acid
Test video and discovered that at least two songs are not from the
Fillmore.
1)
The audio of King Bee matches the video - the first few minutes of
the song are synced exactly enough to make clear that it's the same
performance. However, the video was evidently not shot at the
Fillmore:
-
The camera is level with the band and close to them, so it appears
they are playing on floor level, not on a stage.
-
There is not only no light show, but no screen behind the band;
instead there are wood boards propped up against a wall or curtain.
-
The preliminary footage (showing the Pranksters arriving and setting
up in a venue) is from a different location, not the Fillmore.
2)
Death Don't Have No Mercy is the same performance as the "3/19/66"
tape. On that tape, the mix is different and the start is missing so
it's a 6-minute fragment, but the song in the video was drawn from
this show.
This
show was evidently recorded by both the Pranksters & Owsley -
Death Don't Have No Mercy is mixed differently in each source. The
circulating tape of "3/19" is in Owsley's signature mixing
style of the time, with instruments & vocals in different
channels. It has the drums & vocal together in the left channel,
low in volume, whereas they're separated and higher in volume in the
video mix. The Pranksters weren't using multitracks they could remix
later, nor do I think they were able to separate audio elements like
this in a remix, so Owsley was making his own separate recording at
the show.
A
reel player can be seen on the side of the stage during the show,
which you can see recording. Ironically, in a shot where Pigpen is
singing, it's off and not recording, so the tape evidently missed a
Pigpen song!
The
tape machine on the side of the stage is most likely an Ampex tape
machine with Scotch 203 10.5-inch reels. Both Owsley and Babbs had
Ampex tape players, but Owsley used an Ampex 354 for the longer
reels, which is probably what's seen.
Also,
a tape recorder by the stage is more likely to be Owsley's since the
Pranksters (as seen in the color footage) would typically set up all
their tape machines in their own sound area on the opposite side of
the room from the stage. They also used smaller reels than Owsley. Here they are putting on some reels:
Two
different tape sources for the song make it almost certain to be from
an Acid Test. Since the Pranksters were recording at this show, it's
much less likely to be the 3/12 Danish Center show, and more likely
to be an Acid Test performance. They would have little reason to turn
up with a tape recorder at the Dead's other shows (especially with
Owsley already recording) - it's possible but unlikely.
This
may also explain why we don't hear any Prankster stuff on the "3/19"
tape - Owsley was recording only the band and their mics, not picking
up all the Pranksters' mics. (The full Prankster tape may have had
more non-band chatter between songs.)
Death
Don't belongs with the other songs on the "3/19" tape, so
there's little question it's from that show. (The tape itself, with
its Viola Lee Blues, has to be from later than January.) There is no
change in the audio, and although the song cuts in after a missing
portion, it's continuous with the following Midnight Hour as the Dead
jump right to the next song. ("Little thing now called Midnight
Hour," Weir announces.)
It's
also notable that Pigpen's vocal mic is fine on Owsley's tape,
whereas he tends to sound distant and off-mic on all the songs from
the Pranksters' tapes.
Caution
might be from the same show as Death Don't - the video implies a
segue between them, but this is created by an edit and there's a hard
splice between the songs, so they may not have been joined in the
show. That said, since the second set is pretty short and Death Don't
cuts in on the tape (vs. being complete in the video), it's possible
songs are missing before it.
It's
even possible Caution is the song Pigpen's singing when we see the
tape recorder turned off in the film. You could even speculate that
Owsley missed it because he was too busy dancing in the crowd, as
seen in the film!
Whether
any of the other songs in the video come from the Fillmore is
unknown. There's a lot of sonic consistency between the Tastebud,
King Bee, Caution & Death Don't, which makes it sound like they
could all be from one show. The mix varies a little between songs -
in the stereo King Bee, the drums are mostly on the right with the
vocal. (The mix starts a little blurry, then they try to bring the
vocal up after the first lines since Pigpen's mic is so low.) In the
Tastebud, it starts with drums & guitars on the left, vocal on
the right, then they gradually get more centered. So the recordists
could have been fiddling with the mix during the performances.
Hog
For You Baby sounds a little different, and shifts from stereo to
mono. (Tastebud sounds clearer than the other tracks, but maybe just
because it was a recent addition to the video and didn't go through
as many tape copies as the others.)
One
similarity between songs is the mic problems - in Tastebud, Pigpen's
vocal starts out clear, then changes to a distant, recessed sound
like he's off-mic. That's how his voice sounds through King Bee and
Caution (and, for that matter, Hog For You Baby too). In Death Don't,
Garcia's voice is distant (and on the right) for the first minute,
then switches to the left and gets louder after 1:40.
So
it might make sense to assign all these songs to one show where they
were having trouble with the vocal mics (Pigpen's in particular). But
the sonic consistency is misleading: the video makes clear that King
Bee and Death Don't Have No Mercy are from different shows, using
different microphones. Despite this, the Pranksters' recordings of
the Dead sound much the same from one venue to another, and whatever
problem the Pranksters had recording the vocals seems to have
followed them from show to show. (In contrast, the vocals are quite
clear on Owsley's tape of "3/19.")
FILM
DATES
A
poster for the Muir Beach Acid Test is displayed near the start of
the video, which is misleading. Although the color footage has long
been thought to be from 12/18/65, this was doubtful (the location
doesn't look much like a club), and in fact the film of the Dead
isn't from 1965 at all.
In
1965, Garcia played a 1962 Guild Starfire, but this was broken at the
Trips Festival in late January 1966, and he replaced it with a newer
model. The guitar Garcia plays in both the color and b&w footage
is the new one, so this rules out the shows before the Trips Festival
- both clips must have been filmed at the Los Angeles Tests. (Note
the different knobs and pickguard shape.)
It's
also apparent that Kesey does not show up in the actual Acid Test
footage in the video (although he's seen in clips from other
occasions). Though this is more an argument from omission, it may
also imply that the Dead's scenes were filmed in Los Angeles, after
Kesey had fled to Mexico at the end of January 1966.
Ken Babbs
also remembered the King Bee as being from LA. He recalled:
"We
were still filming when we were making the Acid Tests. We still had
the camera and everything. This one Acid Test that we had in LA, we
had the camera going and we almost did get all of Pigpen on that! We
did the sound system ourselves and the mics and everything. We had a
screw-up there when he was doing "King Bee" and a few other
songs. You can hear him OK on the PA, but his voice wasn't coming
through into the board and into the tape recorder. All the others
were, and that was really bad because if that didn't happen we would
have some dynamite tapes. Still the tapes we did get were really
good..."
Dead
performances from two Acid Tests are used in the video. The color and
b&w films are from different dates, with a different band setup &
background.
-
In King Bee, Pigpen is to Garcia's right. In the b&w film, his
organ is way over to Garcia's left, on the other side of the drums.
-
The glimpse of the stage background in King Bee doesn't match what's
seen in the b&w film: the Altec speakers seen behind Garcia in
the b&w film aren't seen in the color footage (where there are
some horns above the drums); the mic stands strewn around Garcia in
King Bee (one with what looks like tape hanging off it) are
absent in the b&w film.
-
There's a stark difference in venues: the location in the color
footage looks like a garage with all its wood walls, and nothing
resembles the bare decor & plain walls that are everywhere in the
b&w footage, looking like a generic office building. The same
spot is never seen in both the color and b&w footage.
(There
is some visual continuity between the color and b&w films, as
Pigpen & Garcia both tended to wear the same clothes a lot -
Garcia has the same polkadot shirt, and Pigpen wears his ever-present
jacket. Ken Babbs also wears the same pink costume in both the color
and b&w footage, apparently reusing his outfit.)
Both
locations are only seen in glimpses, so it's hard to picture the
layout of each room. The venue in the b&w footage seems to have
bare white walls on all sides, a studio-like appearance. There's a
large mirror that people play with. The "stage" area is
just a spot on the floor in front of an overhang. The Pranksters set
up scaffolding with projectors & microphone by the doors,
presumably opposite from the band. There are couple of spotlights set
on ladders, but even when the Dead aren't playing the room looks
pretty dark. (It seems brighter in shots before the show, but mostly
from the camera light.) It doesn't look like a big crowd. Flashing lights are visible offstage while the band plays, but it doesn't come across well in the b&w film.
The
venue in the color footage is most striking for its wood walls, the
large wood panels strewn about, and the lack of lighting that leaves
much of the area in darkness - it seems like a garage space. The
band's playing on the floor again. The Pranksters set up an area
along one wall on the floor for their sound equipment and projectors
(everything seems to be ground level). Not much is seen of King Bee,
but the stage seems to be lit from the front, not from spotlights
above - no light show is evident. It's impossible to tell which (if any) audience shots come
from this location - some audience shots in color are scattered here
& there in the Acid Test video, which may be from several
different places.
So
King Bee is from a different show than the b&w film. As for
what's being played in the b&w film, there is some indication
that the "3-19" tape is from the same show:
-
Garcia is seen singing Viola Lee Blues in the film (at least it looks
like the line, "You may know by that I"), so at least one
song is shared with the tape.
-
In the setbreak banter after Next Time You See Me, Garcia says
they're going to let "the other band" play. Another band is
seen playing before the Dead in the b&w film - 3 guitarists and a
drummer. (I don't know who they are, but they look like college
kids.) At one point Lesh is spotted out in the audience while people
are dancing, perhaps while the other band played in the break. No
other bands are known to have played at the Dead's L.A. shows outside
the Acid Tests (unless you count Tiny Tim on 3/25).
Also,
since the Dead only played four Acid Tests in L.A., there are only so
many places that the film & tape can come from. The Watts Test, I
think, can be ruled out (both the venue and performance were quite
different than what we see); and there is obviously no film from the
Onion; leaving only a couple of candidates...
PICO
REVEALED
The
b&w footage has been labeled as the Pico Acid Test at Carthay
Studios on 3/19, and there's never seemed to be much reason to
question that. The Dead are seen singing Viola Lee, just like on the
"3/19" tape, in a bare studio-like room - you can even see
the Kool-Aid being poured. Many friends of the Dead appear -
including Owsley, Rock Scully, Florence Nathan (later called Rosie
McGee), and Paul Kantner - as well as a host of Pranksters such as Neal
Cassady.
And
yet, there is little solid evidence actually connecting the b&w
film to Carthay. Instead, the clues point in a different direction...
The
2/25 Acid Test was originally scheduled at the Cinema Theater (there
was even a newspaper ad), but it was moved to Empire Studios at 7417
Sunset Blvd. (The building had been a film production studio with a
large soundstage; Wavy Gravy called it "a movie sound studio.")
As it happened, it was just a few doors down from Lawrence Schiller's
photography studio at 7403 Sunset Blvd. He was planning to do a photo
story about LSD for Life magazine, and here an Acid Test had dropped
right into his lap.
Per one article, "That night at the Acid
Test, Schiller invited the Pranksters to his studio, dangling the
possibility of a Life magazine cover." (He couldn't quite
recreate Acid Test conditions in his studio, so he remembered the
shoot as "a little too posed.") The story ran a month later
in the 3/25/66 issue of Life.
https://lawrenceschiller.com/lsd
(some examples of his photos for the story)
Tom
Wolfe wrote in chapter 20 of The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test: "A
team from Life Magazine turned up, led by a photographer, Larry
Schiller, who was onto the LSD world and had taken the pictures at
the Hollywood Test. They interviewed the Pranksters and took pictures
and said they were going to do a big spread on the acid scene and,
they hoped, put the Pranksters on the cover. So they hailed the bus
on over to the big photo studio...and Schiller took a lot of
pictures." (Here the Pranksters split up, divided about the
wisdom of posing for the "square" world; Babbs refused to
go in and took off with the bus.)
The
known date for Schiller's Acid Test photos unveils some surprising
clues.
There
are shots of Garcia wearing the dark blue shirt (with swirly embroidery) in a few places:
-
the group photograph by Schiller on 2/25
-
the color footage where Garcia's sweeping up by a doorway
-
the start of the b&w footage where he's helping to set up the
Dead's equipment
Phil is also wearing the same jacket & striped shirt in both Schiller's shot and the b&w film (seen at 10:30 in part 3). Florence also has the same outfit on.
When
Garcia's sweeping, George Walker walks by him in a colorful feather
costume. He's also wearing the same costume in Schiller's shots and
when he dances in the b&w show footage. (At least three other
Pranksters in Schiller's group shot also have their same costumes on in the b&w film.)
Of
course, Garcia & Walker & various Pranksters could have worn
the same outfits many times. But what's most telling is that the man
sweeping up next to Garcia (in the striped shirt & green vest) is
also seen on the left in the photo of the front entrance of the 2/25
Acid Test:
(The
guy standing to the right of the door in the black jacket &
turtleneck shirt can also be glimpsed in the b&w dance footage asking for a cigarette from Cassady.)
Thus,
multiple people seen in photos from 2/25 are seen wearing the same
clothes in the film, Pranksters as well as random guys outside. This
indicates that the b&w film, and the color shot of Garcia
sweeping by the door, are both actually from the 2/25 Acid Test at
Empire Studios.
And
so the tape dated "3/19/66," since it's from the same date
as the b&w film, was also recorded on 2/25/66.
How
a tape recorded on 2/25 came to circulate as both 3/12 and 3/19 is a
mystery, but this is typical for Dead tapes from early '66, where the
date on the label does not match the music within. (Pick up a Vault tape dated "2/23" or "3/12," for instance, and it
turns out to be from 5/19.) Another tape used to circulate dated as
"2/25/66 Ivar Theater," which is no such thing - the Dead
never played an Ivar Theater, and the tape seems to be a compilation
from a couple of spring '66 shows. But it does illustrate an
interesting trend - the false dates on some early '66 tapes turn out
to be dates that were actually recorded, though the music wound up
under some other date. (This gives some hope that the elusive 3/12
Danish Center show, which keeps evaporating whenever we think we have
it, might still exist on some unlabeled or misdated reel.)
An
interesting bit of trivia about the show: the Dead are having some
trouble with the PA and talk to Owsley about it. They seem bugged by
how muddy their vocals sound and keep testing the mics, while popping
sounds come from somewhere. ("Microphone, Owsley!" "How's
the PA now?") Weir complains, "That's the weirdest-sounding
PA I ever heard...sounds funky...the most modern up-to-date technical
equipment still sounds funky..."
Owsley
is prominent in the footage, of course, hovering around the band.
Just a week earlier, on February 19, Owsley had bought a couple
thousand dollars of new audio equipment for their PA - McIntosh amps,
Altec speakers, Sennheiser microphones, etc. (There's a receipt in
Blair Jackson's Grateful Dead Gear book, p.33.) This was the Dead's
first show in public with their new PA, so it's fitting that they
immediately started complaining to Owsley about the sound!
"There
goes another speaker cone...another rock & roll casualty...but
it's OK, it's only a machine..."
I
should also mention: in the last minute of the longer b&w clip,
Garcia sings a few lines of some song after a quick tuning that I
could not identify. (Lip-readers may be able to catch a few words.) Possibly this song is not on the "3/19"
tape. Archduke suggests it is Death Don't Have No Mercy (bits from it
are used for that song in the Acid Test video), but I disagree - the
song remains unknown. If it's ever identified, it may be a new
surprising addition to the setlist.
BUT
WHAT ABOUT 3/19?
The
actual Pico Acid Test is little-remembered, although there's more
information about it than the rather obscure Sunset Blvd Test, and it
seems to have been better-attended.
Lee
Quarnstrom recalled: "That was held on Pico Boulevard in an old
sound stage. It was a pretty crowded one. We had driven down Sunset
Boulevard handing out fliers that said, "Come to the Test."
We did an interesting thing at this Test. We didn't put any acid into
the Kool-Aid. We had the same garbage can full of Kool-Aid but there
was no acid in it. We put in some dry ice so it bubbled, but nobody
took any acid at all. Still, people thought they were high and acted
high. It was a psychedelic placebo effect."
The
LA Free Press reporter stopped by Carthay for a bit and saw "lots
of people, over six hundred people... Life Magazine is there. A cop
is there... There are three screens going, two with movies and one
with a light show. People are dancing under the strobe light, people
are flipping out, things are happening." He also observed the
Dead taking a break between sets, like on 2/25. "The band starts
again, the projections start, people start to dance, everyone starts
to smile."
Owsley
remembered it shutting down early, though there's no sign of that in
the available film:
"We
had some pretty interesting times in L.A. - the Watts AT was as
strange as they come and the final one at a sound set on Pico
Boulevard was stopped before midnight by the owner, who was
rightfully freaked out by all the magic and weirdness."
There
is a newspaper photo from the 3/19 Carthay Studios Test, a piece of
evidence with a definite date:
3/25/66 LA
Free Press article:
This
caused some confusion since the photo visibly does not match the b&w
footage that was always thought to come from 3/19. In the photo, the
band is playing under a bright light (maybe it's an early
soundcheck?); in the film it's dark except for a few spotlights. In
the photo, Pigpen is on Garcia's right; in the film, he's moved way
over off to Garcia's (and Bill's) left, and Weir & Lesh have also
changed places. The overhanging paneling behind the band in the
footage doesn't appear in the photo; even the walls look different.
On top of all that, the stage microphones have changed between the
photo & the footage (only Weir's mic looks the same), and the Altec Lansing "Voice of the
Theatre" speakers that are everywhere around the band in the
footage aren't seen in the photo. In short, the b&w film did not
match the visible evidence for 3/19.
However,
the 3/19 photo does match the color footage of King Bee in a few ways:
it shows large boards propped up in the back, Garcia has the same
shirt & vest on, and the visible microphones don't look so different. King
Bee, it seems, is from Carthay after all.
(There
is one change: Pigpen has changed coats and doesn't have his usual
jacket on in the photo, instead wearing the sherpa vest he also wore
on 3/25. This is odd. But a change of clothes is easy to conceive -
for instance, in the b&w footage from 2/25, Garcia has his dark
sweater on while setting up the organ but has changed to his polkadot
shirt during the show; Lesh is also seen taking off his coat at one
point; and there's even an announcement on the tape when Weir "takes
off his shirt.")
The color scenes of the Pranksters setting up and sweeping up the venue seem to be from the same location as King Bee. This isn't definite, but there are two bits of evidence:
- Garcia is seen in the sweeping-up scene wearing the same polkadot shirt & orange-front vest that he wears in the show. (He stands next to Mountain Girl while she's sweeping, perhaps already smitten.)
- The venue was apparently big enough for the Pranksters to drive their bus and a van & truck in, with large double doors. Carthay Studios, a large soundstage and movie studio, seems to fit the bill. (Few of the Acid Test locations would fit this description - indeed there might not be other plausible locations this could be filmed at.)
I should note that Carthay Studios isn't a 100% certain match for the film: The big wood doors in the video don't match the metal stage doors & brick exterior in a 1968 photo of the Carthay building. The studio may have had other doors, or might have replaced this door, but this raises some doubts. Nonetheless, it's hard to identify another Acid Test venue known to have doors large enough that you could park a bus or van inside. (One theory is that the bus may have been parked in an exterior shed, not inside the building itself.)
Carthay also emerges by process of elimination. The earlier Acid Test venues in December '65 are even less likely possibilities for this large space, and no footage in the video can be certainly traced to those locations. We know the Pranksters were filming in Los Angeles and specifically at Carthay; the venue seen here is not the church in North Hills, or the concrete warehouse in Watts, or the Sunset studio; only Carthay is left.
The Pranksters brought a lot of electronics and clutter with them, and it's interesting to see that the venue not only has convenient hooks on the walls to hang cords on, there's even apparently some furniture lying around they can put their equipment on (a little bedframe, steps, a bench and counter, possibly even an old horse-carriage hidden in the darkness). Along with the various big wood panels strewn here & there, it almost looks like a workshop.
The building does not look well-lit - the camera light provides most of the lighting when they're setting up and sweeping, and the shadows make clear that there wasn't much if any overhead light. The area where the bus is parked just has some dim lightbulbs hanging above. Even in the big room where the Pranksters are setting up their gear, it's pretty dark and (in the Youtube video at least) you can't see the other end of the room.
Unlike the b&w film from 2/25, all we've seen of this color footage is what the editors included in the Acid Test video, so a lot more could have been filmed. But what's in the video is noticeably less thorough than the 2/25 camera coverage. Many people you'd expect to see are missing (no Owsley, no Cassady, some of the Dead), and only a few minutes of one song are seen. There's very little sense of the audience, if any audience shots are included from this location at all (it's hard to tell) - no one is seen with the band. Other than a glimpse of Garcia, none of the Dead are seen outside the performance. And (just like on 2/25) there's oddly no footage of the light shows & movie screenings on the walls. On the other hand, you get a sense of the work the Pranksters put into the event - unloading & installing all their equipment, packing it back up again, sweeping the floor, etc.
Aside
from Babbs, at least one Prankster is seen in the films from both
dates. Lee Quarnstrom (who's setting up the tape machines in the
preshow color footage) also appears in the 2/25 shot where Garcia's
sweeping by a doorway. One sign this is from a different date: he's
wearing different shirts under his cloak in that shot than he is when
seen with the tape machines.
Ron Bevirt is also seen running the projectors on both dates - up on the scaffold in the b&w film, and behind the projector counter in the color setup, in a different outfit.
AND
THE FILLMORE?
In
the Acid Test video, Ken Babbs narrates throughout ("I'm nestled
somewhere deep inside the bowels of the Fillmore Auditorium,"
etc). Sound effects are often added to this and some of his segments
were obviously added later, making it uncertain whether he actually
narrated events live at the Fillmore.
Babbs
talks over the ending of Hog For You Baby in the video, so it may
seem like that song at least can be attributed to 1/8/66. ("Here
is the engine room coming in loud & clear, the captain has just
informed me," etc.) In the video, most of the song plays
normally (starting in stereo), then after a cut Babbs narrates his
rocketship stuff over the (mono) end of the song. The question is -
did he do this at the show, or was it an overdub?
Most
likely, he dubbed it later. Lestatkatt's compilation of the 1/8/66 edits shows that Babbs edited (and narrated) the Acid Test a little
differently in each version of the video - recording two different
intros and dubbing himself into parts of the original show. For
instance, before version 2 of "King Bee," Babbs adds an
extra introduction: "Now we're gonna get you some sounds,
Pigpen."
In
tracks 36-39, Babbs also adds a new narration over the
tune-up/no-power section of the show (tracks 2-3), so there are two
Babbs speaking! All this demonstrates he was quite capable of dubbing
new material on top of the recording, probably via copying the tape
to free up an extra track on the copy.
So
the original tape of this show must have had much less Babbs on it.
The band asks "Ken" to fix the power onstage ("Hey
Ken, these microphones don't seem to be working - nothing up here is
working"), so Babbs was to some extent in charge of the
electronics and has some dialogue with the band. (Owsley wouldn't
become the Dead's soundman until the end of January.) It's hard to
tell how much of the rest of Babbs' talking is "live,"
though some between-song portions with other sound effects are
clearly studio creations. While he did do some chatter at the event
(Pigpen yells at him to "stop your babbling"), most of the
"captain" and "ship" narration was apparently
added later.
This
means Hog For You Baby could come from anywhere. I don't think Babbs'
narration was done live. There's no telling what was really played
that night - it's possible none of the songs come from the Fillmore.
The only Dead content that's definitely from 1/8/66 is the brief
setting-up problems before they play, and the end-of-show chatter
after the cops arrive.
In
the end, it's quite a prank if the tape of the Fillmore Acid Test has
no actual music from the Fillmore! This raises the question - why did
Babbs pick songs from other shows instead? Perhaps there was some
recording problem and the band wasn't mixed well (it's hard to tell
from the tuning snippets), or maybe Babbs just decided the Dead
sounded better at other shows. In any case, the tape can be
considered an Acid Test compilation or a 'best-of' sampler from the
L.A. Tests that might not follow the actual setlist of any specific
show.
Ken
Babbs said in the Deadcast about 1/8/66:
"We
had this tape, the Fillmore Auditorium Acid Test. We had so many
tapes, reel to reel stereo, great tapes, and they needed work, you
know, they needed to be edited. I edited that Fillmore Auditorium
tape down to what I considered to be a 2-sided record, you know, 20
minutes a side. We had to cut the tape and splice it together and
fill in other stuff and everything, and really I think it's one of
the best tapes we've ever made... We would put everything down into
our 2-track Ampex, and that would be the master tape, and that would
be the one that I would use for the editing, just cutting and pasting
that."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=um9hhvuAkgQ
(30 minutes in)
The
timing of this is uncertain - the Deadcast suggests that Babbs made
the album right after the Fillmore, but I think it's more likely that
he made his edited tape later on (after the L.A. Tests), drawing from
other shows, and that was the tape used for the video. This is part
of why I suspect a lot of his 1/8/66 narration is not actually live
from the event: he was specifically narrating for record, like a
radio show (or, later on, for the video).
There's
one possible song from before L.A.: at the end of the video after
Tastebud, it sounds like it might be Kesey talking (the voice on the
left saying, "I believe we have accomplished it, at least up
here," while Neal Cassady babbles on the right). If that
dialogue is continuous with the song, it would indicate the
performance is before Kesey fled to Mexico - but I'm not certain it's
Kesey, and not certain that the audience chatter isn't just spliced
onto the end of the song. (Tastebud itself has some audience chatter
near the mics, which you wouldn't expect on the Fillmore stage,
though it's possible.)
It's
not known how regularly the Pranksters filmed the Acid Tests. Their
archive, such as it was, must have been chaos, perhaps nothing dated,
some audio tapes here, some random silent movie reels there, that
could only be pieced together with difficulty. It's odd how little
color footage from 2/25 was apparently used in the Acid Test video -
only one scene that could be identified. There appears to be no
surviving film from the Fillmore Test at all (or any of the December
'65 Tests), and any shots of the Dead playing seem to be quite
scarce, considering how many Tests they played at. So far as we know,
the Dead were not filmed at most of the Acid Tests, and maybe only
for a few minutes at a time when they were. Though it's tantalizing
to imagine hours of Acid Test outtakes, it may be that the editors
scraped together all the Dead footage they could find for the Acid
Test video.
The
Kesey film collection (520 reels of it) is currently held at the UCLA
Film & Television Archive, possibly including many unseen Acid
Test reels:
As
far as audio, it's clear that both the Pranksters and Owsley recorded
more Dead shows in early '66 than have circulated. (Kesey once wrote
about a conversation with Garcia after the Muir Beach Acid Test: "We
taped tonight's show. We could release a record tomorrow!") Many
of these tapes may have since been lost or scattered among unlabeled
reels. Among the Dead tapes in the Vault, few reels from early '66
actually have the correct date on them after many mixups, while
Prankster tapes seem not to have been dated at all.
So
what recordings are known to survive from the Acid Tests?
12/4/65
San Jose - nothing
12/11/65
Muir Beach - nothing
12/18/65
Big Beat - nothing
1/66
Beaver Hall - nothing
1/8/66
Fillmore - partial tape (possibly no Dead music was released); no
film
1/22-23/66
Trips Festival - no known tapes; non-Prankster film & photos
2/6/66
North Hills - maybe a partial tape; no film
2/12/66
Compton - partial tape; no film
2/25/66
Empire Studios - film & tape
3/19/66
Carthay Studios - partial film & tape
(The
Dead's non-Acid Test shows in LA aren't preserved very well either.
There's a partial tape of 3/25 Trouper's Hall, but (despite some tapes from other shows misdated as 3/12) apparently nothing has surfaced from
3/12 Danish Hall.)
Overall,
it's noticeable that the Los Angeles Tests were preserved (even if
partially) better than the early Tests from 1965, from which hardly a
trace survives. It's possible that by the final Acid Tests, the
Pranksters were paying a little more attention to capturing the
events. Someone, after all, was holding the camera while the other
Pranksters were working or dancing. (A handbill for the Carthay Test
mentions "On Location Filming of the Acid Test.")
In conclusion, these are the new dates for the Acid Test recordings:
- the b&w footage and the tape dated "3/19" are from 2/25/66
- Death Don't Have No Mercy from "1/8" is also from 2/25/66
- King Bee and most of the color Acid Test footage are from 3/19/66
This
post was drawn from the discussion in this thread where Archduke
discovered the correct dates:
Not
everything's certain, and there may be mistakes. New evidence might surface later that changes
some of these conclusions. Anyone with memories or photos of the Acid
Test venues, feel free to comment!
*
APPENDIX:
AUDIENCES & ANGELS
The
audience shots in color in the Acid Test video are elusive and hard
to pin to any date. They're never seen with the Dead and the venues
are barely visible. Different dates are mixed together willy-nilly in
the editing. (A typical example is the King Bee in part 1, which cuts
from the band footage on 3/19 to the b&w dancers on 2/25.)
But
there are three short sequences of audiences that seem to be from
different locations:
Part
2, 6:02-7:19 - Dancers in front of a blank wall, focusing on a few
individuals (like a lady with a tambourine). People sitting on the
floor under a blue strobe light. The brief shot of Lee Quarnstrom in
the doorway from 2/25 - but the surrounding shots may or may not be
from that date.
Part
2, 9:13-9:48 - A glitterball; dancers under colored flashing lights.
No sight of the Dead - there's a different group onstage with a blonde lady at the mic. The lights here look a lot more
elaborate than in the other locations, but it's hard to tell where
this comes from, or if it's even an Acid Test. I get the impression
it's an actual music venue.
Part
1, 16:07-17:33 - Hells Angels. It looks like a bar: they're drinking
from glasses (not bottles or cans), people are seated by a wall,
there's a clock with some decorations on the wall over a counter, no
windows are visible, dim lights hang from a low ceiling. Not a
Prankster in sight, just a bunch of Angels with a few gals, in a
place so dark that pretty much the only light seems to come from the
camera light. There might not even be a live band playing; there's
dancing but no glimpse of a band or stage lights, even though the
camera pans across several walls. Maybe the cameraman was just
hanging out in a corner or separate room where all the Angels were,
but it's a big contrast from what we see in other events.
One
possibility for this scene was the Muir Beach Tavern. Tom Wolfe
specifically described a group of Hells Angels showing up at the
lodge on the Dec 11 Acid Test:
"Muir
Beach had a big log-cabin-style lodge for dances, banquets, and the
like... The lodge had three big rooms and was about 100 feet long,
all logs and rafters and exposed beams, a tight ship of dark wood and
Roughing It. The Grateful Dead piled in with their equipment and the
Pranksters with theirs, which now included a Hammond electric organ
for Gretch and a great strobe light... Hell's Angels come reeling
in, shrieking Day-Glo, then clumping together on the floor under the
black light and then most gentle Buddha blissly passing around among
themselves various glittering Angel's esoterica, chains, Iron
Crosses, knives, buttons, coins, keys, wrenches, spark plugs,
grokking over these arcana winking in the Day-Glo..." (Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test, chapter 18)
On
the other hand, the location in the film doesn't seem to match all
the details of the Muir Beach Tavern. The bar-like setting and lack
of any visible Acid Test activity makes me think it's a Hells Angels
hangout. Kesey was friendly with them in '65, so I suspect this is
not an Acid Test, but an Angels party with some Pranksters in
attendance.
George
Walker writes about one occasion: "We did not do an Acid Test in
the Oakland bar. We did hang out there with many of the Oakland Hells
Angels after the gathering downtown on what was called Viet Nam Day,
following a confrontation the previous day between the Angels and the
war protesters marching from Berkeley. It’s a long story; after
hanging out at the bar, which was near the Oakland Angels clubhouse
and frequented by them, we went to Sonny Barger’s house for a
meeting. Much has been written about that day. It was in the fall of
1965, before the first Acid Test."
Whenever
this scene was shot, it's possible that there's no Acid Test
connection here. The video also mixes in other Kesey home movies
(especially in part 2); it's meant to be more an impressionistic
lysergic blur than a strict Acid Test documentary. Times and places
fold together, and scenes repeat; Hells Angels, Pranksters, and L.A.
dancers mingle under the camera lights to some menacing blues from
the Grateful Dead; and the soundtrack gives way to chaos. Who, in
1966, would have thought that sixty years later anyone would go
digging through the film clips to track down the exact dates and
places and setlists of these obscure rock & roll acidheads?












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