What was the 'Summer of Love' and why does it still matter?


              FILE - In this June 21, 1967, file photo, a crowd of hippies keep a large ball, painted to represent a world globe, in the air during a gathering at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, to celebrate the summer solstice on June 21, day one of "Summer of Love." City officials have rejected a permit for a planned free concert intended to mark the 50th anniversary of the famed Summer of Love in Golden Gate Park that had been planned for June 2017. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - In this June 21, 1967, file photo, a crowd of hippies keep a large ball, painted to represent a world globe, in the air during a gathering at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, to celebrate the summer solstice on June 21, day one of "Summer of Love." City officials have rejected a permit for a planned free concert intended to mark the 50th anniversary of the famed Summer of Love in Golden Gate Park that had been planned for June 2017. (AP Photo, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Before Burning Man and Bonnaroo, Coachella and Lollapalooza, Glastonbury and Governors Island, there was Monterey Pop.

Fifty years ago this week, the three-day concert south of San Francisco became the centerpiece of the "Summer of Love" and paved the way for today's popular festivals. The Monterey International Pop Festival created the template for giving emerging artists exposure alongside blockbuster bands while showcasing different genres of music in outdoor settings.

John Phillips of The Mamas & the Papas came up with the idea for three days of music with proceeds going to charitable causes. He brought in Grammy-winning record producer Lou Adler, promoter Alan Pariser and publicist Derek Taylor, who worked with the Beatles.

The festival was planned in just seven weeks with the goal of validating rock music as an art form in the same way that jazz and folk were regarded in 1967.

"The focus was the music and how to present it in the best possible way," Adler said recently at the Grammy Museum in Los Angeles. "The byproduct of that was the feeling that took place in Monterey - love and flowers."

Organizers sought out the best musicians, sound and lighting systems and food "lift the level of what rock 'n' roll should be," Adler said.

They signed on Jefferson Airplane, The Who, the Grateful Dead, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Simon & Garfunkel, Big Brother and the Holding Company featuring Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar, and The Mamas & the Papas.

"We sort of had our pick," Adler recalled, noting no one booked acts that far out at the time.

It was Shankar's introduction to an American audience, and the Indian sitar player was the only one who got paid, Adler said. He received $3,000, while the others had their flights and hotels comped.

"Everybody just wanted to play, and that's why they signed on," Adler said.

Below the single stage that hosted 32 acts was a 24-hour cafe serving the artists steak and lobster. The organizers also set up a first-aid clinic for concertgoers and help for drug-related problems.

"If the artist is happy and the audience is comfortable, then that's a start," Adler said. "If the audience can give back to the performer, then that's a chemistry that is hard to beat."

Adler's favorite performance was by soul singer Redding, who died six months later in a plane crash.

Redding was backed by Booker T. and the MGs. Bandleader Booker T. Jones was 22 and "an innocent guy" at the time, he recalled.

"There we were in our green mohair suits and ties and our white shirts and there was everybody else with long hair and smoking," Jones said by phone from his Nevada home. "I had never smoked stuff before. There's all this stuff in the air. I got the contact high."

Jones and his band were escorted to the show by the Hells Angels motorcycle gang.

"I remember the music impressing me," he said. "We'd only been doing R&B. I learned to love rock 'n' roll during that time."

Backstage, the era's peace and love vibe didn't extend to Hendrix and Pete Townshend of The Who. Both were known for destroying guitars and amplifiers.

Adler recalled that neither wanted the other to perform first, so Phillips flipped a coin. The Who won.

"Hendrix jumped up on a table and said, 'OK, you little (expletive)," Adler recalled. "'No matter what you do, I'll do something that burns you.'"

Aware that The Who planned an explosive finale, Hendrix capped his set with a version of "Wild Thing," kneeling over his guitar and setting it on fire before smashing it repeatedly and tossing the remains into the crowd.

Not all the biggest names of the day played Monterey. The list of cancellations and no shows was equally impressive, including the Rolling Stones (Mick Jagger and Keith Richards couldn't get work visas because of drug arrests), the Beatles, the Beach Boys, the Kinks and Bob Dylan.

Two years later, Adler got a call asking if he wanted to help put together Woodstock on a farm in upstate New York. He declined.

Held at the Monterey County Fairgrounds, attendance numbers vary from 25,000 to 90,000 people, easily tripling the county's population. It was a one-time-only event because by the next year, things had changed. Adler cites money issues and "angry people who didn't like that hippies were in their town."

The festival is featured at the Grammy Museum in a new exhibit called "Music, Love and Flowers 1967" that runs through Oct. 22.

Monterey Pop spawned an eponymous nonprofit foundation that donates to musical and humanitarian efforts in the names of the festival's original performers. Its money comes from video and audio profits generated by the festival.

The festival's golden anniversary will be celebrated June 16-18 at the Monterey Fairgrounds. The lineup includes three acts that played the original: Eric Burdon and the Animals, Booker T. Stax Revue and Phil Lesh. Others artists include Leon Bridges, Gary Clark Jr., The Head and the Heart, Jack Johnson and Norah Jones (Shankar's daughter).

Three-day tickets cost from $295 to $695 for a VIP package.

The original prices ranged from $3 to $6.50.

Fifty years later, Adler is in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, having worked with some of music's biggest names. Today, the white-haired, beret-wearing 83-year-old is best known as Jack Nicholson's seatmate at Los Angeles Lakers games.

He regularly attends Coachella in the Southern California desert, still imbued with the easygoing spirit of Monterey.

"I couldn't have asked for more," Adler said. "We're still talking about it."

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