THE ACID TEST: Difference between revisions

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'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Primary Source</font></font> </font>'''
'''<font face = Papyrus> <font color = maroon> <font size = 4>Primary Source</font></font> </font>'''
[[Image:Acid-tab-on-tongue drescher.jpg]]
'''Acid tab on the tongue.'''
''Photo: Tim Drescher''


[[Image:Indoor-party-scene 0896-1 Chuck-Gould.jpg]]
[[Image:Indoor-party-scene 0896-1 Chuck-Gould.jpg]]
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'''Reverse side of Acid Test ID Card'''
'''Reverse side of Acid Test ID Card'''


<font size=4>'''The Merry Pranksters'''</font size>


Can YOU pass the Acid Test? There's no way to think about it or read about it. There's no other way to know than go ahead on it. Can you die to your corpses? Can you metamorphose? Can you pass the 20th Century?
<font size=4>Carolyn Adams, aka Mountain Girl on the Acid Tests:</font size>


What is total dance?
The Acid Tests were about possibilities and opening the doors in people’s hearts and souls to different ways of being, and different ways of being together. The early 1960s were a time of intense pressure to conform. The purpose of the acid tests was to get LSD out to the people, making deep and rich cracks in the social cement that passed for culture during that time. We were heavily influenced by people like the beat writer William Burroughs, Neal Cassady, [[Allen Ginsberg|Allen Ginsberg]], and [Whole Earth Catalog founder] Stewart Brand. We were producing them in a fly by-night sort of way, with no advertising, just word of mouth, and they cost $1 to get into. They were a psychedelic free-for-all, lasting from 1965 until the middle of 1966, when we fled over the border to Mexico to escape federal prosecution, what we thought was an impending federal dragnet. They attracted only 200-300 people, and were a brief but glorious series of events in the LA and SF Bay Areas.


The [[Merry Pranksters Serve LSD-Laced Punch|Acid Test]] has been conducted in recent weeks at Santa Cruz, San Jose, Palo Alto, Portland, San Francisco, here, and is snowballing fast. Rolling east next month, it will soon be international, if not cosmic.
They begat the San Francisco happening scene and the [[Summer of Love?|Summer of Love]], and many people’s careers as psychedelic rangers. It was more about getting the psychedelic experience out into the public, a way to get acid out of the hands of the academics and the CIA and into the hands of the general public and the hands of artists and creative types. We had faith that we were doing the right thing. It was about creating temporary autonomous zones. We planned them in secret, not letting the location be known until the day before or the day of the event. They were sort of like the flash mobs of today.  


'''Sunday, January 23'''
''As told to David Kupfer''


We don't know.
''Carolyn Garcia a.k.a. Mountain Girl (CG/MG), a friend of Merry Prankster leader Ken Kesey, sound engineer for the acid tests, and widow of Jerry Garcia.''


Participants, beside yourself, are Henry Jacobs (who first carried out the fantasy of turning on an air dome), John Korty (illustrious film maker), Gordon Ashby (who designed the Light Matrix for IBM), Bruce Conner (illustrious film maker), Anna Halprin & dancers, Pauline Oliveros (with Elizabeth Harris and the 12-foot light sitar), Chinese New Years Lion Dancers & Drum and Bugle Corps, the Stroboscopic Trampoline, The Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company, The Loading Zone, America Needs Indians, Open Theater, Tape Center, the Merry Pranksters, and
The [[Merry Pranksters Serve LSD-Laced Punch|Acid Test]] has been conducted in recent weeks at Santa Cruz, San Jose, Palo Alto, Portland, San Francisco, here, and is snowballing fast. Rolling east next month, it will soon be international, if not cosmic.
 
It's prayer, mostly.
 
Festival credits:
 
PRODUCED IN ASSOCIATION WITH BILL GRAHAM ENVIRONMENT: OSBORNE AND STEWART ARCHITECTS
 
PUBLICITY: JERRY MANDER/ZEV PUTTERMAN AND ASSOC.
 
SOUND-LIGHT COORDINATION: DON BUCHLA
 
SIDETRIPS: WORSHIP SERVICE AT 321 DIVISADERO ST., SUNDAY, January 23 at 11:00 A.M.
 
Chloe Scott, dancemistress -- Lou Harrison, composer
 
Encore Theatre -- Mime--Dance--Sound 3:00 P.M. Sunday, Jan. 23
 
The Music
 
The Dance
 
The Bows
 
Elizabeth Harris, Pauline Oliveros and large Mime Troupe Cast The SSSSSSSSSSS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS SPsychedelic Shop 1535 Haight Street
 
Gratitude to Blake, Moffitt and Towne for poster paper. General Radio Corp, Los Altos, for strobes. Comtel Engineering for TV, Harry McCune Sound Service East Wind Printers -- Peter Bailey, designer Contact Printing Company -- Wes Wilson, design Light Sculpture by Marr Grounds, Charles Mac Dermond & Don Buchla Roger Hilliard, Steve Sanders, David Talcott


The Trips Festival notes with approval and great interest the participation in the festival of ''Look, Newsweek, Time'', and ''Life''.


[[San Francisco Diggers|More Diggers]]
[[San Francisco Diggers|More Diggers]]

Latest revision as of 00:13, 23 April 2023

Primary Source

Acid tab on the tongue.

Photo: Tim Drescher

Until it was banned by the California in October, 1966, parties like this were places where people could openly take LSD and dance to the new music of the times.

Photo: © Chuck Gould, all rights reserved.


Acid Test front

Reverse side of Acid Test ID Card


Carolyn Adams, aka Mountain Girl on the Acid Tests:

The Acid Tests were about possibilities and opening the doors in people’s hearts and souls to different ways of being, and different ways of being together. The early 1960s were a time of intense pressure to conform. The purpose of the acid tests was to get LSD out to the people, making deep and rich cracks in the social cement that passed for culture during that time. We were heavily influenced by people like the beat writer William Burroughs, Neal Cassady, Allen Ginsberg, and [Whole Earth Catalog founder] Stewart Brand. We were producing them in a fly by-night sort of way, with no advertising, just word of mouth, and they cost $1 to get into. They were a psychedelic free-for-all, lasting from 1965 until the middle of 1966, when we fled over the border to Mexico to escape federal prosecution, what we thought was an impending federal dragnet. They attracted only 200-300 people, and were a brief but glorious series of events in the LA and SF Bay Areas.

They begat the San Francisco happening scene and the Summer of Love, and many people’s careers as psychedelic rangers. It was more about getting the psychedelic experience out into the public, a way to get acid out of the hands of the academics and the CIA and into the hands of the general public and the hands of artists and creative types. We had faith that we were doing the right thing. It was about creating temporary autonomous zones. We planned them in secret, not letting the location be known until the day before or the day of the event. They were sort of like the flash mobs of today.

As told to David Kupfer

Carolyn Garcia a.k.a. Mountain Girl (CG/MG), a friend of Merry Prankster leader Ken Kesey, sound engineer for the acid tests, and widow of Jerry Garcia.

The Acid Test has been conducted in recent weeks at Santa Cruz, San Jose, Palo Alto, Portland, San Francisco, here, and is snowballing fast. Rolling east next month, it will soon be international, if not cosmic.


More Diggers

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