Neenah Public Library

The bus to never ever land, musical tales from the original Merry Pranksters, a hog farmer, and the Grateful Dead's side projects, by Jake Feinberg ; edited by David Lasocki

Label
The bus to never ever land, musical tales from the original Merry Pranksters, a hog farmer, and the Grateful Dead's side projects, by Jake Feinberg ; edited by David Lasocki
Language
eng
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The bus to never ever land
Oclc number
1319538167
Responsibility statement
by Jake Feinberg ; edited by David Lasocki
Sub title
musical tales from the original Merry Pranksters, a hog farmer, and the Grateful Dead's side projects
Summary
A revolution in consciousness was fueled in the United States in the 1960s by a small group of people who used the tools of psychedelic drugs, story-telling, improvisational theater, communal living, sharing, kindness, humor, and pranks to release people from the confines of society, and get them to think for themselves as well as make deep connections with others. The clown, comedian, and political activist Wavy Gravy led the way. Not only did he found the Hog Farm, the country's longest-running commune. He became loosely affiliated with the Merry Pranksters, led by Ken Kesey, Neal Cassady, George Walker, and Ken Babbs, who famously rode the bus FURTHUR from California to New York in 1964, spreading theater, music, rubber balls, and laughter among unsuspecting citizens along the way. In the mid-60s, The Pranksters organized Acid Tests along the West Coast--parties to promote the then-legal drug LSD. To perform at the parties they hired The Warlocks, soon renamed the Grateful Dead, whose improvisational jams, drug-explorations, and unprecedented ability to attract legions of loyal fans (Deadheads) became a movement and a community that reflected the same revolutionary spirit of life outside the mainstream. Beyond the tours and albums of the Grateful Dead, its singularly talented principal members, Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Billy Kreutzmann, and Mickey Hart, had their own bands, a kind of Dead on the Side. "The Bus to Never Ever Land" explores this territory--from Wavy to the Merry Pranksters to the Grateful Dead's origins, poets, and side projects--through pointed excerpts from dozens of radio interviews that Jake Feinberg conducted with the protagonists and others who were there at the time
resource.variantTitle
Musical tales from the original Merry Pranksters, a hog farmer, and the Grateful Dead's side projects
Content
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