At the time of the ‘serendipitous’ encounter
on
Sunset Boulevard, Stills was living at the home of Barry Friedman, a
former
circus clown, fire-eater, TV producer, and freelance publicist. To say
that his
home was a bit odd would probably be an understatement. According to
folkie
Nurit Wilde, “It had a bathtub in the middle of the living room and a
secret
room behind the bathroom where people carried on liaisons.” The massive
bathtub
sat right in front of the equally massive fireplace. As Friedman
himself would
later acknowledge, “This was a very strange house.”
Not strange by canyon standards, perhaps, but
strange nonetheless. Stranger homes can certainly be found, such as in
the
Holly Mont neighborhood near the base of nearby
Nothing weird about that, I suppose. Nor
about the
fact that the house pictured below, which sits right next-door, is also
linked
through the underground tunnel complex.
Anyway … as I was saying, Friedman had taken
both
Stills and Furay under his wing, providing them with a place to live
and
rehearse, doling out spending money, and introducing them to music
industry
contacts. Friedman was there when the fabled meeting took place, and it
was to
his home that the group adjourned after stopping on the Strip. It was
also
Friedman who found them their drummer, Walter Milton Dwayne Midkiff,
otherwise
known as Dewey Martin.
Friedman, as it turns out, was working for
Byrds’
manager Jim Dickson, who also managed the Dillards. Dickson hooked
Friedman up
with Martin, and with a full slate of electric instruments, just as he
had set
the Byrds up with instruments and a bass player. Dickson and Friedman
would
soon become neighbors when Friedman moved from his odd house on
That home, on 8524 Ridpath, would become a
rather
notorious party house. As Jackson Browne, who Friedman later took under
his
wing, recalled, “It
was always open house at Paul Rothchild’s and Barry Friedman’s”
(Paul
Rothchild, for those who have forgotten, was the producer of the Doors,
and in
case I hadn’t mentioned it before, an ex-convict). Barney Hoskyns
writes in Hotel
California that “Friedman … orchestrated scenes of sexual and
narcotic
depravity that soon spun out of control.” Among the regular visitors
was “a
gaggle of girls who mainly lived at Monkee Peter Tork’s house” – which
was
also, as we all know, in
Just a few doors down from Friedman, at 8504
Ridpath, lived Barry James, who also played a behind-the-scenes role in
the
success of the Byrds. Michael Ochs, brother of folk
legend/self-professed
Most members of the
Martin was older than the rest of the band,
having
been born on
It wouldn’t stay that way for any length of
time,
however. Bruce Palmer had a habit of getting himself arrested on a
regular
basis, usually on drug charges. Some of those arrests led to
deportations,
since both he and Young were in the country illegally. He never seems
to have had
much trouble getting back into the country, however, and needless to
say, none
of his crimes seem to have actually been prosecuted in any meaningful
way. But
he did go missing on a fairly regular basis. During the band’s two-year
run,
Ken Koblun, Jim Fielder (formerly of Zappa’s Mothers of Invention), and
Jim
Messina all filled in on bass for varying lengths of time. And Doug
Hastings
filled in for a sometimes absent Neil Young, who had a habit of
occasionally
quitting the band, primarily due to ego clashes with The Sarge.
The band’s second single, recorded and mixed
on
As a protest song, it must be said, it
doesn’t quite
measure up. First of all, despite what is commonly believed nowadays,
the song
is not a commentary on Vietnam War protests. Far from it. The event
under
consideration was the so-called Riot on the Sunset Strip, which
involved about
1,000 kids who were demonstrating against the imposition of a curfew
and the
announcement that a popular club – Pandora’s Box, at 8118 Sunset
Boulevard –
was slated to be closed.
Pandora’s was a small coffee shop that
featured
poetry readings, folk music … and
Nevertheless, the announcement of its closing
sparked a demonstration, and on the night of
Even if the song had been about anti-war
protests,
it still would be an odd choice for a protest song. Lyrics such as
“Singing
songs and carrying signs, mostly say hooray for our side,” seem to
largely
dismiss the concerns of protestors. And the line “nobody’s right if
everybody’s
wrong” seems to suggest that protestors are no better than that which
they are
protesting against.
Another curious irony about the song is that
it was
authored by Stephen Stills, aka The Sarge, an authoritarian,
law-and-order kind of guy if ever there was one. Stills himself later
heaped
derision on the very notion of a protest song: “We didn’t want to do
another
song like For What It’s Worth. We didn’t want to be a protest
group.
That’s really a cop-out and I hate that. To sit there and say, ‘I don’t
like
this and I don’t like that’ is just stupid.”
Writing insipid pop ditties about Judi
Collins, I
suppose, was a much smarter course of action.
While For What It’s Worth is now the
best-remembered ‘protest’ song of the 1960s, the most successful one at
the
time was Barry McGuire’s recording of P.F. Sloan’s The Eve of
Destruction,
which was also a curious choice for a ‘protest’ song, for reasons best
explained by Paul Jones of the band Manfred Mann: “I think that Barry
McGuire
must have been paid by the State Department. The Eve of Destruction
protests about nothing. It is simply a ‘Thy Doom at Hand’ song with no
point.”
Yet another curious ‘protest’ song of the
1960s was
Glen Campbell’s rendering of Buffy St. Marie’s anti-war standard, Universal
Soldier. The very same Glen Campbell told Variety magazine
that
draft card burners “should be hung … If you don’t have enough guts to
fight for
your country, you’re not a man.” A young Bob Seger, meanwhile, penned
and
recorded Ballad of the Yellow Beret, a vicious put-down of
draft
dodgers, but that might be a bit off-topic.
Returning then to the Buffalo Springfield, I
think
it is safe to say that, to most music fans, there is a world of
difference
between a band like the
The ties between the bands actually ran far
deeper
than their mutual fondness for cheesy television appearances. Stephen
Stills,
it will be recalled, auditioned to be a Monkee, as did
singer/songwriters Harry
Nilsson and Paul Williams, and Danny Hutton of Three Dog Night. Stills
and Tork
remained close friends and frequently jammed together. Indeed, both
Tork and
fellow Monkee Mickey Dolenz joined the
On
Throughout the summer of 1967, Stephen and
Dewey’s
Those jam sessions, both in
There was yet one more curious tie between
the
Monkees and the
Ahmet Ertegun, by the way, played a key role
in
launching the career of Mr. Zappa, so much so that Frank named one of
his sons
after him. Meanwhile, Zappa’s shady manager, Herb Cohen, “was involved
with the
[Buffalo Springfield] financially … Stephen knew Herbie from
Just a couple of weeks before Jimi’s Whisky
debut,
he had dazzled the crowd at the Monterey Pop Festival, where the band
under
review today, the Buffalo Springfield, had also played – though by most
accounts,
not very well. Neil Young was taking one of his leaves-of-absence from
the band
and Doug Hastings filled in on second lead guitar. In addition, Stills
brought
his buddy David Crosby out on stage to join the band, which by many
accounts
was a rather poor decision on Stephen’s part.
In For What It’s Worth, Einarson
provides the
following evaluation of Crosby’s performance: “His profile was so low
key many
took no notice of him there save for his ever-present black cowboy hat,
and his
musical contributions, both instrumentally and vocally, were barely
audible.”
Some of those who had been on stage with
Has anyone noticed, by the way, that I am not
a huge
fan of David Crosby and that I seem to relish tossing in gratuitous
quotes
questioning his talents?
After spending the ‘Summer of Love’ jamming
with
members of both Jimi Hendrix’s Band of Gypsys and the Monkees, the
Buffalo
Springfield hit the road in November 1967 to begin a tour opening for
the Beach
Boys, a pairing nearly as odd as the Monkees and Jimi Hendrix. Bruce
Palmer,
whom we have already learned was not one to mince words, had this to
say about
the Beach Boys as a performing band: “They were real lousy musicians
but they
had terrific harmony and a name. They were a studio group. On stage it
was like
the Monkees. They would spend weeks and months in the studio with Brian
Wilson
perfecting harmonies and overdubs, but you put them on stage and they
stunk.”
That tour included a stop, curiously enough,
at
Just after returning from the 1968 tour,
Dennis
Wilson bonded with another local musician, a guy by the name of Charlie
Manson.
When Dennis introduced his new friend Charlie to his buddies in the
Buffalo
Springfield, Neil Young in particular was quite smitten – so much so
that he
reportedly went to record mogul Mo Ostin and recommended that Ostin
sign
Charlie right away.
How many of you, by the way, were getting a
little
worried that Manson wasn’t going to make an appearance in this chapter
of the
Laurel Canyon saga?
On April 28, the band began playing its last
series
of local venues. On May 5, at the Long Beach Arena, the Buffalo
Springfield
played together as a band for the last time. They had been scheduled to
play
two shows that day, the first at a venue in
The band released their third and final
album, Last
Time Around, some three months later. As with albums by the Byrds
and the
International Submarine Band, the
That was just one curious shift that occurred
in the
local music scene. The folk-rock movement, you see, didn’t really last
very
long in its original incarnation. It quickly splintered into three
distinct new
genres: country-rock, psychedelic rock, and the ‘introspective
singer-songwriter’ school of folk-rock most closely associated with
former
mental patient James Taylor. None of these musical genres, notably,
posed the
slightest threat to the status quo. The navel-gazers eschewed social
concerns
in favor of focusing on tales of personal anguish, the acid rockers
largely
preached the mantra of ‘turn on, tune in, drop out,’ and the
country-rockers
largely stuck to traditional – which is to say, quite conservative –
country
music themes.
Following the breakup of the Buffalo
Springfield,
Richie Furay and sometime bassist Jim Messina went on to form the band
Poco.
Through various formations, the band was critically acclaimed but never
had a
great deal of commercial success. Jim Messina ultimately left to become
half of
Loggins and
Poco debuted at the Troubadour, which served
as the
breeding ground for the country-rock movement, in November 1968. Their
first
album, Pickin’ Up the Pieces, hit the shelves six months later,
three
months after the release of the debut album by country-rock rivals The
Flying
Burrito Brothers, formed by former Byrds Gram Parsons and Chris
Hillman.
Byrd David Crosby, meanwhile, teamed up with
the
Springfield’s Stephen Stills and ex-Hollie Graham Nash (who had arrived
in
Laurel Canyon in December 1968 – and soon after moved in with Joni
Mitchell) to
form a band first known as the Frozen Noses, a name inspired by the
trio’s
fondness for cocaine. By the late 1960s, the drug that would later
become the
drug of choice of the disco crowd had already begun pouring into
A decade later, the world would catch a
glimpse of
that dark canyon undercurrent when four battered bodies were bagged and
removed
from a house on
The newest
Now the band just needed a rhythm section.
Dallas
Taylor, who had played on sessions for the first album, was recruited
as a
permanent drummer. Stills and Young summoned Bruce Palmer to come down
from
According to Palmer, the first CSN album was
“95
percent Stephen doing everything and he’s got his backup singer boys
with him.
He’s been dragging them around with him for 25 years.” Considering that
Stills
composed the majority of the material, played most of the instruments,
and
produced and arranged the album, Palmer’s assessment seems a reasonable
one. In
any event, CSNY didn’t last too long, dissolving after their 1970 tour.
Stills
next recruited the ubiquitous Chris Hillman to form
The band was fronted by Vincent Furnier, the
boyfriend of Miss Christine of the GTOs. Miss Pamela, aka
Pamela Des
Barres, described Furnier as “a rich kid from
Furnier would soon change his own name, and
the name
of his band, to Alice Cooper, after deciding that he was the
reincarnation of a
witch who purportedly lived in the seventeenth century. Our old friend
Frank
Zappa signed the band and its debut album, Pretties For You,
was the
first release on Zappa’s Straight label. After transforming into a
shock-rock
band, the group would hit it big a few years later with the release of School’s
Out.
Cooper had a curious connection to another
rather
eccentric canyon character: Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys. In later
years,
both Cooper and Wilson would receive ‘treatment’ from a certain Dr.
Eugene
Landy, whose handling of
On
One other curious side note: at the time of
the
murder/suicide, Young was receiving ‘treatment’ from Eugene Landy.
As for the original members of the Buffalo
Springfield,
Stephen Stills and Neil Young are still known to perform at times.
Richie Furay
founded the Cavalry Chapel near