Owsley Stanley: the Sixties hero who 'turned on' a generation

                                independent.co.uk | Mar 15th 2011               
                                                                                
                                                                                
 

If you cannot remember the Sixties because you were there, you might – if you 
happened to be living in San Francisco – have Owsley "Bear" Stanley, the 
original LSD cook, to blame.

                

Stanley, who died in a car crash in Australia on Sunday, fuelled the "flower 
power" counter-culture that took root in California in the mid-1960s, supplying 
it with acid that he manufactured after stumbling across a recipe in a 
chemistry journal.

He also worked with the psychedelic rock band Grateful Dead, who wrote their 
song "Alice D Millionaire" about him after a newspaper described him as an "LSD 
millionaire". One batch of his drugs reputedly inspired Jimi Hendrix's song 
"Purple Haze", and he provided LSD for the notorious "Acid Test" parties hosted 
by the American writer Ken Kesey, which featured in books by Tom Wolfe and 
Hunter S Thompson.

News of Stanley's death – his car swerved off a road and slammed into a tree 
near his home in north Queensland – elicited tributes, but also surprise. 
Despite a youth so misspent that his name became slang for good acid, Stanley 
had made it to the age of 76. He was even a great-grandfather. In a statement 
yesterday, his family mourned him as "our beloved patriarch".

The folk hero of the counter-culture came from an establishment Kentucky 
family: his grandfather was the state's Governor and a Senator; his father was 
a United States government attorney. Augustus Owsley – he later dropped 
Augustus – fled to the West Coast in 1963, enrolling at the University of 
California in Berkeley. He already had done stints in the US Air Force and in a 
professional ballet company.

At Berkeley, he dropped out after one semester, having discovered the LSD 
recipe in the university library. Police raided his first laboratory in 1966, 
but acid was still legal then and Stanley successfully sued for the return of 
his equipment. Between 1965 and 1967 he produced an estimated 1.25 million 
doses – stoking the "Summer of Love" in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district 
and enabling countless hippies to follow Timothy Leary's advice to "turn on, 
tune in, drop out". By then, Stanley – who moved to Australia in the early 
1980s, convinced the Northern Hemisphere was heading for another Ice Age – was 
closely involved with the Grateful Dead. After briefly managing the San 
Francisco-based band, he became their sound engineer. He is credited with 
technological advances such as on-stage monitor speakers, as well as creating 
the first public-address system specifically for music.

Sam Cutler, the group's former tour manager and a close friend of Stanley's 
since the 1970s, described him yesterday as "an alchemist, a wonderful man, a 
great thinker". He said: "His death is a grievous loss to his family and the 
tens of thousands of people from the Sixties on who were influenced by his work 
with the Grateful Dead."

The first person to produce LSD in large quantities, Stanley was the supplier 
of choice for many musicians, and is credited with inspiring many classics. 
Raided again in 1967, Stanley was jailed for two years in 1970 after being 
convicted of marijuana possession. 

In a rare interview, with the San Francisco Chronicle in 2007, he was 
unrepentant: "I wound up doing time for something I should have been rewarded 
for. What I did was a community service, the way I look at it. I was punished 
for political reasons. Absolutely meaningless. Was I a criminal? No. I was a 
good member of society. Only my society and the one making the laws are 
different."

Stanley was a colourful character, nicknamed the Bear after sprouting body hair 
at an early age and the Dancing Bear because of his ballet background. 
According to the website jambands.com, he would "pour acid into a squirt bottle 
and spray musicians and fans alike at shows". The psychedelic dancing bear 
became one of the Grateful Dead's logos; Stanley also co-designed the band's 
lightning bolt skull logo.

Psychedelic drugs "bring an understanding of the ecology of the planet and the 
interaction of all living things, because that's one of the first things you 
become aware of when you take psychedelics – how everything is alive and 
everything depends on everything else", Stanley wrote in later years. Every 
indigenous culture that respected the environment, he said, used "psychedelics 
of some sort, usually in a regular, ritualised manner".

Stanley – who survived throat cancer in 2006, losing one vocal chord – claimed 
to have eaten only meat, eggs, butter and cheese since the 1950s. Convinced 
that vegetables were harmful, he attributed a heart attack he suffered a few 
years ago to broccoli that his mother made him eat as a child. He wrote in his 
blog in 2006: "I much prefer cannabis to alcohol, never liked hard liquor and 
gave away even having the odd glass of wine in '90 when I began lifting 
weights."

Stanley's wife, Sheila, survived the crash near the town of Mareeba, inland 
from Cairns. She broke her collarbone, but has been discharged from hospital. 
The couple have four children, eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. 
Based in Queensland's tropical north, which Stanley believed was most likely to 
survive another Ice Age, he worked as an artist, making gold and enamel 
sculptures which he sold online. He also made money from his recordings of 
Grateful Dead concerts, which he turned into live albums.

Stanley still kept up with the music scene. Among new bands he particularly 
liked were Wolfmother and the Arctic Monkeys, he told the San Francisco 
Chronicle. He said: "Any time the music on the radio starts to sound like 
rubbish, it's time to take some LSD."

Under the influence?

'Kid Charlemagne' by Steely Dan

American rock band Steely Dan loosely based their 1976 single on Owsley 
Stanley's exploits. The lyrics "On the hill the stuff was laced with kerosene/ 
But yours was kitchen clean" refer to Stanley's reputation for producing LSD 
with a high level of purity.

'Purple Haze' by Jimi Hendrix

In his 2008 memoirs, former rock 'n' roll tour manager Sam Cutler wrote that 
Hendrix's 1966 single paid homage to a particularly potent batch of 
Stanley-made acid. However, despite its reputation as the epitome of 
psychedelic drug-inspired music, the famous guitarist always maintained the 
song was a love song and had nothing to do with drug culture. 

Blue Cheer 

The San Francisco psychedelic blues-rock band is said to have been named after 
a street brand of LSD produced and promoted by Stanley. 

'Who needs the peace corps?' – Frank Zappa

The American composer's lesser-known 1968 track mocked the hippy movement and 
those who followed the philosophy of its lyrics: 'I'll go to Frisco/ Buy a wig 
& sleep/ On Owsley's floor'.

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/owsley-stanley-the-sixties-hero-who-turned-on-a-generation-2241880.html

Shared from Read It Later

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to