Owsley Stanley dies at 76; 'Acid King' of the '60s psychedelic era

                                by Elaine Woo, articles.latimes.com
March 15th 2011                                                                 
                                                                                
                 

Nearly everyone familiar with the history of the 1960s has heard of Timothy 
Leary and Ken Kesey, the pranksters who spread the gospel of psychedelics to 
the countercultural generation. But far fewer remember Owsley Stanley.

Stanley, who died Saturday at age 76, was arguably as pivotal as Leary and 
Kesey for altering minds in the turbulent '60s. Among a legion of youthful 
seekers, his name was synonymous with the ultimate high as a copious producer 
of what Rolling Stone once called "the best LSD in the world … the genuine 
Owsley." He reputedly made more than a million doses of the drug, much of which 
fueled Kesey's notorious Acid Tests — rollicking parties featuring all manner 
of psychedelic substances, strobe lights and music. Tom Wolfe immortalized 
Stanley as the "Acid King" in the counterculture classic "The Electric Kool-Aid 
Acid Test" (1968).

The music that rocked Kesey's events was made by the Grateful Dead, the iconic 
rock band of the era that also bears Stanley's imprint. His chief effect on the 
band stemmed not merely from supplying its musicians with top-grade LSD but 
from his technical genius: As the Dead's early sound engineer, Stanley, 
nicknamed "Bear," developed a radical system he called the "wall of sound," 
essentially a massive public address system that reduced distortion and enabled 
the musicians to mix from the stage and monitor their playing.

"Owsley was truly important in setting the example of someone who would go to 
almost any length, beyond what anyone would think reasonable, to pursue the 
goal of perfection … sonic perfection, the finest planet Earth ever saw," 
Grateful Dead publicist Dennis McNally said Monday. "They never would have done 
that without Bear. Furthermore, the greater San Francisco scene never would 
have been what it was without the opportunity for thousands of people to 
experience psychedelics, which would not have happened without Bear."

Stanley, who moved to Australia more than 30 years ago, was driving his car in 
a storm near the town of Mareeba in Queensland when he lost control and 
crashed, said Sam Cutler, a longtime friend and former Grateful Dead tour 
manager. He died at the scene. His wife, Sheilah, sustained minor injuries.

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/15/local/la-me-owsley-stanley-20110315

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