Quizzes & Puzzles15 mins ago
Summer of Love
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.thanks for your answers, this has proved to be interesting for me, after andy hughes mentioned Meredith Hunter, I looked up the story on the internet, being born in the 80's I never really got told about a lot of the bad stuff that happened in the 60, just a sex, drugs and flowers!
It's really interesting that people seem to have there own interpretation of the Summer of Love!
Just to recap, the Stones gave a free concert at the Altamont Speedway, Livermore, California on 6 December 1969 at which four people died, the Meredith Hunter murder taking the attention.
Netibiza. As I understand it, it was admitted that the Stones hired the Angels for $500 worth of beer which they placed adjacent to the stage so that the Angels could drink it whilst performing their security duties. This was a cause of the mayhem which followed, but not the sole cause.
Andy Hughes. You are perfectly entitled to express whatever opinion you wish - it gives rise to no "issue" with me.
The Summer of Love was a phrase given to the summer of 1967 to try to describe (personify) the feeling of being in San Francisco that summer, when the hippie movement came to full fruition.
The actual beginning of this "Summer" can be attributed to the Human Be-In that took place in Golden Gate Park on January 14 of that year. Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, and the Jefferson Airplane all participated in the event, a celebration of hippie culture and values.
John Phillips of The Mamas and the Papas took twenty minutes to write
"If you're going to San Francisco,
be sure to wear some flowers in your hair...
If you come to San Francisco,
Summertime will be a love-in there.'
The song was designed originally to promote the upcoming Monterey Pop Festival, in June. Scott McKenzie's cover of the song was released in May 1967
Later that summer, thousands of young people from around the nation flocked to the Haight-Ashbury district of the city to join in on a popularized version of the hippie experience.
A full chronology of San Fransisco Rock can be found from the San Fransisco Museuem website: http://www.sfmuseum.net/hist1/rock.html
I would think that it was 1967 as well. San Francisco was a very popular place in that year as half the songs in the charts (Flowerpot Men, (not as in Bill and Ben of course), Scott Mackenzie etc) were about that place.