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[Music: Grateful Dead "Franklin's Tower"]
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>> Joe Smith: So when the band finally fell into place as The Warlocks
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it was basically what was the Grateful Dead.
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>> Jerry Garcia: Absolutely. Kreutzmann. Me, Phil...
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>> Joe Smith: Pig and Bobby, huh?
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>> Jerry Garcia: That's right.
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>> Joe Smith: And what did it sound like?
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>> Jerry Garcia: It sounded like hell. It sounded really awful for the first few gigs.
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[Music: "Franklin's Tower" continues]
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>> Joe Smith: Was it The Warlocks very long before you became the Dead?
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>> Jerry Garcia: About a year.
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>> Joe Smith: And what triggered the new identity?
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>> Jerry Garcia: Well we finally discovered that there was a band
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that was recording using the name Warlocks.
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We thought: "oh, shit, we can't have that kind of confusion."
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So we went on the band hunt, you know, looking for a name.
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>> Joe Smith: The name came from whom? Who dug it up?
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>> Jerry Garcia: Well I found it in an old dictionary at Phil's house. I just opened
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it up and there I saw "the Grateful Dead."
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>> Joe Smith: You could have been... could you imagine
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what would have happened: the Warlockheads. The dictionary changed society.
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>> Jerry Garcia: It absolutely did. Yes it did.
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[Music: Grateful Dead "Franklin's Tower"]
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>> Jerry Garcia: That was about the time we fell in with the acid tests
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with Kesey and those guys. We had starting taking acid ourselves
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while we were still The Warlocks. We didn't do it at shows.
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At the time we were playing the divorcees' bars up and down the peninsula.
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You know. Our booking agent was this guy who used to book
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strippers and dog acts and magicians and everybody else.
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It was the standard gig: six nights a week, five sets a night. Standard bar stuff.
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We were doing that for about a year. And, you know, after that you're ready for anything.
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We knew a lot of the people in Kesey's scene, because
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it was all part of the Palo Alto scene, which we were a part of.
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And they knew of us. The one guy, named Paige, who was one of the Pranksters,
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came to one of our late night sets at one of the bar's we were playing at.
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[Music: Grateful Dead "Cream Puff War"]
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>> Jerry Garcia: And said: "hey, you guys, we're having these parties up at Kesey's
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place in La Honda [California] every Saturday night. why don't you guys come?"
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I said: "well, we're working all the time." Luckily the following week we got fired.
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And we had nothing to do. So Saturday night came around.
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We went to the first one of those parties, which later became the Acid Tests.
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>> Joe Smith: What did you do there? It was just experimenting?
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>> Jerry Garcia: No. We just set up the equipment. Everybody got high.
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And stuff would happen.
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Now Kesey and his Pranksters have been doing this for a long time,
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so they had instruments and they played weird music.
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But mostly it was completely free. There was no real performance of any kind involved.
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Everybody there was as much performer as audience. You know.
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[Music: "Cream Puff War" continues]
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>> Jerry Garcia: These guys had never been confronted
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with a regular rock and roll band, you know.
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And we plugged our gear in which looked like space age, military nightmare stuff.
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Compared to all their stuff, which was all hand painted and real funky you know.
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[Music: Grateful Dead "Golden Road"]
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>> Jerry Garcia: And WHAM, we played for about five minutes. Then we all freaked out.
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You know. We played for about five minutes, but it completely devastated everyone.
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So they begged us to come back to the next one.
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And that's how it happened essentially.
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>> Joe Smith: When you guys now you're doing some acid, you were playing around.
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What did you expect to be? Were you going to be a Beatles?
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Were you going to be a great rock n roll... what were you going to do?
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>> Jerry Garcia: We didn't really care whether we went somewhere specifically.
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We mostly wanted to have fun. And when we fell in with the Acid Tests
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we a started having the most fun we'd ever had ever.
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More than than we could have ever..... I mean it was just incredible.
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[Music: Grateful Dead "Friend of the Devil"]
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>> Joe Smith: And how long did that go on?
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>> Jerry Garcia: For about six months. But that was probably
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the most important six months in terms of directionality.
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Because the neat thing about the Acid Tests was we could play if we wanted to.
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But if it was too weird, we could always not play.
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So that was the only time we ever had the option of not playing.
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[Music: "Friend of the Devil" continues]
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>> Jerry Garcia: I think The Grateful Dead kind of represents the spirit
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of being able to go out and have an adventure in America at large.
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You know what I mean? You can go out and follow the Grateful Dead around.
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And you have your war stories. Something like hopping railroads. Something like that.
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Or being on the road like Cassidy and Kerouac.
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>> Joe Smith: That's interesting.
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>> Jerry Garcia: But you can't do those types of things anymore.
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But you can be a Deadhead. You can get in your van and go with
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the other Deadheads across the United States and meet it on your own terms.
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Sort of a niche for it, in a way.
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