The Legends of Laurel Canyon: Sunset, Hippies, The Byrds | EYE ON L.A.

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Published 2019-05-28
Revisit Laurel Canyon in the '60s, when legends-to-be were just trying to make it. Sunset clubs and hippies, Vita Paulekas, and The Byrds.

All Comments (21)
  • @kevinquinn3763
    Been there a few times. It was very interesting. I had just came home from Vietnam, I did not care about anything. But I survived. Took up a hobby racing dirt bikes across the Mohave desert. Had way more fun then hanging out with some bands. History is history. Gone are those days.
  • @clarkewi
    I lived there during that period as a teenager wandering thru the old abandoned mansions of the Hollywood Hills. Tripping on Owseley's "White Lightening".
  • @Jamestele1
    I love these people - kindred spirits. I was always the "hippie/Bohemian" amongst a group of longhaired freakers. They were always ready to fight, and I was always ready for reading, learning and peace.
  • @10000rajaram
    So all the bands from those days had high ranking military parents, and there was an advanced military film production facility in the Laurel Canyon. Interesting...
  • My husband and I lived there on Weepah Way, It was the most magical place I can remember. One day there was a fire, people were playing "Fire" by Arthur Brown when the fire Dept. came to put it out...One of my husband's high school friend played on the Band "Love" they were great!
  • One of the biggest regrets I have was my father moving the family from the valley to Oregon when I was a teen. I should have returned when I left home but by then I had fallen in love with the Pacific Northwest. But, I would have loved to have hung around Laurel Canyon in the late 60s - early 70s. The first time I got high on weed was at a house on Laurel Canyon Blvd near Oxnard St. My friend had somehow met these "hippie guys" so we went over there and smoked with them. I remember they had Quicksilver Messe ger Service playing on the stereo. I had only started smoking pot about a month before. I had just turned 13. Crazy (stupid?) stuff I did back then. I sometimes wonder if those men were "anybody". They were very nice and made absolutely no attempt to do anything with us (well, except get us high).
  • @MsMadmax1
    To watch this documentary is like watching old home movies of my family in the sense that these people are so familiar and have been around for so long. There music was time capsule of the 60's and what that era felt like. Each era has feeling and even though there was a lot of civil unrest at the time (civil rights, women's rights, protests against the Viet Nam war) I never felt unsafe. These folks just wanted to make beautiful music and spread a message of peace. There's a gigantic difference between that time and this. Back then, we knew where we stood and why. I don't think the same can be said of this generation. Knowledge is power, know who you're fighting for and exactly why your fighting. Get all the details of your cause and approach it with an open mind. I think young people today are so eager to be a part of something bigger than themselves and they have no idea what that something is--it's a free-for-all, pile on mentality.
  • @rossturcotte419
    It is legendary; a time & vibe that will never be repeated on this level. Rare air: you walk or drive around there now & it's still haunting. The smell of eucalyptus remains, but it's all Hollyweird psychos with too much money & too little time to be real. As one time Canyon chiller & "old man" @ age 24 Neil Young once um, chillingly sang; In a matter of time There'll be a friend of mine Gonna come to the coast You're gonna see him up close For a minute or two While the ground cracks under you By the look in your eyes You'd think that it was a surprise But you seem to forget Something somebody said About the bubbles in the sea And an ocean full of trees And you now, LA Uptight city in the smog, city in the smog Don't you wish that you could be here too? Don't you wish that you could be here too? Don't you wish that you could be here too? Well, it's hard to believe So you get up to leave And you laugh at the door That you heard it all before Oh, it's so good to know That it's all just a show for you When the suppers are planned And the freeways are crammed And the mountains erupt And the valley is sucked Into cracks in the earth Will I finally be heard by you? LA Uptight city in the smog, city in the smog Don't you wish that you could be here too? Don't you wish that you could be here too? Don't you wish that you could be here too? Nope, no I don't. Heard ya loud & clear. It's all a farce that'll very soon be completely underwater & unlivable.
  • @tenbroeck1958
    Johnny Echols is awesome. I do wish Love had gotten bigger. So talented.
  • @heyou702pc
    Jacob Dylan already did a documentary about this place. It's called Echo in the Canyon. It's a fantastic documentary where he covers some of the songs. He did a great rendition of The Bryds song Going Back.
  • @estebannemo1957
    Before my time, but definitely the Golden Age of rock music.
  • Look up Dave MacGowan and his book about Laurel Canyon. We were all connected. All out of the military and the government. He goes into detail on this. Oh yeah, and he was murdered for it.
  • @deanpd3402
    So, no mention of Bobby Beausoleil's involvement with the band Love?
  • @krachenford9594
    Laurel canyon, the most of these people never were musicians.
  • @geeman9252
    Don't want to be Debbie downer but here goes anyway - Jerry Brown grew up their, lived 4 doors from the "4 on the floor" murders (look that story up) - there was an USAF base their, run by the CIA - and Frank Zappa's dad was a chem engineer that assisted in the creation of agent orange - Jim Morrisons dad was the admiral that was in charge during the fake attack on a US Navy ship (forget ships name) which got america into Vietnam, Jerry Garcia, or Agent Garcia , CIA , and many more had parents who worked for the military - and yet - there was a generation gap during this time? was it planned or did their kids (famous musicians) do this to counter the military and old ways of the greatest generation? as we know JIm Morrison yelled at one of his concerts "You are all slaves'
  • @zebratangozebra
    Love had some really great stuff but they never really took off.
  • @annyirish6106
    Yeah right, about as organic and magical as Lucky Charms.