Molly's Rough Draft
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Monday, May 12, 2025
Monday, May 5, 2025
Barry McGuire
Barry McGuire has not been mentioned in my blog yet because I've not too much to say about him. I know that Eric was terribly fond of him and SUPER disappointed when Barry found Jesus.
Barry is a jolly gentle giant of a person and I last saw him at his "Tripping the Sixties" concert in San Diego. I took JoAnne Emde to see him as she was part of the old crowd. JoAnne was on hospice at the time. It was a special night singing our heads off. Barry is a Hollywood survivor. Come to think of it, so am I.
Monday, December 11, 2023
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Will I Ever Get Over Myself?
It's been time to scan in pictures to save them to the "cloud." I came across this picture of me from the 60's. Mini-skirts were in.
Sunday, July 23, 2017
Around Town
It was in Dr. Cole’s office that Eric met the ”King,” Elvis Presley. Dr. Cole was one of the best Beverly Hills
doctors and he had a famous clientele.
Elvis needed to have cortisone shots administered to his hip area as he
had gyrated his hips so often. Also he
had been an avid Karate enthusiast and that didn’t help his overused body
either. Dr. Cole could help. Elvis had him flown to Las Vegas to help him
after performances. First Dr. Cole died
and then Elvis died. Eric always thought
that Elvis would still be alive if Dr. Cole had still been his doctor.
The group was making good money and in the world of real
estate it was a good time to find reasonable property value for your
money. The interest rates were still
reasonable. John had reunited with
Michelle and they bought a castle in Bel-Aire.
It had belonged to Nelson Eddy and Jeanette McDonald. It was right around the corner from Lou
Adler’s house and Brain Wilson’s house.
Cass moved to Woodrow Wilson Drive.
Dennis bought a home on Apian Way in Laurel Canyon that had belonged to
Mary Astor. It was next to Carol King’s
house. Eric moved around the corner from
Dennis.
Dennis’ house had the most beautiful view, yet inside it
looked like dark shadows from the Nordic middle ages. The house had been offered at a good price as
well as having priceless furniture inside.
It had Chinese jade screen room dividers that were worth a lot of money. He had bought the house lock, stock and
barrel. What started as a real good real
estate investment turned into Hollywood Babylon.
You would walk into a foyer and off to the left was a
monstrous living room with a monstrous fireplace. There was a fire burning in it day and night,
all times of the year. On the ceiling
was a huge parachute. Dennis would serve
Harvey’s Bristol Cream and Wheaties for breakfast.
Dennis had a large assortment of friends and a lot of people
dropped in. He “held court” as much as
Cass “held court” over at her Woodrow Wilson estate. Included in Dennis’ court were Barry McGuire,
Owen Orr (Greg Benedict), Bobby Simon, Peter and Mary Jacobs, Anita Kemm, Lance
Wakely, and Linda Hyite.
After a while the parties became something else. People were staying for days on end and you
would have to kick them out and tell them to go away.
Eric’s place was off of Lookout Mountain Drive in Laurel
Canyon. It belonged to Thea Van
Runkle. She was a costume designer in
competition with Edith Head. Bonnie and
Clyde was her biggest picture. “It was good to be able to afford a nice place
and have good drugs and food.”
Eric would constantly play the guitar. People would drop over and pick with
him. Jam. The corner was so sharp turning to get to his
house that one night Dennis, in a large red Cadillac convertible, rolled into
the twenty mailboxes clustered there.
They’d jam on acid or mushrooms quite often. Mark Volmin (from the Turtles) reacted to
something by saying “Man, this is really good stuff” and then barfed. Then they would make it down the hill to the
Whiskey.
If the Buffalo Springfield were playing at the Whiskey it
would be good to go to see them because you knew that some gigantic party would
take place. It would be at someone’s
house in the hills or out in Topanga Canyon or Bel Aire.
During this time Eric would take daily trips down to the
guitar store always trying to pick-up on new techniques . . . to be up on the
new electronic procedures going around.
In the studio you had to have a particular sound. There were echoplex, reverb, and chamber
techniques.
Other people who lived in the hills were Tad (Henry) Diltz,
the photographer and Van Dyke Parks. Van
Dyke was collaborating with Brian Wilson on songs: “God Only Knows,” “Good Vibrations,” “Heroes
and Villains,” Eric called Van Dyke a genius.
There was also Michael Green who lived on Grandview Avenue. And Ry Cooder, Phil Fried, David Crosby and
John Judnich lived in the hills.
Fast Eddie lived over by the Hollywood Bowl and Cyrus’ place
was over on Barham Boulevard. Cyrus was
the leader of the Modern Folk Quartet.
Then Peter (the Count) and Rusty took over Cyrus’ place. It was a fun half-way point there. You could run into Nick Woods, Barry McGuire,
or Paul Potash there. Steve Mann lived
at Hollywood and Argyle.
“A person could tulle around in their Alpha with their
Brioni sports jacket, hat, shirt and smile, Gucci boots, $40 bottle of coke,
some good weed, and guitar and visit a variety of people.”
Eventually Eric moved to Topanga Canyon. He was a canyon person but now he was a
Toganga Canyon person. There was the
Corral and the Canyon Store. If you were
into hallucinogenics, then you wanted to get out to the country somewhere. Eric had enough money to move to a more
natural place.
Topanga was forty minutes from Hollywood. You could take care of your business at home
and then drive into town around 11 a.m. when the traffic was not too bad. In Los Angeles you always had to think about
when you would be on the road and what the traffic would be like before you
drove anywhere. He would visit people in
and around Laurel Canyon and pick-up his check from Carol Samuels at the
Roberts and Landers Agency.
Topanga Canyon was a retreat. It’s not the city. By the time you turn off of Pacific Coast
Highway, which is rimmed with cliffs on one side and ocean on the other, you
are ready to appreciate the chaparral.
Eric felt good driving the canyon curves in his Alpha.
Topanga Canyon had it’s own little scene. Victor Maymudes, who was Bob Dylan’s road
manager at one time, lived there as did Hoyt Axton and Gilligan’s Island, Bob
Denver. There was Chris Hillman, Tim
Hardin, Russ Tamblyn, Bobby Buchanan, Graham Parson, and Paul Potash. Scott and Gerri Elam (actor Jack Elam’s
children) lived in Topanga.
Barry McGuire held court out at his Powder Horn Ranch. Actually Barry had the charisma and his wife
Patti held court. Patti was nut brown
from the sun and swollen pregnant. Her
belly looked translucent and it seemed as though you could almost see
soon-to-be Ever inside. Barry had been
in the Christy Minstrels and in the stage production of Hair and any member of
either might visit the ranch. He was in
a James Coburn film called “The President’s Analyst.” There is an excellent scene depicting Topanga
Canyon life with Barry singing in a field of flowers and Coburn with a
lady. It was filmed there in the canyon.
Barry was a natural person.
He really believed in acid for nature’s sake. He got busted at the big be-in at Tapia Park
in the Malibu Mountains. The police
thought that someone who took acid was an animal and treated them like it. They had it completely opposite. The police were supposed to be there for your
protection, not to be beaten up. Barry
came to the aid of a young person being beaten and was arrested himself. His picture made the newspapers.
Barry was busted once again down by the river where lots of
nude kids went swimming and tripped out.
John Phillips wrote “Young girls Are Coming to the Canyon.” It was acid that brought all thoses girls
there. Hanging out with flowers in their
hair and nothing on. No wonder the
parents were upset.
Once at Powder Horn Eric was doing his circus act on this
large rope swing that was tied to a tall tree.
Out over the rocks he swung and fell.
He was on acid so it was O.K.
They also didn’t mind falling into the poison ivy or getting mosquito
bites.
The scam of the year was the four friends; Victor, Barry,
Crazy Patrick and Eric) walking into the Vox Instrument plant in the San
Fernando Valley and proclaiming themselves as the next big rock group. Vox is to Europe what Fender, Gibson, or
Martin is to the U.S. The Stones and the
Beatles used Vox instruments. V ox sponsored major tours. So they walked in looking half-crazed and
convinced them . . . stoked them into lending them an electric organ, a couple
of large amplifiers, a bass guitar and a couple of electric guitars. Just sign here please.
The first Topanga fiddle contest was held in a creek bed in
Topanga. It was a nice stage setting for
a battle of the bands. It was Eric’s
idea to hold the contest there and it is still a major event.
Eric’s neighbor next to where he lived on Rock Trail kept a
lion in a cage in their back yard. One
morning he got up and rolled a fat bomberoso joint and walked outside bombed
and blitzed. He walked around the corner
and saw a roaring lion. Gray hair.
Another day Eric had parked his car to close to the
corner. Victor and he were in his living
room. They were breaking up a tightly
packed brick of weed onto newspaper on the floor. There were candles and incense burning. When they answered the door a policeman
looked inside and said “Would you please move your car.” And then he walked
away. That was a close call.
Now Eric was beginning to be interested in a church. The acid was slowly starting to sink into the
ministry of it. Why couldn’t they have a
Sunday thing out here for all these kids?
Guitars and stars. They had a
mini be-in in Topanga with thirty to forty people. “Come on over to Doc’s place for a little
guitar music and spiritual gathering.”
He also played his sitar while Indian Doug danced and the purple Owsley
acid was passed out. It was a cosmic
paradise one again.
Their Sunday be-in was on his large back lot with plants and
sunflowers, crickets, birds, and a little stream going by. They had an altar with a big cross. There was also an old-fashioned western wagon
wheel and a few old saddles draped over the fence posts. Barry would be nearby looking at a bug on a tree, making bug or bird
sounds with his mouth. He would look at
the leaves. He was always being
fascinated with life and the eternal now.
A typical Topanga day might go like this: first you would go to the post office around
11 a.m. or noon and check your P.O. box to see if you got any mail. Then you would go over to the Topanga Café
and just hang out and find out if anything was happening somewhere. You might see some girls come by on horses,
country girls with straw hats on. Other
ladies wore knee high moccasins. Some
wore leather jackets with beaded fringes and hats with feathers in the
headband. Barry McGuire wore lace
shirts. In general it was fashionable
for men to wear flowered shirts. Mod was
the style then also. In Topanga it was
mod, hippie and country styles mixed together.
Maybe a group would decide to go to the Renaissance Faire
out in Calabasas. They would don
Elizabethan costumes and wear wreaths of flowers in their hair.
For dinner you could go to Moon Fire. It was a vegetarian restaurant that served
good food and had nice windows for looking at the full moon.
For evening entertainment you could see different groups the
Corral. The “canyon band” was Spirit
comprised of Randy California and Neal Cassidy.
There was Canned Heat, Buffal0 Springfield, Taj Mahal. Gene Clark, the Dillards,
Chris Hillman, and the Yellow Submarine Band.
Sometimes a group of them would go to the Whiskey in
town. They’d dress up in their finest
hippy finery and dance up a storm at the club.
Their fringe and feathers would swing and sway. Eric was looking sharp in his Brioni sports
clothes.
While they were in town they might go visit “the castle”
over near the Griffith Park Observatory.
John Phillip Law along with Tom and Lisa Law (the co-originators of the
hog farm along with Wavy Gravy) lived there.
You might find Wavy Gravy, “hog” people, Severn Darden, Vito or Crazy
Patrick there.
The Mamas and Papas were on top of the world but because of
inner conflicts they just weren’t the same group of people that Eric remembered
from the East Coast, from all the times in the islands or going to the World’s
Fair on acid. Something was starting to
dissolve.
The problem with John and Dennis rested with Michelle. The problem with John, Dennis and Michelle
rested with Cass.
John was a task master and the leader of the group. He worked with Lou and set up the
rehearsals. Let’s make a couple of
demo’s here . . . let’s make a showing there.
He was the business man. Cass
didn’t want to work that hard. With all
the luxury you might not want to rehearse and work as hard. “I don’t want to come into the studio
tonight. I want to hang out with Jimmie
Hendrix or Buddy Miles who are in town.”
During the actual recording of a song in the studio there is
a lot of condensed pressure. A part of a
song will be done over and over again until it is done right if need be. This can become irritating and usually leads
to a spat here and there at any recording session. “ Do it again, do it again, do it
again.” The constant repetition and
criticism of vocal phrases made for a high strung situation.
On stage John and Cass were best at having a good rapport
with the crowd. John was a natural born
talker and always had a good response to give a heckler. Cass was loveable. It was easy to laugh with her. Especially when she would say “Howdy, howdy,
howdy kids, it’s Froggy the Gremlin.”
Dennis was the Errol Flynn of the set.
He had a nice Irish personality.
Not too rough. The chicks liked
him. He had a good voice. Michelle was good to look at. She was the Rose of Spanish Harlem, the young
wild nymphet.
One night they played the last set at a jai-alai arena
called the Fronton Palacio in Orlando, Florida.
Paul Revere and the Raiders had played the first set.
The group went back to their rooms at the Orlando
Inn and Cass looked in the yellow pages and called an Italian restaurant to
order food for everyone. She ordered up
about $150 worth of food; five orders of
escargot, spaghetti, lasagna, and salad.
She started to cry because she was so “loose” she couldn’t even keep
track of her purse and someone had stolen her money. She gathered the money from everyone and paid
the delivery person. Then they all sat
down to eat.
Somehow between the hash, Eskatrols, weed, and booze things got a little
rowdy. Dennis and Cass started throwing
spaghetti at each other. Soon everyone
and everything joined in. The whole room
was covered with food and the T.V. and beds were overturned. Lou stopped by to visit and shouted out “You’re
all animals” and left. There was a lot
of laughing . . . a temporary break of the tension.
John was receiving the lion’s share of what the group was
pulling in as he had written the songs they sung. Cass wanted to try for a better career as a
solo artist. The others didn’t seem to
mind. John said it was time to call it
quits. “O.K. , time to quit.”
Before the group broke up Eric was becoming more and more
discontent himself. He was back to being
a side man, like he had been with Ian and Sylvia. He was this mysterious person that had
disappeared to do his time in jail, which he never mentioned to anyone. It was nobody’s trip but his. He had to take his medicine as it came and
wait for his time to take a shot at the spotlight.
In the original recording of “California Dreaming,” Bud
Shank took and instrumental break. It
was a flute solo. On the road, Eric
played it as a guitar solo, note for note.
At the Monterey Pops Festival he played it as a guitar solo. At the Hollywood Bowl concert, Bud Shank got
the solo. Eric was extremely pissed and
never did get over it. He knew his place
after that. It was just salt in an open
would when Bobby Roberts asked him to tell the band not to order Chateaubriand
at the restaurants anymore.
One night the group was bickering so badly during a
recording session that Eric wrote a note saying that when they got it back
together he’d come in and put on some good guitar. He was also mad because his dog had eaten out
the interior of his Alpha. Eric drove
out to the Santa Monica pier.
Construction was going on and they had a small chain blocking the end of
the pier. Eric accelerated and drove off
at about 40 miles per hour. He was sure
the car is still sitting down there. It
was a convertible so Eric floated up to the top of the water and swam back to
shore.
Friday, March 24, 2017
On Tour
During the Monterey Folk Festival arrangements were made
with the Mamas and Papas, Jimmie Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Scott McKenzie to
play a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. It
meant playing a heavyweight concert, not a festival.
Lou Adler had been handling Jan and Dean until the Mamas and
Papas diverted most of his business attention.
There were bad feelings and at the beginning of the Hollywood Bowl
concert, Jan jumps up on the stage, slugs somebody, knocks him down, grabs the
microphone and starts bad rapping Lou and the industry. It put a bad karma flavoring on it and three
weeks later was the tragic accident that Jan got into and barely survived.
Another time the group played at the Hollywood Bowl with the
Turtles, Sonny and Cher, and the Beach Boys.
It was a K.H.J. charity concert.
Sonny and Cher closed the place down.
There was a forty string orchestra with them. “I Got You Babe.”
When you arrive at the big concerts you can see the heavy
weights of the industry sitting down in the front rows with all these big
gunzels standing around to protect the biggies.
All of the group’s bookings into concerts were done by the
Roberts and Landers Agency formed by Bobby Roberts and Hal Landers. They made all of the reservations for
airplanes, hotels and limousines.
The Mamas and Papas performed on the weekends and recorded
on the week days. There were usually
three or four engagements per weekend.
For example, they left Los Angeles via plane Friday afternoon to do a
concert at the University in Berkeley Friday night. Saturday night they would play the San
Francisco Civic Auditorium. Sunday
afternoon they attended the first big acid be-in in Golden Gate Park. All of the San Francisco groups were
there: Janis Joplin and Big Brother, the
Grateful Dead, all of them. And all of
the guru’s like Tim Leary, Ken Kesey, and Wavy Gravy. Everyone is on acid. Sunday night they did another concert in
Sacramento. Then a plane ride home.
Another weekend they played the McCormick Place in
Chicago. Someone burned it down the following
day. Then they did a concert in Toronto
and then on to Detroit to play with Mitch Rider and the Detroit Wheels. Their
hit was “Devil With the Blue Dress On.”
Then another weekend they’d play Boston, New York, and
Chicago and then on another they’d play Houston, Dallas and Atlanta. They spent nine days in Hawaii doing a
concert with the Association. It was a
combination vacation/engagement but it rained the whole time they were there.
Eric played Carnegie Hall in New York with Ian and Sylvia and
with the Mamas and Papas. In Forrest
Hills they played with Simon and Garfunkel.
There was always an entourage of various people on the
planes. There were photographers from
magazines and newspapers doing interviews en route to an engagement.
At the Phoenix Amphitheater, there was an audience of 10,000
people. The group had all taken acid . .
. and played to a whole sea of waving, undulating, flower people. Eric said, “Everything you did on the guitar
was more than ever.”
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