The Great
Speckled Bird May
4, 1970 vol 3 #18 pg 4

Contradictions Among the People
If you
weren't at the Sports Arena Sunday for the Community Benefit, you missed some
good times and some terrific music. What was to have been a community happening
bringing us all together around our own music and musicians--in a setting
provided by people living in the community itself--turned out to be a sparsely
attended occupation of the Sports Arena, sleeping bags, Ripple, dope, and all
the rest--just very few people. The kids, who did pay a couple of dollars for
community use, didn't seem disturbed by the small numbers, however, and we had
one of the best times we've ever had at the Sports Arena. None of the bands was
less than good, some were very fine, and the Stump Brothers, with three Grease
Band musicians, almost blew the roof off the building! When Hampton joined them
to sing a few songs, it was too much. But how can bands be expected to play for
a mere handful of people?
We could get
into just how good the music was, but it's more important to say quite a bit
about the good thing most of the community missed out on. First of all, we have
to realize that the Rock concert Sunday was organized by and for the hip
community. Community Center people got their shit together and worked with
Murray Enterprises, Steve Cole of Discovery, Inc., The Electric Collage, and
members of the community to plan and execute what they thought would be one of
the best things to happen in the Atlanta Hip Community. Some of the cream of
the local Rock scene volunteered to play (they should have been paid but
weren't, for obvious reasons). Posters were made, tickets were printed up, a
beautiful stage was built (designed by T. P. of the Community Center so that it
can be used again anywhere it's needed, the park, etc., or disassembled for the
lumber), the Electric Collage was ready to put on one of its very best shows, a
volunteer stage crew was put together (Cole said it could have been one of the
best ever to work on an Atlanta Rock show), the Sports Arena was rented (they
had to pay for cops they didn't ask for, and also for a window that was broken
before folks started working in preparation for the benefit, plus countless
other small hassles), free transportation was arranged from the Center to the
Sports Arena-and what happened? The "hip" community did not support
its own benefit. Nothing hip about that. The few hundred freaks who did show up
at the Sports Arena had a groovy time, but had the hall been filled, we could
have raised much-needed money to go into community institutions, and the music
would have been way up there with the best ever heard in Atlanta.
Week after
week, kids have been paying from $3 to $6 to hear top-name groups at the Sports
Arena and the Municipal Auditorium--in all that time, no one has spent the time
and energy and work that went into the benefit; Murray Silver never built a
decent stage, and the sound this past Sunday was the first time Rock music has
been heard the way it should be heard in the Sports Arena. Are we so hung up on
the star syndrome bullshit that we don't recognize the healthiness indicated in
our community by the presence of many, many fine, developing Rock bands? Bands
can't exist without audiences to hear them, and any fool can tell you that most
of our local bands do much better work consistently than the lousy set that
Canned Heat played at the Sports Arena a couple of weeks back, for one example.
But more
than these--the work that community people put into the benefit, the together
organization and coordination of the people behind it, the willingness of the
Electric Collage, Discovery, Inc., and the local bands to give their time and
energies to us--beyond these factors lie the simple truth that MANY OF US ARE
IN JAIL! And more and more of us are going to be going to jail in the next few
months. The fact that this particular benefit failed to arouse any decent
community response, coming as it did after an assault upon our community by
Atlanta city police and the passing of a loitering ordinance aimed at freaks
and Black people (who else, in your wildest imagination, could it have been
aimed at--doctors?) just makes the charge of stupidity and hiplessness that
much stronger against what we like to call our "hip" community. Folks
were all full of love and peace after the police riot on the strip, after the
loud, noisy meetings in the park, after the ridiculous Hoffmanesque courtroom
scene, and everybody was talking about how the city is on our side, how Massell
weeps about what happened on the strip, etc., ad nauseum. What we didn't know
is that one of the freaks whose charges were dropped was busted for contempt by
Judge Brock right in the courtroom, hastily separated from the rest of us, and
practically held incommunicado in jail (in solitary because he refused to have
his hair cut) while idiot hippies were talking about peace and love and how the
city is on our side. Why anybody would get hung up in whether or not the city
is on our side is beyond meŃa lot of us are wondering whether or not WE are on
our side!
Think about
the fact that hard drug pushers are doing their thing in full knowledge of the
police while Wayne Scott, who was trying to do something to get rid of the shit
in our community, is in jail for possession of grass. Think about that fact
that one of the bands that didn't play at the benefit was the River People, and
the reason they didn't play is because they don't exist, and the reason they
don't exist is because one of the most brilliant musicians in Atlanta, John
Ivey, a beautiful cat, is serving a THREE YEAR jail sentence for a first
offense of possession of marijuana plants found growing in the basement of a
house he hadnŐt even moved into! Some of the kids busted during the loitering
police riot were really screwed in court, and some are still waiting to stand
trial just for doing the right thing in the right situation.
A lot of
kids don't want to throw rocks and bottles, don't want to fight back and don't
want anybody else to fight back. Well, that kind of thing is up to you and in a
larger sense to the community, but there is absolutely no reason under the sun
why you shouldn't support your own institutions. They are merely another form
of fighting back against the people trying to screw us, and the less dependent
we can be on ourselves, the more dependent we are on people outside the
community. Self-reliance is the only way we can prevent the loss of the
community we have. Who has done more to rid our community of hard drugs? If a
few thousand people had turned up at the Sports Arena Sunday, community
institutions could have paid rent, bought needed supplies, expanded operations,
got some people out of jail, been ready for more busts, paid all the musicians
who knock themselves out giving music to the people, and a lot more, too. As it
is, the community bank account isn't all that much changed from where it was
before the benefit. What is really frightening is that when community people
actually took it upon themselves to canvas the neighborhood, trying to give the
benefit tickets away just so the bands would have an audience large enough to
inspire them to play, most of our people wouldn't even take the tickets for
free. There's just no way to look at this situation without realizing some very
frightening things that may take even more frightening concrete forms this
summer when masses of new kids come into Atlanta. Let's hope they're more
together than those of us who already live here, because they sure as hell
can't depend on us for leadership.
A hearty
"FUCK YOU!" to the Atlanta "Hip" Community, and a great
deal of gratitude and appreciation to those freaks who supported the Community
Benefit and who will form a nucleus for a growing and expanding hip community.
--miller
francis, jr.