The Great Speckled
Bird, Vol 3 #25 June 22, 1970
pages 12, 19
[The following article
got mangled in its original layout, with paragraphs out of order, a line or two
of missing text, etc. The following attempts to correct those errors.]


Well, folks, we been ripped off.
Say it LOUD--the Cosmic Carnival was a gigantic R-I-P-O-F-F! The Bird used to
get criticized for being on a "negative trip", always looking for the
worst in any situation. Always rapping on about Capitalism and pigs and a lot
of other nasty elements in the Amerikan way of life. So, when the Cosmic
Carnival ads began appearing, we took the promoters at their word and printed a
"positive" article that stressed the low price, the TV lightshow, the
quality of the performers, and the No-Hassle promise of Aftermath/Pure Cane
Productions. It's obvious now that, as usual, the groovy things about the
Cosmic Carnival came from Us, the People, and the rip-offs came from Them.
Don't forget that Woodstock was free because we refused to pay for it.
Just walking around inside the
Atlanta Braves Stadium, center of Atlanta machismo, the scene was like a free
zone liberated by freaks. Dope was everywhere--mescaline, grass, acid--and
nobody seemed uptight in the new and strange environs of official city property.
Long hair, tie-dyed clothes, skin, love and dope stood out glaringly against
the C & S Bank billboard, the giant ads for "the real thing" that
let you know who is really running the city of Atlanta. But the only people
present were freaks. I suppose that in order to make any money on something as
overblown as the Cosmic Carnival, promoters have to use saturation advertising
(which they did) to bring in college students and other young people outside
the growing freak communities all over the Southeast. But they didn't
come--just Us, crazy, hairy, stoned freaks, the only truly loyal Rock music
audience that ever existed in the first place. As it turned out, we were the
show. Think about it--besides Frank Zappa, what was the most exciting thing of all
other than the sheer joy of turning on in the Atlanta Stadium in the glare of
the C & S and Coca-Cola billboards?
The music was the big rip-off.
"It's a Beautiful Day," according to the emcee, "made the day
beautiful," but Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention made the day.
Evidently the Atlanta/Southeast hips have listened to and loved the music of A
Beautiful Day, and everybody grooved on the response the group got, especially
violinist Le Flame. Traffic did some good stuff, but as far as this participant
is concerned, the volume was so low that most of the music sounded like it was
coming from a transistor radio in the next apartment! The Allman Brothers
especially suffered from this ridiculously low volume. When the Mothers began,
however, a speaker came on that hadn't been on before, so their set was at
least a third louder than anything else. Just in time, too, because the Mothers
did a terrific set built around their recorded work, somehow managing to
reproduce all the freaky elements that come easy to recording but not so easy
to a live performance. Zappa's charisma was intact, from the time he appeared
at various points in the stadium, rapping with kids, to his work on stage, to
the long trail of Zappa freaks who followed him from the stage across the field
and up the stairs of the bleachers. We heard it all, the satire, the campy
reformulations of 50s Rock, the farther-out material inspired by the New Music
of Black musicians, all of it blended and intertwined into Zappa compositions
that miraculously hold together, performed by one of the most brilliant groups
of vocalists and instrumentalists in all of Rock music. Fantastic, and it put
the audience through some heavy mind/music changes! (Note: word has it that
those two outasight vocalists are lead singers for the Turtles!)


All the people who bought $7
tickets were in for a shock when they saw the size of the crowdÑ$3 bought the
best seat in the house. That sacred ballfield became more and more a symbol of
the stupidity of young people asking, begging, crawling to city officials for
OUR OWN MUSIC--it was just a matter of time before we got up off our asses and
eliminated the distance between us and the music. It happened during the Allman
Brothers set, and rightfully so; they have the sound we love, the sound we
needed to say Fuck It to the city of Atlanta. Duane told us to go back to our
seats, and we sheepishly did so, but the Cosmic Carnival wasn't really worth
getting busted for. Amerika always looks to "leaders" and "inciters"
to pick on whenever they want to come down hard on young people (that's what
the Chicago Conspiracy trial was all about), so don't be surprised if some
Atlanta pig, or group of pigs, decides that the Allman Brothers
"incited" us to storm the ball field. If the city pulls this sort of
shit, we're gonna back up the group with everything we've got. Get ready
because it just might happen. Bongo was busted this weekend because he is a
"leader". What we have to get straight is the fact that our musicians
are responsible to us, not to the city of Atlanta, not to those billboards and
must be dealt with within the community, not by outside forces and certainly
NOT BY THE PIGS! We have our own Street Patrol--STP means "Stop the
Pig"/"Serve the People"--and we must rely on them to settle our
disputes. Otherwise, the pigs are going to step in, and we'll all be the worse
for it.
We dug the final rush onto the
ballfield to hear Mountain do a little bit of their hard and heavy Rock. To no
one's surprise, they did not play in Piedmont Park Sunday. Majester Ludi did
play, and while a few people may think it was a big deal that they appeared in
the park, we have many local Atlanta bands who can blow Majester Ludi off the
stage--they were obviously on a New York snob trip the whole time they were
here, and all they play is what will get them on a record and nice PR photos in
Billboard magazine, etc. What a hype! Herman Hesse should turn over in his
grave.

God bless the Allman Brothers.
The jam, with pieces from A Beautiful Day and an unknown harmonica player, was
really fine. But please, somebody, turn the volume up--we don't just want to
hear it, we want to feel it, too! Steve Cole is doing a lot for Rock & Roll
in Atlanta (without ripping us off), but some of the shit he was putting down
in the park about "violence", etc. was either misdirected or
mistakenly handled. What he was talking about was the kind of stuff that occurs
within various elements of our community, but he didn't make that clear enough.
We must learn that any problems and hassles we have within our
community--"Contradictions Among the People," as Mao calls
them--[missing text from original] must tees, corporate liberals, and MassellÕs
behind them. When the shit comes down on them, it comes down on us.
Hope everyone dug the four giant
TV screens and the different angles they gave of the music on stage! Actually
the only angle the promised "lightshow" gave was another glimpse at
the way Rock promoters are allowed to get away with murder, without accounting
to anybody, least of all the people who make it possible for Rock music to
exist in the first place.
Funny thing about all the music
promised, too. It weren't there! Love, Sweetwater, Albert King and Ten Years
After did not play, and all but Love were there, at the Stadium!
Worst of all, Ike & Tina
Turner, one of the most awaited of all the scheduled groups, didn't get to play
at all. Incidentally, there's something fishy about the lineup anyway. If it's
true that the Cosmic Carnival had a 12 o'clock curfew to meet (that's what they
say, that's why the thing ended when it did), then why does the official
schedule have Ike & Tina Turner coming on at midnight? There's no way under
the sun that that schedule could possibly have been met (have you ever known
stagehands and technicians who weren't stoned during a show?), so how come so
many groups were signed up (if they really were) to play in such a short lime?
What an insult to have to listen to Shelly Isaacs when you came to hear Albert
King and Ike and Tina Turner!

And that sound by Hanley--whose
idea was it to keep the volume low? Hanley's? Aftermath/Pure Cane's? Sam
Massell's? Mills B. LaneÕs? Coca-Cola's? C&S Bank's? Or, more probably, a
sick combination of all of these. Did anybody ask YOU how loud you wanted the
sound to be, because I wanted it loud enough to clean our heads out, and for
ten hours, I heard fellow freaks yelling "louder! LOUDER!!!" and I
don't remember anybody from the stage answering that rather clear demand. Can
you imagine what will happen to our music if we let ourselves be intimidated by
pigs who don't know Frank Zappa from Patti Page, and if we allow ourselves to
be forced to listen to our music at low volume? In the words of Tommy,
"We're not gonna take it/Never did and never will!"
The Rock music scene in Atlanta
is really fucked up. It may be dying. But remember that Rock music has always
been defined as an industry, subject to all the forms and limitations of
capitalism--promoters, middle men, expensive tickets, deals with the city, etc.
It's becoming increasingly obvious that this capitalist base has to go, or the
music has to go--1 don't know about you, but I'm not ready to give up my music.
Let's have it because we demand it, not because the city lets us have it. It
isn't theirs to give.
One thing: Don't let anybody
divide us up into Good and Bad. We--all of us--are one community. If there are
problems, WE can solve them. Beware of anyone who tries to divide us into
"violent" and "peaceful" elements. These are the kind of
people who always put down "violent protest" by us, and don't get
uptight ahout what Martin Luther King, apostle of militant (dig it!)
nonviolence, called "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world
today"--the United States government. The brother who gets sick at his stomach
at the shit the pigs pull on the strip is not alone when he throws a rock, or
calls a pig a pig. The sister who fights back, doing what she has to do to
survive, must have our support. Brothers and sisters who organize to Stop the
Pig are working in our interest. I don't know anybody who is planning to leave
Atlanta just because Massell and his henchmen don't want the hip community to
run itself and make its own decisions, and it would be outasight if all that
new blood Massell is worrying about would get it on and come right on into
Atlanta. Welcome, brothers and sisters! We dig Atlanta and our scene here, and
if you want to turn on to it, we'll make a space in the lives that we've
planned. The Atlanta Chamber of Commerce spends a fortune each year trying to
encourage businesses, industry and white collar executives to move to Atlanta;
now it says it wants to discourage young people from turning on to one of the
best scenes in the whole country. It's not up to Massell and it's not up to
Coca-Cola. Power to the People!!!
--miller
francis, jr.