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Showing posts with label Rock n' Roll spot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock n' Roll spot. Show all posts

Exile On Main Street: Nellcote

Anita: “It was this marathon of music, it was quite incredible, but it was also a nightmare. I mean, creatively it was really great, and everybody was on the spot, but in all the time we were in that place we were never by ourselves. Day after day it was 10 people for lunch, 25 for dinner. I don’t think anyone slept that whole summer. I was completely responsible for everything that was happening. I was basically the only person who could speak French well. And there were the local cowboys - they kind of moved in on us. They said, ‘We’re going to come here, we’re going to destroy this place, we’re going to do this, that, and the other.’ So I thought, ‘Well, might as well hire them and make them work for us’, so we had all these kinds of locals working in the kitchens. And eventually we found, outside the door, drug dealers, and they were doing all kinds of things, and that’s how it came to everybody was coming and going - the musicians, everybody - so it was open house.”
Keith seemed content to absorb himself in the Riviera pursuits of eating, drinking, sunbathing, swimming, and sailing his boat, Mandrax, with whomever he could rouse from the Nellcote floors to act as his crew. He also found time for fatherhood. Two-year old Marlon, thus far, had seen little home life outside the tumbled hotel suites. Keith devoted the best part of every day to him, carrying him around clamped to the skinny chest that once admitted no encumbrances but its guitar strap and dangling cocaine spoon.

(http://www.stonesplanet.com/, www.rollingstonesitalia.com , http://www.genesis-publications.com/, Dominique Tarle )

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L.A. Woman


The atmosphere of life in L.A. was captured perfectly in the 1969 edition of the Pirelli Calender. L.A. was the hippest and wildest place to be in the late sixties and seventies. For many musicians going to L.A. was a real treat. The popular hangouts: Rainbow Bar & Grill, the Whisky, Thee Experience, London Fog, The Troubadour, etc. I included some photos of some of the other colorful characters that haunted the strip.




L.A. Club





Jim and Pam


Pamela Des Barres

Gto's


Morgana Welch
Thee Experience


The Trip

L.A. nightlife












(photos from hollywoodhangover.com, and by Harri Peccinotti)

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Drugs, Dreams, and a Wilderness of Stoned Harlequins


Rock Music, London's mini -skirted birds, and California bohemia gave the strange collage of hippie-ethnic style a currency throughout mass culture. The look was a Pre-Raphaelite silhouette, and crushed velvets. Ragamuffin curls fell round dreamy, druggy faces onto tiny shoulders. Long sleeve granny vests over bell-bottom pants or long, floaty gypsy skirts. Materials consisted of satin, embossed velvet, jersey, 1940's flower prints, and an occasional hint of fake leopard or snakeskin. Sometimes, there would also be some patchwork that included moons and stars on an already decadent dress or jacket. The dirty, muted colors, and metallics were: sludge brown, brick dust, airforce blue, sage green, cream, or dusty pink.




Pam and Jim Morrison
Ossie Clark
Georgia Linhart

Granny Takes A Trip


Ossie Clark
Themis Boutique
Anita Pallenberg and Mick Jagger
Alice Pollock

The Fool

(images from Boutique: A Cultural Phenomenon, Hippie)

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