Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jun 2006 Source: Mirror (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltee Contact: http://www.montrealmirror.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/267 Author: Johnson Cummins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) LEADERS IN LOUDNESS San Francisco's Blue Cheer Keep It Cranked To The Max After Almost Four Decades In 1968, when San Francisco's hippie-dippy craze was still in full bloom, it was a badass Bay Area band called Blue Cheer who let the world know that not everybody was looking through the same rose-coloured lenses. Preceding the nihilism and decibel levels which would mark the sounds of the MC5 and the Stooges, already bubbling up in Detroit, the sheer kerrang and ballast of Blue Cheer's cover of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues" quickly struck a chord with the unwashed masses of the era, and helped put the danger back into rock 'n' roll. Almost 40 years since its release, "Summertime Blues" has stood the test of time and continues to be one of the most sonically dangerous songs to sneak onto mainstream airwaves. After two incredible records, Vincebus Eruptum and Outsideinside (both from 1968), Blue Cheer lost their original guitarist Leigh Stevens and became steeped in drug problems and label mismanagement, while their later records were somewhat rudderless, reducing their once ferocious roar to a whimper. After a few "heavy metal" misfires in the '90s, the band is back (although still without Stevens) and a new legion of fans are just now discovering the sheer power of the first two records. The Mirror talked with bassist and singer Dickie Peterson through a bad cell-phone connection while he was on tour. Mirror: You have been called the seminal proto-punk band and the forefathers of stoner rock. How does that make you feel? Dickie Peterson: It means so much to us. When you're young, you don't say you are going to create a typical sound. At that point, you're just functioning. We knew we wanted our music to be physical, but that was about the only plan, and I guess it translated well over time. When we hear new bands like Dead Meadow, Nebula and others talking about us, it just feels really good. M: When you started out, you guys were really the black sheep of the tie-dyed San Francisco scene of the late '60s. Are you still comfortable about being outcasts? DP: I could be accused of never really growing up, because I still identify with the renegade and rebellion. The current state of my country reminds me every day that I took the right side. M: Why has volume always been a big part of the Blue Cheer sound? DP: It's the only way you can get those overtones, which is a big part of our music. The inside dope M: You were named after a batch of ['60s LSD kingpin Augustus Owsley Stanley III]'s acid, but ironically it was drugs that became the band's undoing. DP: Well, I'll speak for myself and tell you I became a heroin addict for a while. At the beginning we took a hell of a lot of acid, but I think LSD has some psychological benefits for some people. When I was young, they said if you took acid, you would kill yourself. I don't know anybody who ever killed him or herself, loaded on acid. See, I was lied to as a youth as far as drugs went. I was told if you smoked marijuana, your life was destroyed. Didn't happen. I smoked pot and thought it was great. They were telling us that war was great and good and acid was bad--all lies. So I just thought the dangers of heroin were also part of the lie. Drugs really became a problem when we started messing around with powders. If you have kids, you can't lie to them. It's the worst thing you can do, and from my experience, heroin will turn into a real problem. M: You played with legends like Cream and Hendrix, back in the '60s. What were some of your favourite shows from those days? DP: When Hendrix was on, it was just beautiful. Having said that, some of the worst shows I have ever seen were Hendrix when he was out of tune and fucked up on drugs. I saw some nights, though, where you would swear Hendrix's feet just left the ground. M: What would you say to the people that say Blue Cheer's heyday ended in the '60s? DP: We still provide a service and prove that life doesn't end at 30. I've been doing this most of my life, and you give me any kid, any kid, and I will rock him right to the floor. Everybody in Blue Cheer feels the same way. We've been walking onstage for a long time, and when we walk out there, we really know what we're doing--and we own that stage. With Witch and the Mongrels at la Sala Rossa on Thursday, June 29, 9 p.m., $18 - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman