Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2014 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: John Mackie MEMORIES OF THE PSYCHEDELIC WONDERLAND Long-Lost Promoter Of Vancouver's First Hippie Club Returns With Stories, And Some Amazing Posters The saying goes that if you can remember the '60s, you weren't really there. Jerry Kruz knows this all too well. At 66, his memory of the parties, concerts and happenings he took part in during the hippie era are a bit hazy. But a marvellous thing happens when he looks back at his collection of old psychedelic concert posters. The memories of the shows come floating back, like a contact high. And what memories those are. From 1965 to 1967, Kruz was the promoter behind The Afterthought, Vancouver's first psychedelic club. Kruz promoted gigs by '60s legends such as the Grateful Dead, Steve Miller, and Country Joe and The Fish, as well as local acts like the United Empire Loyalists, the Painted Ship and the Tom Northcott Trio. To promote the shows, he commissioned artists like Bob Masse, Frank Lewis, Bruce Dowad and Doug Cuthbert to create posters. They responded with mind-bending visions filled with wild colours, beautiful women and hairy men. The band names were rendered in psychedelic art nouveau lettering that was so stylized that at times it was hard to decipher. The Afterthought posters are now cherished collector items, and internationally renowned. Bob Masse's 'exploding face' poster of a hairy fellow was even used to illustrate psychedelia in the coffee-table book The Art of Rock and Roll. The image promoted a gig by the Steve Miller Blues Band, March 17 to 19, 1967, at the Kits Theatre at 4th and Arbutus, which is where many of the Afterthought gigs were held. If you were able to track down an original of the poster, you might have to fork over hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Alternatively, you can pick it up in Kruz's new memoir and art book, The Afterthought: West Coast Rock Posters & Recollections from the '60s (Rocky Mountain Books, $40). All the Afterthought posters are there, in glorious colour - from a crude 1965 poster for a coffee house where Kruz cut his promoter's teeth, to the drug-friendly posters from '66 and '67 that got Kruz into trouble with the cops. One of these posters features a green-haired hippie goddess puffing away on a hash pipe. Masse designed it for a March 3-4, 1967 gig with Carnival, the Seeds of Time, and William Tell and the Marksmen. Forty-seven years later, it became the cover of Kruz's book. "Tommy Chong picked that, by the way," Kruz said over the phone from his home in Victoria. "We sent him a couple of images and asked him, 'Which one do you like?' And he immediately went to that one. He said, 'That's the one that represents the time.' " It does. But posters like this didn't sit too well with RCMP sergeant Abe Snidanko, a 'narc' who Kruz said was constantly harassing him and the hippies who came to his shows. "(At one show) I walked out onto the street, onto Fourth Avenue, and there were traffic barriers," Kruz recalled. "I go 'Oh s---! The whole damn street is shut down! What's next?' And I turn around and all of a sudden Snidanko is beside me. They come in with a SWAT team and lined everybody up against the wall, including me and my brother." Kruz is of Ukrainian descent (he was born Jaroslav Krushelnyski). As luck would have it, so was Snidanko. Kruz's mother was selling tickets at the show and lambasted Snidanko in her native tongue. "She came out of the ticket booth and started yelling at Snidanko in Ukrainian," Kruz said. "I still don't know how she knew he was Ukrainian, because I didn't know he was Ukrainian. (But he still) searched everybody. Not my mother, fortunately. I think she would have bopped him over the head if he would have tried it." Kruz became a promoter by accident. A minister at St. John's Shaughnessy Church wanted to throw music gigs for a youth group and asked Kruz if he would set it up. The minister had mistaken Kruz for his older brother Terry, a folksinger. But the 18-year-old didn't let on and on Nov. 6, 1965, the Afterthought made its debut with the folk duo Al & Diane. Al was Allen Garr, now a columnist for the Vancouver Courier. "He was a straight Peter, Paul and Mary folksinger," Kruz said. "Good folksinger, actually, him and Diane." The show was a financial success and in a couple of months, Kruz moved his shows from the St. John's Shaughnessy hall to the Pender Auditorium downtown, and added rock 'n' roll. The tipping point was a show by the Tom Northcott Trio on April 7, 1966. Frank Lewis designed a poster which featured flowers coming out of the top of Northcott's head, which many took to be a drug reference. "I see it as the first psychedelic poster of the era," Kruz said. "If you talk North America, they say the Charlatans in the summer of '65 (in Virginia City, Nev.) was the first one. But I say (the Northcott show) was the first one because there was an actual light show attached to it. And (the poster had) the flowers coming out of the hair, out of his head. "The police and the city gave me trouble, because they said I was suggesting to people that they get stoned. All that did is just sort of trigger me to do farther-out things." The poster called the show an Arty Musi Opti Happening and included the name Sam Perry, although it didn't say why. Perry was integral to the Afterthought because he did the psychedelic light show. "He just appeared in the Pender Auditorium. He said, 'I've got this idea from New York' - not San Francisco, New York. He said, 'People were throwing paint on the walls, and it was called a Happening. I can do the same thing with projection.'" Perry was one of the casualties of the '60s in Vancouver - he committed suicide Nov. 14, 1966, when he was just 26. But Kruz said he was brilliant. "He was way ahead of his time. He was a genius," he said. "Sam was doing things that were just out there in lighting effects, in liquid projection, in screens and movie creations, all that. (And) he was responsible for the first Trips festival in Vancouver." The Trips festival was a psychedelic wonder imported from San Francisco in the summer of 1966, with acts like Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin and the Grateful Dead. Kruz hit it off with Jerry Garcia of the Dead and asked Garcia if the band would like to stay around Vancouver and play the Afterthought the following weekend. "He said, 'Sure,' " Kruz said. "So they hung out for a week, and a lot of craziness happened." The Dead played their first free show, impromptu, on the bandstand at Alexander Park on Beach Avenue in the West End. But the real craziness was Aug. 5, 1966, at the Kits Theatre (now the Russian Hall) at 4th and Arbutus, where Kruz had moved his shows. At the time, the Grateful Dead's soundman was Owsley Stanley, who Rolling Stone dubbed "The King of LSD." "Owsley, during the concert, literally went around dropping acid in everybody's mouths," Kruz said. "It was a very high concert, to put it mildly." It was also very successful. Kruz thinks capacity at the Kits Theatre was 400 to 500, but there were probably 1,000 people when the Dead played.' "It was ridiculous. They were (crammed) in there like sardines. It was shoulder to shoulder." The Grateful Dead show "without question" was the best Afterthought gig. But Kruz also has fond memories of a Country Joe and The Fish show where Country Joe exhorted the audience to smoke dried banana peels. Kruz's book reads like an oral history - he tells little stories related to each Afterthought gig, along with stories of his journey in early 1967 to San Francisco to check out bands. Janis Joplin hit on him at a tiny but legendary San Francisco club called The Matrix. "I spent a whole evening with her. I can't get into details of that or my wife will shoot me," he said with a laugh. "But yes, she was a very beautiful, wonderful lady. She really wanted to come back to Vancouver after playing at the Trips Festival. I was fortunate to spend an evening with her at The Matrix, watching her and drinking Southern Comfort." He didn't book Joplin, but did book Steve Miller after seeing him at The Matrix. Miller convinced him to put "from Chicago" on his Afterthought poster because Miller thought it would bring in more people than "from San Francisco." Unfortunately, just as Kruz's career was getting into high gear, on Oct. 28, 1966, he was busted with two joints and sentenced to three weeks in jail. There, he became hooked on methadone and when he came out, got into heroin. He was busted for possession of pot again and sentenced to 18 months in Oakalla, which he said was "terrifying." "I still get flashes. I had a nightmare just two nights ago, because I watched a TV show and there was a jail scene. And the jail scene flashed me back to when I was in jail. Those are the realities of what happens - it's called post-traumatic stress." While he was in jail, the psychedelic movement exploded. "It crushed me," he said. "I was the promoter (in town), I had it all happening, you know? (My former partner) Roger Schiffer picked up the torch and opened up the Retinal Circus (on Davie Street). There was obviously a lot of resentment (about that)." After his release from jail, Kruz couldn't get a business licence to promote shows because he had a criminal record. So he wound up moving to Vancouver Island and going into social work. At one point, he even worked at the Wilkinson Road prison in Victoria. Kruz is now retired. A few years ago, he started reproducing and selling some of the old Afterthought posters. The owner of Rocky Mountain Books saw his Grateful Dead poster, contacted him and convinced him to do a book. He has had a ton of fun reconnecting with old pals he hasn't seen for decades, noting, "There are people who thought I was dead. A lot, actually." But Jerry Kruz is very much alive - and thanks to his new book, so is the legacy of the Afterthought. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D