THANK YOU for this. Most sources beat around the bush on this story, but you’ve really put in a simple message. This is extremely important and hit me very deeply. Thanks again
I'm glad you're making videos like this. I am a music teacher, and try to convince my young students why taking drugs is not going to help anyone be a better musician.
It helps some never play again. But don't get all moralistic. Pot has helped a million musicians. Spiking with strong LSD is criminal. Coleridge and Wordsworth wrote their classic works under the influence of laudanum. Get your facts right. The Australian military has approved the use of MDMA to treat PTSD. Get your facts right. Micro dosing is helping countless people. Back in the 50's controlled LSD use cured alcoholism. Couldn't have people stop drinking could we. Get your facts straight. Some people react badly to aspirin. Get your facts straight. What happened to Peter Green was an absolute tragedy.
32 here. I finally quit any substances (besides bud, legal state) just bc I got bored of it. Not even beer any more. In hind sight it's blatantly obvious, but got my pity party ass up and learned- What we think the drugs are adding; it was already there. We're just tricking ourselves, like fibbing children, that this "fun" thing will aide in it. Shuuuuuut tf up lol i say to myself every day. Been a few months now. Longest time in bout 10 years. I don't need a congrats. I'm just glad I am who I am and how I respond under the influence. Not many would have made it this far. Man made poison. Man-made poison.
I have always liked blues but never really found one band that I could listen too for hours on end. This was until I recently stumbled upon the earliest Fleetwood Mac albums on Spotify. Absolutely incredible.
I met Peter when we were both on Loose Ends on Radio 4. He was a sweet, gentle guy. BIll Drummond of the KLF was on the same show, we both got Peter's autograph. Thanks for another great video, always compelling.
Brilliant as always James, and so true. I’ve always felt absolutely livid about the tragedy that fell on Peter Green. Such a major loss to music, and his story is truly heartbreaking. I believe he was a lovely chap but a tortured soul who as you say fell victim to his own success. Another great documentary and one everyone should watch, listen and take heed. Thank you mate. RIP Peter Green. 🙏🏻
James , did you enjoy the Peter Green appreciation performance at the Palladium .. Dave Gilmour , Steven Tyler, Pete Townsend , Kirk Hammet and Noel Gallagher jesting ' I bet you lot thought I can't play the Blues 😂' . Stunning concert I recommend to all
We saw them at Pirate's World in Dania Florida about 1969, along with Long John Baldry, and Savoy Brown. GREAT Memorable CONCERT. I taught myself to play drums in 1963. I still play.
@@timmotel5804 I got the chance to see him a lot later in life, it was a very bittersweet evening. He wasn’t really present in any way shape or form, his back up band where kind of doing everything. I really wish I had the opportunity to see him in his prime
It's a shame how people have made Owsley Stanley into this LSD demigod. LSD isn't for everyone, just like alcohol or weed, magic mushrooms or even chocolate ice cream. Not everyone should have everything. Acid is a powerful drug. It needs to be taken with the consent of the person about to have the trip.
I've been spiked a few times. In one town, where I used to play at multiple venues, one night where the crowd pressed right up to where I was set up to play, a guy in a wheelchair kept pestering me to let him sing during my breaks. Now I'm always wary of letting anybody up to sing at my gigs because I'm not a great singer by any stretch of the imagination . . and there's a better than even chance that the interloper would be better at it than I am. Add to that the sympathy quotient of a handicapped guy in a wheelchair, and I could easily lose my crowd for the evening, and even my future bookings in the case of an able-bodied singer usurping me. So, as politely as I knew how to be, I declined the guy's request to let him get up and use my gear during my breaks. That was the last night that I had my drink of water in a regular glass. It is my belief that someone, guess who the prime suspect was in my mind, dropped something in my drink. I remember feeling strange toward the end of my gig, and that night I pissed the bed! Now that reaction to whatever whoever had put in my water made it impossible for me to ever stay the night in that town again. Word would've spread to the other motel owners not to rent me a room for the night, and even though I paid the motel owner in cash, from my earnings the night before at the pub, the price he asked to replace the mattress, from the look in his eyes I knew he'd never forgive me. So from then on I had to drive the four hours to get there, set up and play the four hour gig, dismantle and load out again, and then drive the four hours to get back home. If I had another gig in that general area . . and Australia's a VERY big place . . I'd drive out of that town and sleep in my car at whatever truck stop I could find.
Those cults I hate those groups and they are everywhere in America. Had it been my friend or family member I may be still in prison to say. I walk in and you have spiked his drink. Yeah ! I would black right out. 😤
@@arthurblackhistoricwow! Yeah! I know it's tough I use to go with my buddy all over he's a prominent dj and when I didn't feel like going I would emphasize to watch yourself keep your drink where nobody can get to it if it gets away from you trash it. Get another.
Good Day. Excellent & Sad. So many "great ones" have come and gone. I was born in 1952, and lived a time of wonderful musical happenings. I started playing drums in 1963 and music has always been a central part of my life. Thank You & Best Regards 🎶
Great video as usual. Often bring up Peter's story on a Friday night down the pub. Generally no one is interested and just go back to discussing the footy but at least I try! Stellar video and well researched
Great video as a young kid learning to play guitar I loved Peter green. I still think he is one of the most soulful guitar players I’ve heard. I romanticised the drug side of the band but as I got older I realised creativity has nothing to do with drugs. Living clean and facing your own problems and enjoying the act of creation is the best place. The great work Peter green did was there regardless of the drugs. The thing that was magic was him expressing himself so well through his guitar and voice.
I went through an LSD phase to in the early 1980s. To this day I believe you can trip 50 times and have a perfectly enlightened time. It only takes one time to accidentally take to much or get ahold of some bad acid. For around 3 years I took LSD occasionally. Then I had the most terrifying trip. It left me in a state I thought was permanent. For a week I couldn't get back to normal. My two friends who dropped cid with me had the same experience. I don't recommend anyone taking LSD even once. There's a 50/50 chance you'll stay tripping for the rest of your life. Example Syd Barrett, Peter Green
@@joeshoe6184Yeh, it's obviously an off the cuff percentage. What would be a low enough percentage to risk the loss of your mind and life to risk it? You are gambling with your brain as collateral.
I had the same experience in the 80s, did it for about 3 years, then it started making me really paranoid, then all drugs made me paranoid, I quit all drugs and never did them again
My favourite era from Fleetwood Mac's career. I adore Peter Green and Danny Kirwan together and Jeremy Spencer is very talented, yet so underrated. Then Play On is one of my top favourite albums of all time. I'd also call it my favourite guitar album as it did make a very special impact on me when I was learning lead guitar. It was such a tragic shame through Peter's and Danny's mental health after the incident and their time with FM. Danny's being different to Peter's but it was still awful. Their signature, inspirational sounds of playing guitar still is mesmerising and always will be.
Thanks James. This is the most insightful analysis of what happened to Peter that I've seen so far. For background, I turned 18 in in 1970, and being an aspiring Brit blues guitarist (still am) was a huge fan, had their first two albums. I had a similar experience with psychedelics after a horrendous trip almost destroyed my ego for a couple of years. Long story short, I made it out the other end, older and somewhat wiser. I dropped acid one more time after that just to see what would happen; maybe I wasn't that much wiser after all! Things to mention: I don't think you put enough emphasis on the part that money and success played. In my case, if I hadn't had to pull something together due to having to make some kind of living I'd have been on that same, long hard road downhill. Thanks again , Mark.
Thank you for telling this story. It needs to be told over and over again. Peter Green was absolutely one of the best guitar players ever. And then it all was interrupted.
Wow, I always enjoy your content but this one was something else. I play guitar and sing in a blues band. Peter Green has been a prime influence for me. I could'nt help but feel sad and emotional about this episode. Peter really was the man of the world. Keep up the great work James, many thanks.
I'm a recovering freelance pharmaceutical stuntman, and I've seen drugs destroy far more people than help them. If you're susceptible to it, then you're in trouble. I've seen people develop psychosis from speed, weed, and acid. It's pure luck that I'm not permanently altered, but when you're young, you think you're invincible, that nothing will happen, and it's only decades later when you look back and realise it. I enjoyed every stupid, hedonistic minute of it, but I escaped unscathed. I know people who are deeply messed up who didn't dive in with both feet like I did.
Doctors are the worst case for turning patients into zombies or making them suicidal. The other problem is people self medicating. The medical profession should be targeted before any war on drugs.
@@2porangi lol, there is no such thing. hydro is just plants grown with water as a substrate, as opposed to soil. the only differences are some cultivars have varying cannabinoid concentrations. the main factor in strength is the environment and the availability of nutrients. weed from the 70s is the same as today but over time we have picked out the most vigorous ones. you have more chance of alcohol being the issue
Thanks James, I think I've learned more about Peter Green's metamorphosis in the last 33 minutes than I have in all the years previously. I'm 77 now, I was in that hippy era, it felt great at the time; I even used hallucinogenics. Like the song says: 'I wished I'd known what I know now when I was younger.' And if you believe in predestination my life's course was meant to be as it has been. I'm a writer/poet; I've produced and 'self published' my last 2 collections this year. So far they've been met with a deafening silence. I certainly understand the 'God' complex, in my case it's been a tortured Christ wearing his crown of thrones and dragging my cross along with one arm of it draped over my shoulder.
Spot on. It's heinous that the Grateful Dead crew would spike drinks with LSD. They saw it as comedy. There's a story in Phil Lesh's book about them spiking bottles of Heineken for the security when they played in Germany. He thought it was funny that he saw a police officer with a pool of piss at his feet and scared out of his mind. There's major karmic retribution for these actions.
@@davidcollin1436 I know that extremely well. My good friend Greg and a girl he was hanging out with were murdered in Ventura California at a Rainbow Family encampment at a park.
I think Peter Green had the genes for schizophrenia, the drugs just flicked those genes on like a switch. Anyone can succumb to drug induced psychosis but the majority with the correct care and environment come back down to earth. I think too much emphasis is put on the Munich incident, often by the band. Everybody in the group was great in their own right but, Peter was the 'golden goose' i think the emphasis on Munich is to kinda absolve their guilt of not seeing Peter's problems sooner and sending him home to rest and recuperate. That being said he was his own man and probably couldnt have been told otherwise.
@SpartanDragonDXD I love him and it genuinely saddens me when I think of the downward trajectory he took after shining so brightly ....but every member of the band has a different account of what went down and it kinda reeks of 'pouring it on a bit too thick'. Just my two cents
@ralphjones9903 prior to acid and a life in music, Syd as a teen was talking about being able to telepathically communicate with aliens. So yeah the seeds where already there and drugs and a lifestyle made it come to life
What effect did the electro shock therapy he was subjected to have on his condition? It arguably made things exponentially worse. Has there ever been any accountability or reckoning for the doctors (and the health system) who had him institutionalized and essentially ran experiments on him based on junk science that today we would consider abusive?
Electroconvulsive therapy is still usef and it is actually very effective for psychosis and depression that is refractory to medications. Today it's administered in multiple treatments at reduced voltage compared to decades ago. This drastically reduces the risk to memory and risk of inducing seizures. Sure, it can be abused by unscrupulous psychiatrists who take a maximalist approach too quickly but that doesn't mean it isn't useful or practical when used correctly and on the right subset of patients.
@madamkir It was the only thing that helped my auntie back in the 50s. They had tried everything else over a period of nearly two years to no avail. It was pretty much a last resort to help her especially as she had three little children . She went on to live a remarkably healthy life both mentally and physically. She lived to the age of 87. As an aunt she was very much the one we went to with things you didn't want to talk about with your parents. So it worked for her , she talked about it openly .
Jan 17, 1970 I was in the Seattle's Eagle's auditorium right balcony right over Peter Green's head as they did Fleetwood Mac performed the Play On album performance.
And I was at the Fillmore West in March of that year where there was an announcement notice stating that Peter Green would not be appearing with the band that night. Christine Mcvie filled in, or could have been there to augment the band as she had on albums. Jeremy Spencer left the band a few days later to join up with a whack job religious cult. Don't research anymore about that as it is stomach turning. JS is a sick F.
Had the pleasure of seeing Peter in the lakes playing live thanks to good mates getting me a ticket My god wtf was Peter given in Munich. One of the best gigs I've seen no wonder people feel robbed of such a guitarist
I was playing in San Francisco 1966 to 69 acid was legal. People thought they could fly were jumping out of windows and there was all kinds of bad trips. This is I feel what happened to Peter Green absolutely one of the greatest blues guitar players ever and definitely the first in the UK. I spoke with jimmy page once and he had a great amount of respect for Peter green. His singing was also something that was spectacular complementing his musicality as a guitar player. I saw the band in maybe 67 at the shrine auditorium. It’s always been a heartbreaking Riddle what happened to Peter Green
And LSD became a federally-prohibited, publicly-illegal Schedule I narcotic with no legitimate medical use or purpose according to the then-BNDD (future: DEA) in San Francisco & the rest of California, as well as the entirety of the United States, on 10/6/1966.
@@joeshoe6184October 66. I knew it was way before 1969 so I looked it up. Peter was not the first great blue's guitar player in the UK. Clapton preceded him in J Mayall & BB for one and he had been playing blues in the Yardbirds previously. He left when they wanted to go commercial. Not sure who would have been the first, but it definitely wasn't Peter.
Depends on the dosage .I took my first and only microdot and it was so strong I j shut down internally and no memory at all of what was going on for about 5 hrs then I started to come back and was so disappointed I couldnt recall anything.Luckily the friends I was with steered and directed me in the right direction otherwise anything could have happened.I would do it again but the rule of thumb is take less as you can always take more but if you take too much you cant take less and may well regret it.Agreed ; spiking is a terrible trick to play on anyone. RIP Peter Green
Yes, the Syd Barrett and Peter Green stories are two sides of the same coin, really. The Syd Barrett "story", if you will, has become much more mythologized and well known over the years because of how Floyd incorporated his descent into madness on several of their songs. Peter's tragedy, on the other hand, was largely lost until rather recently, perhaps because of UA-cam, and Mick Fleetwood's attempt to keep his legacy alive.
Green and Clapton, in that order, are, IMHO, the 2 most important Rock/Blues guitarists to study for how to create melodic solo "phrasing". They took BB Kings' style to another level. Such a shame we didn't get 50 more years of that "Peter Greens Fleetwood Mac".
The part from 17:10 onwards reminds me of John Frusciante's solo work during his heroin addiction - he was convinced it was beautiful, spiritual music and whilst there are parts that are intriguing musically, it does sound like a mental breakdown put onto tape.
Great video! With the depth of investigation you did, I would love to see how the Munich event drove Jeremy Spencer into the Children of God cult and Danny Kirwin into his own madness. The Munich incident had more victims than just Peter.
I totally agree with what you say about drugs pushing someone past the point of madness. We grew up in the 90s, past the days of LSD but mushrooms were very popular. I had a cousin who grew them, and his were the absolute best. I'd get them for everyone in my school, and eventually stopped when I'd see some kids having almost permanent effects. I'm sober 5yrs now, but between weed and mushrooms, years of coke and heroin plus whatever pills, I only now feel like I'm starting to return to my normal self.
The book 'Fleetwood' covers this era of the band. Cults, LSD, and mental illness was suddenly a staple issue for the band for a few years. Its a miracle they endured long enough as a band to hire Lindsay and Stevie.
I really like your videos, and a huge early Fleetwood Mac fan,and while I have a lot of things that I do feel need to be more established (specifically the sides of this story on some of the people mentioned in this video), It is a great thought out video none the less.
I saw PG in Birmingham, England, in the early 90's, with the late Cozy Powell on the drums, at Ronny Scotts. It blew my mind. The skill of PG and the relentlessness of CP, and I do remember the base player, also relentless. It is a kodak moment for me
I recall watching the BBC4 doc that featured this Munich incident. That, after watching your superb video was just a fraction of the story. Thank you for making this and, again painting the FULL picture. 👍👍
Thank you for this, Green is right behind Syd Barrett as one of my favorite guitarist and tragic what-could-have-been figures. I actually really enjoy his instrumental END OF THE GAME album which he made after he left FLEETWOOD MAC, It's fascinating he joined the MAC for a little your of the States 1971 as an emergency replacement for Jeremy Spencer.
Check out the book weird scenes in the canyon, goes in depth on the MK Ultra stuff going on in the LA scene in the 60s hugely eye opening with so much facts backed up, a lot of weird cult stuff going on surrounding bands in the 60s and 70s, Bowie had a similar experience with these kinds of people
@@simonwebster1148Excellent book! The Bavaria/Nazi connection is very real. I’m sure James will eventually debunk it.. not the first time I’ve had a comment on one of his videos removed after touching on these kind of topics.
@@ianlewis777 yeah that book blew my mind right open, can’t see how any one could deny all the connections after reading it, there’s no getting out the rabbit hole after that. You may be interested in listening to this guy Thomas Sheridan talking about the music scene back then where he makes a link that the process church of the final Judgement may have been/still are doing things around bands and artists ua-cam.com/video/DRVlWyDKrYg/v-deo.htmlsi=Ioh1fbJKQqgwzsqr
This added a lot to my understanding of Peter Green and what happened to him. A tragic tale. Has that “LSD tape” ever been leaked or released? It would be interesting to hear it.
I saw Peter Green and the original Fleetwood Mac play at the Greens Playhouse in Glasgow in 1970. His rendering of " Need your love so bad " was unforgettable and rivetting. It brought the house down and captured your very heart. He really needed someone so bad to love him for who he was, if it had happened, my guess is Munich would never have occured.
Peter Green has, and always will be one of the greatest guitarists this country has ever produced. His effortless vibrato, the slides, the note choices, everything about his playing was magnificent. And Oh Well Part two is just off the scale for me, so personal, so bluesy, so painful also. Doesn't Kirk Hammett have Peter's famous Les Paul with the inverted neck humbucker?
He sold his Les Paul to Gary Moore around 1972. Gary played it until he sold it in 2006, due to financial difficulties. A few dealers had the guitar until Hammett bought it from a dealer in 2014.
11/10 I worked in addiction services as a volunteer. Long term drug abuse can begin as a kind of self medication to escape the trauma of being raised in a hostile environment, but it all comes at a price and with a sting in the tail. One of the things you see is grown adults acting like teenagers. The drugs destroy their inhibitions and they don't know the difference between what's safe or dangerous, help or harm or being in or out of trouble. They don't do it deliberately or with any malice, they just walk blindly into situations others would avoid or safeguard themselves against. They don't mean to cause harm but they're drawn to it like a magnet, because of the damage the drugs have done to their minds. I don't think it's creative at all. It's destructive. I play the guitar a bit. I tried to get a wee band going with them. Me and just one of them did one gig. The rest of them were out of it. If there was the least way to screw up they found it. But we had a good recovery rate and about 60% became drug free after a year or two.
spiking someone with an hallucinogen is a terrible prank and can be quite harmful. that's how 3 of the beatles first experienced Lsd. they were at a dinner party at their dentist's home and he put it in their coffee. but in my experience (and the beatles') most people who voluntarily take Lsd have a wondrous & harmless experience. not that i still do it- that was the '60's...
This post directed to me by YT algorithm. I'd heard the story, but this exploration was interesting. I believe that the spiking may have been STP - but it doesn't really matter. The similarity to Brian Wilson is well made. Peter was obviously away in his own world for a very long time. His Splinter Group stuff is still so good - his Robert Johnson covers are excellent. Regards to all.
It’s funny that you would mention STP. I had a close friend who was given STP at an Emerson, Lake and Palmer concert and she wound up permanently psychotic.
@@RickCarter-o7w Yes - Being an oldie, I was a young man in 1974. During the Spring of that year, STP spiked Columbian appeared in London and wreaked havoc. Ridiculously powerful stuff - think Carlos Castenada (Now there's a blast from the past).
I was lucky to see Peter Green live with band in Melbourne 14 years ago.I recorded the whole concert and is available on you tube. It was great evening .Day before in the same place played John Mayall, shaked his hand and get autograph on his CD.After "In the Sky" and "Little Dreamer" I waited with hope for some new music from him. Sad that his life gone so wrong.
Interesting, something that PG would never really admit, but what I had long suspected is that he was a frequent user of LSD, as opposed to what he said about taking it 6-7 times. You do realize that when they’re talking about a 2nd person at the party locked in a trip with PG and also severely mentally damaged thereafter, they’re not talking about Dennis Keane, they’re talking about Danny Kirwan, the other Guitar player. In the same way as Jimi Hendrix and countless others, the Industry fucked them over, they needed a long break with no drugs and good people around them, unfortunately, they never got that chance.
Yeah there seems to be a constant mix up over who was actually there, but the vast majority of people seem to say it was Peter and Dennis not Peter and Danny, so I have assumed people have got Dennis mixed up with Danny in certain places
Very well done and important video. Drugs, sex, and rock and roll has been a mantra for decades, half a century or more. But, there are casualties of war. A life without drugs and alcohol, in balance, and with a strong God connection, is the key to positive creativity without losing yourself or your soul. Avoid drugs and cults. Manson and his family destroyed the Laurel Canyon scene and all its creativity. Some survived and thrived, but some did not.
I really loved Peter. Green's muic and while searching for "Oh well", I ran across this video and the words "Owsley Stanley... the sound engineer of the Greatful Dead" jumped out at me. In 1968, my best friend from high school who I hadn't seen since I had moved away two years before after my sophomore year of high school... by chance had a happy reunion at the Electric Factory in Philadelphia. He was dealing a bit and he fronted me the best 4-way LSD tablets and hashish. It was far better than anything I had or any of my friends that had before or after. The LSD was incredible beyond description and I was told that it was "White Owsley" made by the chemist for the Grateful Dead. We did some of it together and we wound up at a bizarre high School graduation pool party at my friend's house who is the class president... and later also the Glass View diner.The first experience was amazingly, but the repetition burried me. I apparently did too much of it and I lost my way. I don't know if my severe childhood ADHD and dyslexia had something to do with it but I became perma-spaced and got so wrecked at a party that I wound up at a bizarre commune where I lived for several years. I lost touch with reality so badly that I could not understand what people were saying to me. I also couldn't keep track of what I was saying to other people. I was also suffering a major broken heart at the end of my first true love. In everyday conversations, I would nod my head affirmatively like I understood...but when people realized that I didn't, they would lose patience and walk away. It was terrifying to be trapped inside my incapacitation for 3 or 4 years till I began to come out of it. I wanted to die but I couldn't force myself to do that. It probably took another several decades to recover. I still owe my best friend the money. There are a few mistakes in life that I really regretted and revisited in my thoughts hundreds of times that I still feel awful beyond description about....that I never paid my friend and I lost touch with him are among them.
You're right James, someone with an already fragile sense of self being spiked is the worst thing that could've happened. Jim Morrison was another who nonchalantly experimented with LSD and I think never recovered.
LSD didn't affect Jim Morrison like it did Peter Green, Syd Barrett, and Brian Wilson. He never went into constant freak out mode, or had mental problems becauseof it. Alcohol was what got Jim in trouble, and caused him to do stupid stuff. But Jim remained perfectly aware, intelligent, and alert up until his death.
@@Iondeen I've never heard a single person say, or even hint that Jim had mental problems. None of the doors, friends of Jim, nor any of the biographers ever mentioned anything about him having mental problems. You're the only person I've ever heard even bring it up. Did he do crazy stuff while drunk? Yes, but everyone that drinks does crazy things. Jim didn't have mental problems. If someone were to make a diagnosis from watching the doors movie they might come to that conclusion, but the movie wasn't an accurate portrayal of Jim. Ray Manzarek said he wouldn't have hung out with the Jim in that movie.
Man, what a crying shame. My wife had a great uncle who passed several years ago. He was a casualty of LSD. He was a bright young man who ended up with the mental capacity of a young child, who could not hold a coherent conversation and had no idea what was going on around him. He had to live with his parents until they passed, then was at a mental health facility for the rest of his life as he was left unable to care for himself. He was brought to a couple family gatherings, people were happy to see him, but then grew uncomfortable around him pretty quickly. He just was not really there. Sad to say, but the family was almost relieved when he passed.
I experimented with LSD starting in 1966. My first trip took place at a most unopportune time, at least for me. I took it with a friend during a teen demonstration in front of the "Pandora's Box" nightclub on the Sunset Strip in LA, the same protest that the Buffalo Springfield wrote a song about called, "For What It's Worth" (remember the verse, "Some people carryin' signs mostly saying hooray for our side"?? One of them was me). When a bunch of us were rounded up by the riot police for being out after 10PM while under the age of 18, I found myself being interrogated by an overly zealous LA County Sheriff Department leiutenant while hallucinating on my very first trip, but luckily he just thought my extreme nervousness was just because I was 16 and in a police station, but I will never, ever forget the singular insanity of that horrible hour of terror and fear. After that, several of my school chums started taking acid, and a few flipped out and were never the same, especially my best friend. After a few bad trips he totally changed and was never the same again. He started acting strangely, never left his apartment, and I never saw him again. So when I heard about Peter Green, I knew exactly what had happened to him in an instant. LSD when used intelligently was an amazing drug, but when used improperly, and especially during a difficult emotional time, can lead to permanent personality changes, as so obviously seen in the tragedy of one of the greatest blues guitarists who ever lived. I only hope he eventually grew out of the mental damage that this experience had caused him.
I saw Him on tour with BB King in Leeds England a sort of comeback tour a good few years ago. He was obviously not well and being carried by the band. B.B King and his band were however magnificent. A very interesting video thanks.
Its pretty clear that Uschi Obermaier was a MH Chaos agent out of Berlin. MH Chaos's #1 purpose was do discredit (or worse) anyone talking about Hippy love and not needing money or communes. And Peter had been giving interviews about all these things before flying to Berlin. And all those weird CIA projects had training centers in Berlin due to the Cold War. Brother walked right into the spider web. Next thing you know Hendrix was hanging out with Uschi. There's fairly famous photos of him walking her from their hotel to a taxi. Then Hendrix was gone fairly soon afterwards with all kinds of nonsense statements from (also a German) Monika Dannemann. Then Monika died under strange circumstances. I think Uschi Obermaier was Rainer Langhans' CIA handler as he experimented with communism. They wanted someone very close to him. The house/ estate the LSD party took place in can be google earthed at 48 degrees 00'22.75 North and 11 Degrees 08' 46.20 East in Germany.
I did acid when I stayed in Germany 1971, although I did acid in the UK on several occasions it was nothing like this encounter in Frankfurt. I realised something was amiss when the American girl supplying this shit didn't take the it herself, the rest freaked. I was so alarmed by the experience afterwards I returned to the UK a few weeks later, a changed man. What did I learn, strong minded individuals faired far better than easier going types like myself. On returning to the UK I married a great girl who opened my eye's to a new life, to her I am eternally grateful but for Peter Green who I think of quite a lot my heart still saddens
Wow, You got more information outin 30 mins than all the other docs out there, even a pic of the weird Germans. I guess the other docs go on to long about the green dog dream and you have focused on the people and situations. Then the interview of Peter at the end was very cool. Its great to see He got to enjoy music again before he passed. He was right though, then world was full of starving people back then and I think he said what he makes from one show could feed village and Ive heard he fed alot of people
Hi James, great documentary. I would love to see you dive into Brian Wilson’s relationship with Dr Eugene Landy and how that changed him mentally and physically over the years as well as his relationship with members of the beach boys. It’s such a fascinating story that I would love to hear you talk about. Thanks.
I'm very familiar with those days . I had seen Fleetwood Mac with Peter in Detroit around 1970 . It was actually the drummer Mick that went berserk during the show when I'd seen them .
I’m a retired mental health professional. I have worked in secure hospitals and the community, in the UK. Drugs even cannabis were a frequent cause of psychosis. It was very difficult to convince people to stop, even with evidence. People believe what they want to believe and disregard the rest…
I met him in 12 Bar club on Denmark St early 2000 he kept say he knew me from before another life. It was only when he left the bar staff told me who he was I didn’t have a clue.
It was only when I see him later on a doc with that green hat on that I recognised him. Exactly like you see him in interviews…it’s pretty unforgettable
I saw them live in June 1968 in San Francisco at the West Coast Fillmore. Alvin Lee's Ten Years After was on the bill that night too. I had never heard of wither of them.
I have C-PTSD and ive always been an open minded creative person Lsd has always been great for me. Its like anything from coffee to heroin, some people can't take any some people can have it everyday for years. Survivorship bias also plays a lot in to peoples minds when considering trying drugs recreational or otherwise
THANK YOU for this. Most sources beat around the bush on this story, but you’ve really put in a simple message. This is extremely important and hit me very deeply. Thanks again
I'm glad you're making videos like this. I am a music teacher, and try to convince my young students why taking drugs is not going to help anyone be a better musician.
The drugs will help you into an early grave though. Ask the 27 club.
It helps some never play again.
But don't get all moralistic.
Pot has helped a million musicians.
Spiking with strong LSD is criminal.
Coleridge and Wordsworth wrote their classic works under the influence of laudanum. Get your facts right.
The Australian military has approved the use of MDMA to treat PTSD.
Get your facts right.
Micro dosing is helping countless people.
Back in the 50's controlled LSD use cured alcoholism. Couldn't have people stop drinking could we.
Get your facts straight.
Some people react badly to aspirin.
Get your facts straight.
What happened to Peter Green was an absolute tragedy.
32 here. I finally quit any substances (besides bud, legal state) just bc I got bored of it. Not even beer any more. In hind sight it's blatantly obvious, but got my pity party ass up and learned-
What we think the drugs are adding; it was already there.
We're just tricking ourselves, like fibbing children, that this "fun" thing will aide in it.
Shuuuuuut tf up lol i say to myself every day. Been a few months now. Longest time in bout 10 years.
I don't need a congrats. I'm just glad I am who I am and how I respond under the influence. Not many would have made it this far.
Man made poison.
Man-made poison.
@@robomaster4882😳
I love Peter Green and the music he gave us. A man of pure talent and those studio and live songs he did with them are hard to top.
I have always liked blues but never really found one band that I could listen too for hours on end. This was until I recently stumbled upon the earliest Fleetwood Mac albums on Spotify. Absolutely incredible.
I met Peter when we were both on Loose Ends on Radio 4. He was a sweet, gentle guy. BIll Drummond of the KLF was on the same show, we both got Peter's autograph. Thanks for another great video, always compelling.
Damn now there's a wild fucking combo, Peter Green and half of the KLF!!
Who's KLF?
Brilliant as always James, and so true. I’ve always felt absolutely livid about the tragedy that fell on Peter Green. Such a major loss to music, and his story is truly heartbreaking. I believe he was a lovely chap but a tortured soul who as you say fell victim to his own success. Another great documentary and one everyone should watch, listen and take heed. Thank you mate. RIP Peter Green. 🙏🏻
Cheers Mark 👍👍
James , did you enjoy the Peter Green appreciation performance at the Palladium .. Dave Gilmour , Steven Tyler, Pete Townsend , Kirk Hammet and Noel Gallagher jesting ' I bet you lot thought I can't play the Blues 😂' .
Stunning concert I recommend to all
@@jamesmilne8264thanks for posting I've never heard of it
Early Fleetwood Mac is some of the most important music of my lifetime, I was so blessed that my father showed me these things at a young age ❤
English Rose is a good one
@@duelenigma7732 such a good album album 🔥🔥
We saw them at Pirate's World in Dania Florida about 1969, along with Long John Baldry, and Savoy Brown. GREAT Memorable CONCERT.
I taught myself to play drums in 1963. I still play.
@@timmotel5804 I got the chance to see him a lot later in life, it was a very bittersweet evening. He wasn’t really present in any way shape or form, his back up band where kind of doing everything. I really wish I had the opportunity to see him in his prime
Spiking is one of the most heinous things anyone can do
It's a shame how people have made Owsley Stanley into this LSD demigod. LSD isn't for everyone, just like alcohol or weed, magic mushrooms or even chocolate ice cream. Not everyone should have everything. Acid is a powerful drug. It needs to be taken with the consent of the person about to have the trip.
I've been spiked a few times. In one town, where I used to play at multiple venues, one night where the crowd pressed right up to where I was set up to play, a guy in a wheelchair kept pestering me to let him sing during my breaks. Now I'm always wary of letting anybody up to sing at my gigs because I'm not a great singer by any stretch of the imagination . . and there's a better than even chance that the interloper would be better at it than I am. Add to that the sympathy quotient of a handicapped guy in a wheelchair, and I could easily lose my crowd for the evening, and even my future bookings in the case of an able-bodied singer usurping me. So, as politely as I knew how to be, I declined the guy's request to let him get up and use my gear during my breaks. That was the last night that I had my drink of water in a regular glass. It is my belief that someone, guess who the prime suspect was in my mind, dropped something in my drink. I remember feeling strange toward the end of my gig, and that night I pissed the bed! Now that reaction to whatever whoever had put in my water made it impossible for me to ever stay the night in that town again. Word would've spread to the other motel owners not to rent me a room for the night, and even though I paid the motel owner in cash, from my earnings the night before at the pub, the price he asked to replace the mattress, from the look in his eyes I knew he'd never forgive me. So from then on I had to drive the four hours to get there, set up and play the four hour gig, dismantle and load out again, and then drive the four hours to get back home. If I had another gig in that general area . . and Australia's a VERY big place . . I'd drive out of that town and sleep in my car at whatever truck stop I could find.
@@arthurblackhistoric toss pots they are. keep on keepin on
Those cults I hate those groups and they are everywhere in America. Had it been my friend or family member I may be still in prison to say. I walk in and you have spiked his drink. Yeah ! I would black right out. 😤
@@arthurblackhistoricwow! Yeah! I know it's tough I use to go with my buddy all over he's a prominent dj and when I didn't feel like going I would emphasize to watch yourself keep your drink where nobody can get to it if it gets away from you trash it. Get another.
Good Day. Excellent & Sad. So many "great ones" have come and gone. I was born in 1952, and lived a time of wonderful musical happenings. I started playing drums in 1963 and music has always been a central part of my life.
Thank You & Best Regards 🎶
Great video as usual. Often bring up Peter's story on a Friday night down the pub. Generally no one is interested and just go back to discussing the footy but at least I try! Stellar video and well researched
Great video as a young kid learning to play guitar I loved Peter green. I still think he is one of the most soulful guitar players I’ve heard. I romanticised the drug side of the band but as I got older I realised creativity has nothing to do with drugs. Living clean and facing your own problems and enjoying the act of creation is the best place. The great work Peter green did was there regardless of the drugs. The thing that was magic was him expressing himself so well through his guitar and voice.
Thank you for a excellent documentary about how sometimes drugs can mess you around.
I went through an LSD phase to in the early 1980s. To this day I believe you can trip 50 times and have a perfectly enlightened time. It only takes one time to accidentally take to much or get ahold of some bad acid. For around 3 years I took LSD occasionally. Then I had the most terrifying trip. It left me in a state I thought was permanent. For a week I couldn't get back to normal. My two friends who dropped cid with me had the same experience. I don't recommend anyone taking LSD even once. There's a 50/50 chance you'll stay tripping for the rest of your life. Example Syd Barrett, Peter Green
So true. Thank you for stating this.
50 50 chance? Sorry but that's utterly ridiculous.
@@joeshoe6184Yeh, it's obviously an off the cuff percentage. What would be a low enough percentage to risk the loss of your mind and life to risk it? You are gambling with your brain as collateral.
You are absolutely right. It breaks my heart when I think of the damage it caused to several of my friends.
I had the same experience in the 80s, did it for about 3 years, then it started making me really paranoid, then all drugs made me paranoid, I quit all drugs and never did them again
My favourite era from Fleetwood Mac's career. I adore Peter Green and Danny Kirwan together and Jeremy Spencer is very talented, yet so underrated. Then Play On is one of my top favourite albums of all time. I'd also call it my favourite guitar album as it did make a very special impact on me when I was learning lead guitar. It was such a tragic shame through Peter's and Danny's mental health after the incident and their time with FM. Danny's being different to Peter's but it was still awful. Their signature, inspirational sounds of playing guitar still is mesmerising and always will be.
Thanks James. This is the most insightful analysis of what happened to Peter that I've seen so far. For background, I turned 18 in in 1970, and being an aspiring Brit blues guitarist (still am) was a huge fan, had their first two albums. I had a similar experience with psychedelics after a horrendous trip almost destroyed my ego for a couple of years. Long story short, I made it out the other end, older and somewhat wiser. I dropped acid one more time after that just to see what would happen; maybe I wasn't that much wiser after all! Things to mention: I don't think you put enough emphasis on the part that money and success played. In my case, if I hadn't had to pull something together due to having to make some kind of living I'd have been on that same, long hard road downhill. Thanks again , Mark.
Thank you for telling this story. It needs to be told over and over again. Peter Green was absolutely one of the best guitar players ever. And then it all was interrupted.
Wow, I always enjoy your content but this one was something else. I play guitar and sing in a blues band. Peter Green has been a prime influence for me. I could'nt help but feel sad and emotional about this episode. Peter really was the man of the world.
Keep up the great work James, many thanks.
Amazing player. Amazing singer and songwriter. He wrote Green manalishi, rattlesnake shake, albatross, oh well...masterpieces.
Peter Green had such perfect tone and was a brilliant song writer
I'm a recovering freelance pharmaceutical stuntman, and I've seen drugs destroy far more people than help them. If you're susceptible to it, then you're in trouble. I've seen people develop psychosis from speed, weed, and acid. It's pure luck that I'm not permanently altered, but when you're young, you think you're invincible, that nothing will happen, and it's only decades later when you look back and realise it. I enjoyed every stupid, hedonistic minute of it, but I escaped unscathed. I know people who are deeply messed up who didn't dive in with both feet like I did.
Doctors are the worst case for turning patients into zombies or making them suicidal. The other problem is people self medicating. The medical profession should be targeted before any war on drugs.
I smoked extra strong hydro weed 20 years ago and have suffered from clostiphobia ever since.
@@2porangi lol, there is no such thing. hydro is just plants grown with water as a substrate, as opposed to soil. the only differences are some cultivars have varying cannabinoid concentrations. the main factor in strength is the environment and the availability of nutrients. weed from the 70s is the same as today but over time we have picked out the most vigorous ones. you have more chance of alcohol being the issue
Good testimony this, thanks for sharing and Im glad you survived.
@@rubievale I too have seen "the needle and the damage done". And it's not just by way of the needle.
Great video, so well put together and with an absolutely spot-on assessment of the dangers of LSD outside clinical settings
Thanks James, I think I've learned more about Peter Green's metamorphosis in the last 33 minutes than I have in all the years previously. I'm 77 now, I was in that hippy era, it felt great at the time; I even used hallucinogenics. Like the song says: 'I wished I'd known what I know now when I was younger.' And if you believe in predestination my life's course was meant to be as it has been. I'm a writer/poet; I've produced and 'self published' my last 2 collections this year. So far they've been met with a deafening silence. I certainly understand the 'God' complex, in my case it's been a tortured Christ wearing his crown of thrones and dragging my cross along with one arm of it draped over my shoulder.
Great video. These stories are always so sad and too common from this era, Skip Spence. Roky Erikson and, of course, Syd Barrett
These videos seem to be speaking directly to me. This and the one about Noel. Thanks mate.
Spot on. It's heinous that the Grateful Dead crew would spike drinks with LSD. They saw it as comedy. There's a story in Phil Lesh's book about them spiking bottles of Heineken for the security when they played in Germany. He thought it was funny that he saw a police officer with a pool of piss at his feet and scared out of his mind. There's major karmic retribution for these actions.
They had psychopaths in their "family"
@@davidcollin1436 I know that extremely well. My good friend Greg and a girl he was hanging out with were murdered in Ventura California at a Rainbow Family encampment at a park.
Timothy Leary is ultimately to blame.
@@rumpraisinhe was a government asset following others imo
They were different times if you were not there you could never understand..
I think Peter Green had the genes for schizophrenia, the drugs just flicked those genes on like a switch. Anyone can succumb to drug induced psychosis but the majority with the correct care and environment come back down to earth. I think too much emphasis is put on the Munich incident, often by the band. Everybody in the group was great in their own right but, Peter was the 'golden goose' i think the emphasis on Munich is to kinda absolve their guilt of not seeing Peter's problems sooner and sending him home to rest and recuperate. That being said he was his own man and probably couldnt have been told otherwise.
One of the only sensible takes I've read in these comments
@SpartanDragonDXD I love him and it genuinely saddens me when I think of the downward trajectory he took after shining so brightly ....but every member of the band has a different account of what went down and it kinda reeks of 'pouring it on a bit too thick'. Just my two cents
Same unfortunately occured with Syd Barrett .
@ralphjones9903 prior to acid and a life in music, Syd as a teen was talking about being able to telepathically communicate with aliens. So yeah the seeds where already there and drugs and a lifestyle made it come to life
You might be right. Just like Brian Wilson, and Sid Barrett.
Always be humble and grateful ❤
Very well presented and just so sad.
What effect did the electro shock therapy he was subjected to have on his condition? It arguably made things exponentially worse. Has there ever been any accountability or reckoning for the doctors (and the health system) who had him institutionalized and essentially ran experiments on him based on junk science that today we would consider abusive?
Electroconvulsive therapy is still usef and it is actually very effective for psychosis and depression that is refractory to medications. Today it's administered in multiple treatments at reduced voltage compared to decades ago. This drastically reduces the risk to memory and risk of inducing seizures.
Sure, it can be abused by unscrupulous psychiatrists who take a maximalist approach too quickly but that doesn't mean it isn't useful or practical when used correctly and on the right subset of patients.
CCHR is an organization that exposes psychiatric abuses like this.
@therach7841 False. Sad that you state it has such benefits. Study the Hippocratic Oath .
ECT fcuked me up in 1981. Never fully recovered from that evil shit
@madamkir It was the only thing that helped my auntie back in the 50s. They had tried everything else over a period of nearly two years to no avail. It was pretty much a last resort to help her especially as she had three little children .
She went on to live a remarkably healthy life both mentally and physically. She lived to the age of 87. As an aunt she was very much the one we went to with things you didn't want to talk about with your parents.
So it worked for her , she talked about it openly .
Jan 17, 1970 I was in the Seattle's Eagle's auditorium right balcony right over Peter Green's head as they did Fleetwood Mac performed the Play On album performance.
And I was at the Fillmore West in March of that year where there was an announcement notice stating that Peter Green would not be appearing with the band that night. Christine Mcvie filled in, or could have been there to augment the band as she had on albums. Jeremy Spencer left the band a few days later to join up with a whack job religious cult. Don't research anymore about that as it is stomach turning. JS is a sick F.
Had the pleasure of seeing Peter in the lakes playing live thanks to good mates getting me a ticket
My god wtf was Peter given in Munich.
One of the best gigs I've seen no wonder people feel robbed of such a guitarist
Excellent documentary , thanks, so sad, i always wondered what happened.
I was playing in San Francisco 1966 to 69 acid was legal. People thought they could fly were jumping out of windows and there was all kinds of bad trips. This is I feel what happened to Peter Green absolutely one of the greatest blues guitar players ever and definitely the first in the UK. I spoke with jimmy page once and he had a great amount of respect for Peter green. His singing was also something that was spectacular complementing his musicality as a guitar player. I saw the band in maybe 67 at the shrine auditorium. It’s always been a heartbreaking Riddle what happened to Peter Green
It was the STP that was the culprit..
And LSD became a federally-prohibited, publicly-illegal Schedule I narcotic with no legitimate medical use or purpose according to the then-BNDD (future: DEA) in San Francisco & the rest of California, as well as the entirety of the United States, on 10/6/1966.
DEFINITELY STP.
LSD was made illegal in Califorin November of '66.
@@joeshoe6184October 66. I knew it was way before 1969 so I looked it up. Peter was not the first great blue's guitar player in the UK. Clapton preceded him in J Mayall & BB for one and he had been playing blues in the Yardbirds previously. He left when they wanted to go commercial. Not sure who would have been the first, but it definitely wasn't Peter.
I will always remember going camping with my mates back in the late 90s with my ghetto blaster listening to albatross. Great times.
Great episode...a proper perspective on what actually happened to Peter.
Very respectful. Thank you
Thanks for doing this video. Really great message here.
Depends on the dosage .I took my first and only microdot and it was so strong I j shut down internally and no memory at all of what was going on for about 5 hrs then I started to come back and was so disappointed I couldnt recall anything.Luckily the friends I was with steered and directed me in the right direction otherwise anything could have happened.I would do it again but the rule of thumb is take less as you can always take more but if you take too much you cant take less and may well regret it.Agreed ; spiking is a terrible trick to play on anyone.
RIP Peter Green
A few similarities between Peter Green and Syd Barrett here. So creative, so fluid, so in the zone and so not needing LSD to open them up any more.
Yeah I agree
um, the English doctors also were inept at treating them.
Yes, the Syd Barrett and Peter Green stories are two sides of the same coin, really. The Syd Barrett "story", if you will, has become much more mythologized and well known over the years because of how Floyd incorporated his descent into madness on several of their songs. Peter's tragedy, on the other hand, was largely lost until rather recently, perhaps because of UA-cam, and Mick Fleetwood's attempt to keep his legacy alive.
After seeing this I can't help but think of Syd Barrett. Thank you for this video on Peter Green.
Green and Clapton, in that order, are, IMHO, the 2 most important Rock/Blues guitarists to study for how to create melodic solo "phrasing". They took BB Kings' style to another level. Such a shame we didn't get 50 more years of that "Peter Greens Fleetwood Mac".
The part from 17:10 onwards reminds me of John Frusciante's solo work during his heroin addiction - he was convinced it was beautiful, spiritual music and whilst there are parts that are intriguing musically, it does sound like a mental breakdown put onto tape.
What a fantastic video have a wonderful day ❤😊 also RIP Peter green
Much appreciated 👍👍
Great video! With the depth of investigation you did, I would love to see how the Munich event drove Jeremy Spencer into the Children of God cult and Danny Kirwin into his own madness. The Munich incident had more victims than just Peter.
Those guys had other issues. The Munich thing had nothing to do with them.
I've often wondered about that as well.
Great details and solid delivery, Mr. Hargreaves. Consider me a new subscriber. Cheers!
Thanks and welcome
Even if you do take LSD illegally (not recommending it) you should at least know about it. Spiking people is disgusting. Period.
Same thing happened to Brian Wilson of "The Beach Boys".
I totally agree with what you say about drugs pushing someone past the point of madness. We grew up in the 90s, past the days of LSD but mushrooms were very popular. I had a cousin who grew them, and his were the absolute best. I'd get them for everyone in my school, and eventually stopped when I'd see some kids having almost permanent effects. I'm sober 5yrs now, but between weed and mushrooms, years of coke and heroin plus whatever pills, I only now feel like I'm starting to return to my normal self.
The book 'Fleetwood' covers this era of the band. Cults, LSD, and mental illness was suddenly a staple issue for the band for a few years. Its a miracle they endured long enough as a band to hire Lindsay and Stevie.
I really like your videos, and a huge early Fleetwood Mac fan,and while I have a lot of things that I do feel need to be more established (specifically the sides of this story on some of the people mentioned in this video), It is a great thought out video none the less.
Great post James thank you 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
I saw PG in Birmingham, England, in the early 90's, with the late Cozy Powell on the drums, at Ronny Scotts. It blew my mind. The skill of PG and the relentlessness of CP, and I do remember the base player, also relentless. It is a kodak moment for me
Did the scary Peter Green lsd recordings ever get released?
I believe ‘I got a mind to give up living’ was the last recorded song prior to the psych ward
I recall watching the BBC4 doc that featured this Munich incident. That, after watching your superb video was just a fraction of the story. Thank you for making this and, again painting the FULL picture. 👍👍
Thank you for this, Green is right behind Syd Barrett as one of my favorite guitarist and tragic what-could-have-been figures. I actually really enjoy his instrumental END OF THE GAME album which he made after he left FLEETWOOD MAC, It's fascinating he joined the MAC for a little your of the States 1971 as an emergency replacement for Jeremy Spencer.
MK Ultra-esque, they sure destroyed that people's movement with those chems.
Highly placed Bavarians, stately homes, cults and military/secret service grade drugs… sounds likely.
Check out the book weird scenes in the canyon, goes in depth on the MK Ultra stuff going on in the LA scene in the 60s hugely eye opening with so much facts backed up, a lot of weird cult stuff going on surrounding bands in the 60s and 70s, Bowie had a similar experience with these kinds of people
@@simonwebster1148Excellent book! The Bavaria/Nazi connection is very real. I’m sure James will eventually debunk it.. not the first time I’ve had a comment on one of his videos removed after touching on these kind of topics.
@@ianlewis777 yeah that book blew my mind right open, can’t see how any one could deny all the connections after reading it, there’s no getting out the rabbit hole after that. You may be interested in listening to this guy Thomas Sheridan talking about the music scene back then where he makes a link that the process church of the final Judgement may have been/still are doing things around bands and artists ua-cam.com/video/DRVlWyDKrYg/v-deo.htmlsi=Ioh1fbJKQqgwzsqr
@@ianlewis777 mind blowing book. I’d replied to your comment earlier with some other stuff and just noticed that got removed too
This added a lot to my understanding of Peter Green and what happened to him. A tragic tale. Has that “LSD tape” ever been leaked or released? It would be interesting to hear it.
I saw Peter Green and the original Fleetwood Mac play at the Greens Playhouse in Glasgow in 1970. His rendering of " Need your love so bad " was unforgettable and rivetting. It brought the house down and captured your very heart. He really needed someone so bad to love him for who he was, if it had happened, my guess is Munich would never have occured.
Great video as always mate
Great presentation James.
Peter Green has, and always will be one of the greatest guitarists this country has ever produced. His effortless vibrato, the slides, the note choices, everything about his playing was magnificent. And Oh Well Part two is just off the scale for me, so personal, so bluesy, so painful also. Doesn't Kirk Hammett have Peter's famous Les Paul with the inverted neck humbucker?
He sold his Les Paul to Gary Moore around 1972. Gary played it until he sold it in 2006, due to financial difficulties. A few dealers had the guitar until Hammett bought it from a dealer in 2014.
I grew up in the SF Bay area in the 70s, you need your head to be in a good place before dropping acid.
11/10 I worked in addiction services as a volunteer. Long term drug abuse can begin as a kind of self medication to escape the trauma of being raised in a hostile environment, but it all comes at a price and with a sting in the tail. One of the things you see is grown adults acting like teenagers. The drugs destroy their inhibitions and they don't know the difference between what's safe or dangerous, help or harm or being in or out of trouble. They don't do it deliberately or with any malice, they just walk blindly into situations others would avoid or safeguard themselves against. They don't mean to cause harm but they're drawn to it like a magnet, because of the damage the drugs have done to their minds.
I don't think it's creative at all. It's destructive. I play the guitar a bit. I tried to get a wee band going with them. Me and just one of them did one gig. The rest of them were out of it. If there was the least way to screw up they found it. But we had a good recovery rate and about 60% became drug free after a year or two.
He really was the best of the best, such a sad story.
spiking someone with an hallucinogen is a terrible prank and can be quite harmful. that's how 3 of the beatles first experienced Lsd. they were at a dinner party at their dentist's home and he put it in their coffee. but in my experience (and the beatles') most people who voluntarily take Lsd have a wondrous & harmless experience. not that i still do it- that was the '60's...
Great advice James. Very well put.
This post directed to me by YT algorithm. I'd heard the story, but this exploration was interesting. I believe that the spiking may have been STP - but it doesn't really matter. The similarity to Brian Wilson is well made. Peter was obviously away in his own world for a very long time. His Splinter Group stuff is still so good - his Robert Johnson covers are excellent. Regards to all.
It’s funny that you would mention STP. I had a close friend who was given STP at an Emerson, Lake and Palmer concert and she wound up permanently psychotic.
@@RickCarter-o7w Yes - Being an oldie, I was a young man in 1974. During the Spring of that year, STP spiked Columbian appeared in London and wreaked havoc. Ridiculously powerful stuff - think Carlos Castenada (Now there's a blast from the past).
Thank you James
very welcome
I was lucky to see Peter Green live with band in Melbourne 14 years ago.I recorded the whole concert and is available on you tube. It was great evening .Day before in the same place played John Mayall, shaked his hand and get autograph on his CD.After "In the Sky" and "Little Dreamer" I waited with hope for some new music from him. Sad that his life gone so wrong.
It's so sad to hear this. People hurting other people. All I can do is pray and hope everything is getting better for all involved.
Interesting, something that PG would never really admit, but what I had long suspected is that he was a frequent user of LSD, as opposed to what he said about taking it 6-7 times.
You do realize that when they’re talking about a 2nd person at the party locked in a trip with PG and also severely mentally damaged thereafter, they’re not talking about Dennis Keane, they’re talking about Danny Kirwan, the other Guitar player.
In the same way as Jimi Hendrix and countless others, the Industry fucked them over, they needed a long break with no drugs and good people around them, unfortunately, they never got that chance.
Yeah there seems to be a constant mix up over who was actually there, but the vast majority of people seem to say it was Peter and Dennis not Peter and Danny, so I have assumed people have got Dennis mixed up with Danny in certain places
I've heard the story before but this is the best.
Although less known this could also be about Skip Spence of Moby Grape.
Very well done and important video. Drugs, sex, and rock and roll has been a mantra for decades, half a century or more. But, there are casualties of war. A life without drugs and alcohol, in balance, and with a strong God connection, is the key to positive creativity without losing yourself or your soul. Avoid drugs and cults. Manson and his family destroyed the Laurel Canyon scene and all its creativity. Some survived and thrived, but some did not.
Absolutely Agree! This breaks my heart! Love Greeny.. oh man why why why?? ❤❤❤
I really loved Peter. Green's muic and while searching for "Oh well", I ran across this video and the words "Owsley Stanley... the sound engineer of the Greatful Dead" jumped out at me.
In 1968, my best friend from high school who I hadn't seen since I had moved away two years before after my sophomore year of high school... by chance had a happy reunion at the Electric Factory in Philadelphia. He was dealing a bit and he fronted me the best 4-way LSD tablets and hashish. It was far better than anything I had or any of my friends that had before or after. The LSD was incredible beyond description and I was told that it was "White Owsley" made by the chemist for the Grateful Dead. We did some of it together and we wound up at a bizarre high School graduation pool party at my friend's house who is the class president... and later also the Glass View diner.The first experience was amazingly, but the repetition burried me. I apparently did too much of it and I lost my way. I don't know if my severe childhood ADHD and dyslexia had something to do with it but I became perma-spaced and got so wrecked at a party that I wound up at a bizarre commune where I lived for several years. I lost touch with reality so badly that I could not understand what people were saying to me. I also couldn't keep track of what I was saying to other people. I was also suffering a major broken heart at the end of my first true love. In everyday conversations, I would nod my head affirmatively like I understood...but when people realized that I didn't, they would lose patience and walk away. It was terrifying to be trapped inside my incapacitation for 3 or 4 years till I began to come out of it. I wanted to die but I couldn't force myself to do that. It probably took another several decades to recover.
I still owe my best friend the money. There are a few mistakes in life that I really regretted and revisited in my thoughts hundreds of times that I still feel awful beyond description about....that I never paid my friend and I lost touch with him are among them.
You're right James, someone with an already fragile sense of self being spiked is the worst thing that could've happened. Jim Morrison was another who nonchalantly experimented with LSD and I think never recovered.
LSD didn't affect Jim Morrison like it did Peter Green, Syd Barrett, and Brian Wilson. He never went into constant freak out mode, or had mental problems becauseof it. Alcohol was what got Jim in trouble, and caused him to do stupid stuff. But Jim remained perfectly aware, intelligent, and alert up until his death.
It's conjecture. He had mental problems either way.
@@Iondeen I've never heard a single person say, or even hint that Jim had mental problems. None of the doors, friends of Jim, nor any of the biographers ever mentioned anything about him having mental problems. You're the only person I've ever heard even bring it up. Did he do crazy stuff while drunk? Yes, but everyone that drinks does crazy things. Jim didn't have mental problems. If someone were to make a diagnosis from watching the doors movie they might come to that conclusion, but the movie wasn't an accurate portrayal of Jim. Ray Manzarek said he wouldn't have hung out with the Jim in that movie.
@@michaelharrington75 There's countless examples of his core instability
Great video and such a great message to deliver to those who may consider taking LSD. Thanks.
I loved listening to Peter Green and Danny Kirwin's guitars with that first Fleetwood Mac iteration. So sad to have lost them through those years.
Man, what a crying shame. My wife had a great uncle who passed several years ago. He was a casualty of LSD. He was a bright young man who ended up with the mental capacity of a young child, who could not hold a coherent conversation and had no idea what was going on around him. He had to live with his parents until they passed, then was at a mental health facility for the rest of his life as he was left unable to care for himself. He was brought to a couple family gatherings, people were happy to see him, but then grew uncomfortable around him pretty quickly. He just was not really there. Sad to say, but the family was almost relieved when he passed.
I experimented with LSD starting in 1966. My first trip took place at a most unopportune time, at least for me. I took it with a friend during a teen demonstration in front of the "Pandora's Box" nightclub on the Sunset Strip in LA, the same protest that the Buffalo Springfield wrote a song about called, "For What It's Worth" (remember the verse, "Some people carryin' signs mostly saying hooray for our side"?? One of them was me).
When a bunch of us were rounded up by the riot police for being out after 10PM while under the age of 18, I found myself being interrogated by an overly zealous LA County Sheriff Department leiutenant while hallucinating on my very first trip, but luckily he just thought my extreme nervousness was just because I was 16 and in a police station, but I will never, ever forget the singular insanity of that horrible hour of terror and fear. After that, several of my school chums started taking acid, and a few flipped out and were never the same, especially my best friend. After a few bad trips he totally changed and was never the same again. He started acting strangely, never left his apartment, and I never saw him again. So when I heard about Peter Green, I knew exactly what had happened to him in an instant. LSD when used intelligently was an amazing drug, but when used improperly, and especially during a difficult emotional time, can lead to permanent personality changes, as so obviously seen in the tragedy of one of the greatest blues guitarists who ever lived. I only hope he eventually grew out of the mental damage that this experience had caused him.
I saw Him on tour with BB King in Leeds England a sort of comeback tour a good few years ago. He was obviously not well and being carried by the band. B.B King and his band were however magnificent. A very interesting video thanks.
About bloody time
They were still the best incarnation of Fleetwood Mac IMO. So sad what happened to Peter Green...
Its pretty clear that Uschi Obermaier was a MH Chaos agent out of Berlin. MH Chaos's #1 purpose was do discredit (or worse) anyone talking about Hippy love and not needing money or communes. And Peter had been giving interviews about all these things before flying to Berlin. And all those weird CIA projects had training centers in Berlin due to the Cold War. Brother walked right into the spider web. Next thing you know Hendrix was hanging out with Uschi. There's fairly famous photos of him walking her from their hotel to a taxi. Then Hendrix was gone fairly soon afterwards with all kinds of nonsense statements from (also a German) Monika Dannemann. Then Monika died under strange circumstances. I think Uschi Obermaier was Rainer Langhans' CIA handler as he experimented with communism. They wanted someone very close to him. The house/ estate the LSD party took place in can be google earthed at 48 degrees 00'22.75 North and 11 Degrees 08' 46.20 East in Germany.
I did acid when I stayed in Germany 1971, although I did acid in the UK on several occasions it was nothing like this encounter in Frankfurt. I realised something was amiss when the American girl supplying this shit didn't take the it herself, the rest freaked. I was so alarmed by the experience afterwards I returned to the UK a few weeks later, a changed man. What did I learn, strong minded individuals faired far better than easier going types like myself. On returning to the UK I married a great girl who opened my eye's to a new life, to her I am eternally grateful but for Peter Green who I think of quite a lot my heart still saddens
Wow, You got more information outin 30 mins than all the other docs out there, even a pic of the weird Germans. I guess the other docs go on to long about the green dog dream and you have focused on the people and situations. Then the interview of Peter at the end was very cool. Its great to see He got to enjoy music again before he passed. He was right though, then world was full of starving people back then and I think he said what he makes from one show could feed village and Ive heard he fed alot of people
He was such an awesome guy in such an awesome personality it's a shame that what happened to that happen to him
Very well documented ❤
This is just sad. I loved Peter Green's guitar work. Perversely I suppose, I absolutely loved Green Manalishi.
Hi James, great documentary. I would love to see you dive into Brian Wilson’s relationship with Dr Eugene Landy and how that changed him mentally and physically over the years as well as his relationship with members of the beach boys. It’s such a fascinating story that I would love to hear you talk about. Thanks.
I Prayed during this. Really he comes for himself and moved away from it. I hope he found himself and God collected him.
I'm very familiar with those days . I had seen Fleetwood Mac with Peter in Detroit around 1970 . It was actually the drummer Mick that went berserk during the show when I'd seen them .
I’m a retired mental health professional. I have worked in secure hospitals and the community, in the UK. Drugs even cannabis were a frequent cause of psychosis. It was very difficult to convince people to stop, even with evidence. People believe what they want to believe and disregard the rest…
i took it for two years listing to earleyn German Krut Rock. would i like to relive those days, yes Sir.
A friend of my used it once. He told me the same things, and years later he still got flashbacks. The Drug was a experiment from the government.
I met him in 12 Bar club on Denmark St early 2000 he kept say he knew me from before another life. It was only when he left the bar staff told me who he was I didn’t have a clue.
It was only when I see him later on a doc with that green hat on that I recognised him. Exactly like you see him in interviews…it’s pretty unforgettable
I drive by that mansion on my way to work and always think about Peter Green when I look at it.
Poor guy.
I have a friend with serious mental health issues and it’s devastating and very sad.
I saw them live in June 1968 in San Francisco at the West Coast Fillmore. Alvin Lee's Ten Years After was on the bill that night too. I had never heard of wither of them.
I have C-PTSD and ive always been an open minded creative person
Lsd has always been great for me.
Its like anything from coffee to heroin, some people can't take any some people can have it everyday for years.
Survivorship bias also plays a lot in to peoples minds when considering trying drugs recreational or otherwise