Eight Miles High: Folk-rock's Flight from Haight-Ashbury to Woodstock

Front Cover
Hal Leonard Corporation, 2003 - Music - 343 pages
Eight Miles High documents the evolution of the folk-rock movement from mid-1966 through the end of the decade. This much-anticipated sequel to Turn! Turn! Turn!(00330946) - the acclaimed history of folk-rock's early years - portrays the mutation of the genre into psychedelia via California bands like the Byrds and Jefferson Airplane; the maturation of folk-rock composers in the singer-songwriter movement; the re-emergence of Bob Dylan and the creation of country-rock; the rise of folk-rock's first supergroup, CSN&Y; the origination of British folk-rock; and the growing importance of major festivals from Newport to Woodstock. Based on firsthand interviews with such folk-rock visionaries as: Jorma Kaukonen, Roger McGuinn, Donovan, Judy Collins, Jim Messina, Dan Hicks and dozens of others.
 

Contents

FolkRock to Acid Rock The San Francisco Sound
11
Forever Changes FolkRock Psychedelicized From Sunset Strip to Outer Space
39
FolkRock Grows Up The SingerSongwriters
77
In Thyme British FolkRock Finds Its Voice
133
The New Dylan and CountryRock
171
FolkRock Superstars and Supergroups
203
Liege Lief A Truly British FolkRock
233
FolkRock From Newport to Woodstock
265
Discography
305
Interviewees
325
Bibliography
329
Acknowledgments
333
About the Author
335
Photo Credits
336
Index
337
Copyright

FolkRocks legacy
289

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information