Dark History - 102: A Free Concert From Hell: Deadly Drugs, Murder and Music | Dark History with Bailey Sarian
Episode Date: September 6, 2023Welcome to the Dark History podcast. We all know about Woodstock, right? Peace and love, 60s hippie vibes. But did you know that Woodstock has an evil cousin? Today I’m talking about the Altamont Sp...eedway Festival. And this isn’t your average bad festival- this was a day of bad drug trips, violent beatings, and MURDER! Episode Advertisers Include: Buffy, Hello Fresh, & Apostrophe. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!
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I just wanted to point out that this is our 100th episode of Dark History.
Woo! I got a balloon! I got a balloon just for the occasion.
Okay, wow! I can't believe it. 100th episode.
Thank you so much to everyone who has watched and listened to us these past few years.
Dark History started out as a passion project of mine and to see like what it's become is really incredible.
It's amazing. I've learned so much and that's like been the goal with the podcast. I just wanted
to learn and I wanted others to learn as well because as cheesy as it is, knowledge really is power.
Facts. So thank you. Thank you for being here and down for the ride. I appreciate you.
So thank you, thank you for being here and down for the ride.
I appreciate you.
And I love hearing your responses to the show.
And also I have lots of exciting things coming up.
It's gonna be incredible.
So now celebration over.
Let's get into it.
Okay, so I think most of us know about Woodstock, right?
Hippies, music, love, pee, strugs, you know?
But did you know that Woodstock has an evil cousin?
Mm-hmm.
In the late 60s, it was a massive music festival
held in California.
It was a day filled with bad drug trips,
violent beatings, and even murder.
It was supposed to represent progress,
but instead, it exposed the dark side of music festivals.
Oh baby, I'm talking about the Altamont Speedway Free Festival.
I know I haven't heard about it either.
How are you doing today? I hope you have a wonderful day.
My name is Bailey Sarian, and I like to welcome you
to my podcast, Dark History.
Here, we believe history does not have to be boring.
I mean, guess it might be tragic, it might be happy,
but either way, it's our Dark History.
So all you have to do is sit back, relax.
And let's talk about that hot juicy history
goss because today is juicy.
Look, a couple of weeks ago, okay, I was on an antique store
and I saw this really big woodstock poster for sale.
It was so pretty, I wanted it so bad.
The lady, she wouldn't sell it to me
because I'm not worthy.
So I had to settle with just like watching
a documentary at home about woodstock. And this got me to googling. I'm googling and googling. And next thing, you know,
I come across something called Altamont. And I was like, what is this? It sounds like the name
of an insurance company, right? Well, Altamont was a fire festival compared to Withstock. Altamont,
if you don't know, because I didn't know,
is short for the Ultraman Speedway 3 Festival.
First of all, mouthful, I know.
So we're just gonna, I'm just gonna call it Ultraman, okay?
And second of all, I know you're thinking,
Bailey, Bailey, Bailey.
I've never heard of Ultraman.
Well, there's a reason for that.
It was a complete shit show. People got stabbed,
there were rumors about women like getting birth at the festival, and before the night was said
and done, there was a murder that happened in the middle of the festival in front of everyone.
But in order to understand Altamont, we have to know what they were, what was the goal? What were
they trying to accomplish? You know, they basically wanted to be the bigger, better woodstock.
Now most of you guys probably know about woodstock. It was an iconic music festival in
upstate New York in 1969. And this festival was huge. It was a huge like end of the decade party
of the 60s. It was like New Year's Eve on crack.
The idea was for it to be a nice little reward
for everyone who had lived through the decade of trauma,
war and assassinations.
Oh yeah, there were a lot of assassinations
going on around this time.
I mean, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and John F. Kennedy.
So it was kind of like the first mega festival and like no one had ever seen anything like it.
But the organizers, they did drop the ball in one pretty major area. That was security. Yeah, they barely hired any.
In the days leading up to Woodstock, 186,000 people had bought tickets, which is a lot of people, right? But you know, with that amount of people, they really weren't worried about security so
much.
But little did they know that 400,000 people were about to turn up to their little music
theorem.
So, Neal is to say, Woodstock, overall, it was a hit.
On August 29, 1969, a hot, sweltering summer day brought out almost half a million people.
Everyone flocked to Woodstock.
All the hippies, ruck in their tight-eye tanks,
their free-flowing lots of hair,
their free-flowing bushes, everything was just free and fun.
And even when a rainstorm had rolled in, it didn't matter.
It was still a freaking fun party.
Sure, there was mud.
Yeah, there was probably shit in the mud.
It had its faults, of course,
but a lot of people thought it was the best thing ever.
Bans like Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young,
Joe Cocker, and Jimmy Hendrix played.
In hundreds of thousands of people
got to experience this three-day festival for Bari
because there wasn't enough security to stop the people who didn't technically have a ticket.
On top of that, for this festival, they didn't have a fence.
I know. So it's like you can just walk in, great you're in.
Woodstock was seen as like this huge positive moment in pop culture history.
But little did the public know it was also a massive failure
profit wise. Right after the festival, things were not luck and good for the people who organized it,
and fact if the organizers hadn't taken a ton of footage of the festival, they would probably still be
upshits creek without a paddle, but they turned the footage into a documentary called Woodstock.
And thankfully it was a big financial success
because they didn't get any money, you know?
Naturally, people didn't want the good energy
of Woodstock to end.
I mean, they want to do it again.
They have that high.
But Woodstock would prove to be completely unattainable
and honestly impossible to recreate.
And for the people who hadn't made it to Woodstock,
they were like, honestly, they got FOMO, right? They were jealous. They wanted to do it. They wanted to.
Do it again. I want to go. So, a new idea for a new festival came along a few months later.
So, the story of Altmont starts with a little English band called the Rolling Stones. Oh yeah.
In the 60s, the Rolling Stones were everything.
Critics described them as the original bad boys
of rock and roll.
They changed the way people saw rock stars forever.
The Rolling Stones were so iconic to so many people
because they played edgy music
that refused to conform to the standards at the time.
They released a song called,
I Can't get no satisfaction.
Oh, so it wasn't Brittany.
Unfortunately.
Okay, well, they did.
At the time it was shocking, it was sexy.
There was nothing else like it out there.
It became an international hit,
but Brittany's was better.
Plus, they would perform in these flashy outfits that
totally destroyed any of society's fashion rules at the time. I mean, famous bands, singers
at the time were still performing and proper buttoned down shirts and dress pants, you know?
And the Rolling Stones, they would come out wearing like, top hats, skin tight suit sequins, dresses.
They leaned into being bad boys and refusing
to follow social norms.
Honestly hot, good for them.
I love that, you know?
The lead singer and kind of like the face of the stones,
Mick Jagger was a total sex symbol in the 60s.
Yeah, I guess people thought he was hot because girl,
you're like, ugh.
Throughout the 60s, the Rolling Stones had five number one hits
on the charts and millions of fans all over the world.
Okay, they were right up there with the Beatles.
And after all these hits, the Rolling Stones were on a very successful,
very profitable tour, but they wanted more.
More!
They wanted to throw a woodstock of their own.
And this time, they felt like the festival
should be on the West Coast.
They decided it would be the final show of like their US tour
and their last show of the 60s.
And they really wanted to go out with a bang.
Okay, also at this time, the Rolling Stones,
they had a little bit of a bad reputation going on.
People were talking shit, okay, because listen,
they were charging a little too much for tickets,
and it was pissing people off.
Their tickets were $8.50.
Hmm.
Who do they think they are?
And people were fucking outraged.
$8.50?
What the fuck?
Like, who's going to that?
Huh?
Like Kings and Queens?
Like, get off your high horse.
OK, people were being very vocal about it.
And so the Rolling Stones, they like,
gets back to them.
They're noticing a shift going on.
People are mad. And they needed some positive PR.
So they're like, you know what?
Let's make the tickets to our West Coast experience free.
One WG, do you guys?
Yeah.
They used Woodstock as inspiration
because they had a pretty insane lineup
of world famous musicians.
And they were like, you know what,
we're gonna do that, but we're gonna do better.
They were gonna pull out all the stops,
and it wasn't just gonna be a Woodstock 2.0,
but she was gonna be the shit.
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Now let's get back to today's story.
So this epic last Rolling Stone show was set to take place on December 6, 1969 in California.
They figured people would be stoked to have a festival at the end of the year, with the
holidays and like the new year just around the corner.
It was a way to be like, bye, 60s!
Okay, that's the end spoke.
But the problem that they were not really thinking about was the fact that they were not organized
at all.
The festival organizers didn't lock in any plans
until just a few weeks before the festival
was supposed to go down.
Okay, but the worst part, the stupidest part.
They had a date in mind of when they were gonna have
this festival, but the organizers,
they only announced the Ultimaant Festival
to the people four days before it was gonna take place.
Four days, okay?
The biggest problem with Ultimaant was they didn't know
like where to even have the festival.
They're like California, but vague.
So originally they were calling the event Woodstock West.
It was supposed to take place in beautiful lush golden gate park in San Francisco.
This area was like grassy, central, beautiful.
Right?
It's like iconic.
Everything they wanted the festival to be.
So the Rolling Stones, they get on the radio and they announce the festival.
They tell everyone it's going to be at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco and people are
like, but yeah, let's go.
Yeah, like, yeah, it's free.
But this was new news to the city of San Francisco.
They're like, huh?
No, I don't think so.
Who did, who'd he speak to?
They didn't speak to it.
San Francisco had no idea.
They're like, no, get the fuck out of here.
San Francisco is just not interested in hosting a big festival
and having their beloved park destroyed.
Wrecked, shit on, who knows?
So they end up going to the stones and they're like, hey,
no, and the city, hey, no.
And the city, they pulled out.
So this left the organizers of the Altimaan in a bit of a pickle.
No one wanted to cancel the festival, bad idea.
They already announced it.
Instead, they decided that they were going to find a new place, no big deal, new place.
Okay?
But at this point, they had less than four days to find a venue. Four days to find a venue
that hundreds of thousands of people were going to show up to. Four days. The ultimate organizers,
they thought that they had found another good venue option in San Francisco. but the day before the festival,
after they started setting up everything,
the venue got cold feet.
They were scared that the fans were probably
going to mess up their property, right?
But it's like, damn, you can unless no sooner.
Oh, they have four days.
It's their fault, you get it.
The organizers didn't give up though. They
keep searching, okay, they're looking, they've got to find something. These
venues, they need to charge the stones to use a space. This is their show. But I
guess the stones didn't want to pay. I know. It's like, okay, so now you would
think at this point, you should probably just take this all in and
realize that this is a sign to just cancel the festival, right?
It's not gonna work.
I mean, again, the festival was free, so it's not like they would have to refund anybody,
right?
They could have canceled or even rescheduled.
There were lots of other options that they could have went with, but no, no.
The organizers were confident that they could still
pull this off.
So literally right before the concert,
in the 11th hour, they find the venue,
and it's the perfect venue.
Well, if you squint, you know?
And no, it wasn't like a cute farm.
We, sorry, I just think about a bunch of like farm animals
hanging out with you that was so cute.
It wasn't a park, it wasn't at like some stadium.
This venue, it was a race track.
Yeah, that's right.
The festival was moved to the Ultimont Speedway.
The Ultimont Speedway was located in Alameda County about an hour and a half away from San Francisco.
Now, it was not known for its iconic views and parks like Golden Gate Park, and people didn't hold music festivals there, but it was available.
Now, they were open to taking it.
But the speedway was basically like a glorified parking lot.
It was just dry asphalt.
Okay, there's no trees, there's no grass,
there's no cucumbers, nothing, nothing in sight,
middle of nowhere.
Okay, so you gotta like drive out there.
It was just not the first choice, you know?
But the free festival, it had a pretty sick lineup as the kids would say.
So, the Rolling Stones, honestly, they were just hoping people wouldn't care.
It was on a bunch of asphalt in the middle of nowhere because the lineup was sick, okay?
They'll ignore if they're watching their favorite people on the stage, right?
It's supposed to be about the music, right?
Who cares?
Get over it, babies.
The festival advertised that it would be headlined
by the Rolling Stones.
And the show was also set to include
Van Tanna and The Grateful Dead.
Great.
He was like, fuck yeah, that's right.
Santana.
So just fuck out of a boner.
The Rolling Stones were planning on filming the whole event.
And at this time, they'd actually been already filming their whole tour for their own documentary.
So they're like, hey, at least we're gonna make some money off of this...
off of this festival by selling the footage, right?
And come smart.
The Stones weren't stupid.
They knew a ton of people would try to get into their festival,
especially with all the big bands they had secured.
I mean, Santana?
God, people are showing up just right,
great, get the fuck out of here, shut up.
Finally, hours count down,
and guess what?
It's December 6, 1969,
and it's the day of the festival.
And surprise, surprise, over 300,000 people ended up showing up.
And even though the organizers verbally said they were expecting a lot of people,
they weren't actually thinking about what that even means or what that looks like, you know?
So right off the bat, there's issues.
The roads that were leading to the festival were shut down
because the Altsmont Speedway didn't have enough parking.
So people were just like abandoning their cars on the side of the road
and walking miles to the Speedway. At the festival itself,
there were no like food vendors. Yeah, not even a pretzel.
Not a hot dog in sight.
People who are walking into the festival,
many of the time just like buzzed on cheap wine.
And that's not gonna be good.
Yeah.
Oh, my favorite part was that on top of that,
they only brought in 100 porta-potties
for over 300,000 people.
Yeah, can you imagine?
No.
Actually, I've seen a porta-pottie that's overflowed.
Don't ask.
It was awful, it was disgusting.
So I imagine it was a lot of that.
Just shit, just piled to the top.
I don't even know how they shit on top of that pile
because it was stacked so high.
But within like the first hour, first half hour,
I'm sure they ended up being filled, right?
Great.
The festival organizers had the crew move in all of their gear
from the old venue and they just like plopped it
on the asphalt.
Nothing was really like fully put together,
including the stage.
Now when we think of a stage, imagine a stage,
now I'm sure you're imagining the stage
being kind of like lifted, elevated above you,
you know, a stage where one performs.
But this was no stage like you're thinking,
and you're mind this was no stage like you're thinking in your mind. This was a DIY
stage, okay? Pinterested. And there was no barrier between the musicians and the
people. The bands were performing essentially at the base of a tall slope by
the speedway. This was so people would be able to look down at the performers and
still get to see at least a little bit of the show.
So instead of being up, they were down.
And for the bands, this gave them a really sick feeling
of quote unease.
I mean, think about it.
It must have been like absolutely terrifying,
feeling like little tiny ants.
Oh, I love ants.
Surrounded by thousands of fans, like in all ants. Oh, I love ants. Surrounded by thousands of fans,
like in all directions of you,
and they're kind of like coming upwards.
Does that make sense?
I love ants.
Dark history of ants.
Let me know down below.
But the organizers, they were like,
don't worry about it.
Don't worry, it's not a big deal.
We're gonna have security.
We're gonna have security to handle.
All you love
you're unease. When the festival security was discussed, the managers of the Grateful Dead and
Jefferson Airplane pointed out that the Hells Angels had actually provided great security at a
concert in 1967, so why not just hire them? They're great! And yeah, when I say Hell's Angel, I'm talking about exactly
who you think, the Hell's Angels Biker Friendship Group. Bernardino in 1948 by a World War II veteran
and it started as a small group of guys who rode Harley Davidson motorcycles, just
brought up in all over the place.
But by the 60s, it was known as a quote, outlaw motorcycle game.
They're actually considered an organized crime syndicate by the police and the US Department
of Justice. So what I'm getting at is that they're not a friendship group.
Mm, yeah.
So it's definitely just, it's a unique choice,
but the Hells Angels, specifically the British Hells Angels,
had actually done security for the stones before.
I mean, honestly, it probably felt like kind of cool
to have a banker game for security,
kind of aligning with your rock and roll brand.
Yeah, got security.
And the best thing of all, they were available
on short notice, and on top of that,
they didn't even wanna be paid in money.
I know, what's the catch?
One of the main organizer of Ultimaunt
was the Rolling Stones Tour Manager, Sam Cutler.
And Sam said that when he asked the hell's angel,
how they would like to be paid for their services,
they responded with, we like beer.
You know, all right, you know, cool.
According to multiple angels.
So I was thinking that Jesus,
they were paid about $500 worth of cheap beer,
which is just a bargain, right?
Love that.
They say this is because they were quote,
not interested in policing the event.
Okay, all right.
I guess I just went a party, really.
It was just supposed to be like, low key, whatever.
They're not going to be like psycho,
so they're just going to hang out, have some beer,
and make sure everything's okay.
They had like three main jobs, the hell's angels,
to keep people off the stage,
keep people off the cameras,
and also keep them away from sound equipment
that had been set up all over the venue.
Just look out, that's great.
According to a former member of Hell's Angels named Sunny,
they were mostly required to quote,
sit on the edge of the stage, drink beer,
and make sure there were not any murders or rapes occurring.
No rapes!
But murder?
They were kinda... You know, shaky on it. But what
people maybe weren't thinking about was that the other show that the Hells Angels had done
security for, they also had police security. So, you know, the police did most of the heavy lifting, but at Altamont, you know, it was just all of the hells angels.
I guess this happened because Mick Jagger didn't want any police there.
It was just supposed to be hippie loving environment,
but pretty much right away when the festival started,
it was anything but that.
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The Grateful Duds Manager, a man named Rock Scully,
said if the angels hadn't been guarding
that crappy stage, then, quote, that whole crowd could have easily passed out and rolled
down onto the stage.
There was no barrier.
And quote, the only thing that was between the wild fans and the bands were just like a
few of the guys from the Hell's Angels.
They were kind of like those bouncers at the base of a concert's VIP section,
where they just kind of look at you and they say,
hey, don't do that.
Hey, no.
Or maybe they pull you out of the pit.
Those guys, it was kind of like that.
At Woodstock, there was this unspoken understanding
that everyone was in it together.
Like high school musicals were all misty together.
It was like that.
But at altimon when they were driving out to the middle of nowhere,
they were starting to realize some shit.
Okay, they're like, this is a little odd.
So then when they get there and they were being forced to stand on some asphalt or on a slope
Way far away from the stage
They're getting a little pissed and it turns out they could barely even see anything
I mean this was supposed to be a life-changing event got damn it
But the vibes the vibes at Ultima were just
chaotic from the jump after a little while people are getting all antsy, right?
So they just start pushing their way to the front to get a better view.
But the hell's angels? They know likey.
No likey that. They did not like it.
So they decided the best way to like keep these people away from the musicians
was to like line up their big ass motorcycles
in front of the stage, right?
I'm gonna get that's my motorcycle.
But hey, there's a lot of people, okay?
And they were getting a little wild, wet and wild.
And it's not just because they were excited for the show.
It was because...
Drugs.
Yeah.
There were a lot of drugs available at Ultima.
Okay, it was a 60, shut up.
Everyone was experimenting.
Just having a good time.
Smoking a pancake, okay?
Smoking a pancake?
Bongo and a rich?
Living.
The problem was that most people at this time,
they loved LSD.
That was their favorite truck.
Wait, LSD.
Why am I thinking of the Mormon church? Oh!
Sorry about that. Okay. Now before the LSD people come for me, I'm not trying to judge you
or your drug of choice, okay? Live LaughSD, I support you, as long as you're being safe and unidiot.
But the LSD at Altamont was not your typical type, okay?
And the 60s, LSD was being used a lot.
It was a party drug known for its amazing effects.
People would be like hallucinating,
they'd be having visions,
having that little, that's so raving moment,
just making discoveries
about themselves.
It was an experience.
But not long before, Altima, the US government started cracking down on the use and the sale
of that drug because it was getting out of hand.
And because of this crackdown, a lot of the drug makers of legit, like high quality
LSD were either arrested or they had a close close up shop.
But most people didn't know about this and what was left after this government
crackdown was LSD being cut with other drugs like speed or in other words math.
People are tripping but also they're being a little chaotic.
You get it.
Joan was there.
She told me about it.
Paul died.
The drugs.
Too much for him.
He couldn't handle.
Joan, she lived.
She loved.
She had a good time.
That's what she said.
I think she slept with the Mick Jagger.
He says where she told me.
Really?
She's a little liar, but whatever.
So meth.
So I need you to envision in your mind
a crowd of 300,000 people on some insane trip.
None of them were expecting, yeah, these people,
they're paranoid.
What excited?
Their hearts beating out of their chest,
but also they wanna lay down.
There's no food, there's no water.
Body, going through it.
The drug trips were apparently so bad that someone had to call the local hospitals to fly
incentives to calm people down.
So another drug.
Writer Joel Selvin describes people experiencing absolute freakouts from their drug trips.
I imagine Joel holy shit.
In his 2016 book about Altamont, he writes quote, it's like a toxic mass psychosis.
The drugs were terrible.
And quote, bummer man.
Doctors were called in to set up a medical tent and give people a drug called thorazine.
And this was specifically used for people
having really bad insane drug trips.
And I mean, it was supposed to help, okay?
But anyone who's been to like a high school party
knows that with cheap beer, bad drugs, no food,
you are so fond.
Actually, no, because back then,
you could go to sleep and wake up and you were fine.
You know, try doing that today.
Anyways, but bad, right?
Yeah, there's really no sedative for it, right?
Except Jack in the box, they're monster tacos.
Yes, shout out to the monster taco, bitch. Please sponsor
taco. I need that taco to sponsor me. So even with the sedatives and people's
systems, the hell's angels were having a hard time keeping people in line. People
were shoving each other, they were shouting, they were climbing up an expensive
video equipment, you know, because they wanted to get a better view. Well the Hells Angels are getting
really, they're getting angry, but people are just straight up ignoring them.
They're like whatever, they're not police, what are they gonna do? Run me over with
their bike. The Hells Angels, if you keep poking that bear? Well, eventually,
they're gonna get a little mad and violent and it became a
total techno prisoners approach. There were a few people who managed to get to
the very front of the stage and they started like knocking their motorcycle
fence over, knocking the bike sover, you know, because they wanted to get a better
view. And if there's anything I know about people with bikes,
you're not on, you don't touch those bikies.
Knock it over, they will literally knock your head off.
So when people had pushed over
the Hell's Angels motorcycles, they took it very personally.
I mean, these bikes were their most prized possessions.
And these people were just like disrespecting their hearties like that.
Right in front of them?
No, the angels were pissed.
So, you know what, they're like,
but you guys, and they started to turn on the crowd.
They were going to make them pay for this disrespect.
Okay.
Now, there isn't an official number on the amount of people that were injured,
but we do know dozens of people got beat the fuck up by the Hells Angels.
The reports say they either beat them with their fists,
full cans of beer, which out, or they would use motorcycle chains,
beat them with that, or like sawed off pool cues.
I know, I was like, where the hell did they in a pool cue?
You're in the middle of nowhere.
Yeah.
I think they brought themselves, probably.
There were reports of fights between the angels
and people in the crowd everywhere.
There was one woman who wandered onto the stage
and a hell's angel decided to drag her off the stage,
but by her hair, dick.
And there were even rumors that since the police weren't there,
the angels were just stealing money
and drugs off of the people they were beating up.
And this part made me laugh a little,
just a little, sorry, for laughing, but it did.
Apparently the hell's angels would also rev up their engines
when they decided they didn't like the music that was playing.
Yeah, they would, they'd
like, I don't like the song and they would just read the engine. I just think that's so immature.
Like it's silly. I don't know. I thought it was funny. Shut up. Just imagine being heckled by
like a beefy biker who's like three feet away from you. It's kind of, it's kind of funny. Okay.
Whatever. At a certain point, the angels seemed to start turning
on the bands they were supposed to be protecting.
And this started pretty much.
You fucking Santana, man.
Okay, pretty much it started right when Santana
opened the show.
Yeah, he's like, he's like,
some look for Santa, and then hell's angels were like,
nope.
Oh, no.
Poor Santana, I'm sorry, that sucks.
So I guess like right when Santana opened the festival,
some guy took off all of his clothes.
Yeah, he got butt-ass naked and ran across the stage.
And honestly, I love it people do that.
So I'm like, no, I don't.
That's pervy, I'm a perf.
But two hells-angels pulled him from the stage
and started like being him up in front of everyone.
But naked, getting beat up, could you imagine?
Talk about embarrassing. I hope someone
got pictures. Bill Owens, who was a photographer at Ultimawn, saw the whole thing go down.
Did he get pictures? He said, quote, two angels with their pool cues. Be a naked guy.
I'm so sorry, this is not funny. Be a naked guy to the ground. Then they kicked him with
their boots. He was bloodied and had his teeth knocked out.
He crawled under the stage to get away from it.
Still naked.
Somebody told me he stayed under there for the rest of the festival,
which ran from day and tonight.
I've always wondered how he got home with no clothes on.
End quote.
Pfft.
Pfft.
Pfft. Okay, it was clear that things were, they were getting a little off.
Things were getting a little out of control, okay?
And Joel, the writer of the Altamont book, said quote,
There was no central command or figurehead running the whole festival and handling like
the logistics.
Nobody in the crew knew who was in charge.
I quote, there was no captain, who the fuck was in charge.
Now, when the band Ace of Cups was playing, someone in the crowd just walked in.
Just hurled is the word hurled.
A beer bottle at one of the band members' heads.
Yeah, it ends up hitting one of the members on stage.
And the musician had hit with six months pregnant at the time,
and the bottle caused a serious skull fracture.
She had a freaking bead like rush out of the venue
to have emergency surgery.
What the, like that's fucked, you could throw it
at a big beefy guy while you shouldn't, but like that's better. Not a pregnant woman. Who's performing for you? You little
desk bitch. Capital C. Anyways, she lived. Okay, so bad, right? I don't get you people who throw
shit on stages. I don't get it. I don't understand what your end goal is.
We all pay to be here.
Like what the fuck?
Anyways, let me just stop.
Okay, there was another story of this woman
who was on a really bad drug trip.
She fell to the ground and was getting kicked
and walked on by other people who were just as high
as she was.
They probably thought they were like walking on clouds.
I don't know. And like it was awful. I'm laughing because of how uncomfortable I am.
Excuse me. It's not funny because that is a scary. One time I was in a mosh pit. I used to,
yeah, I was the person who got into the pit. And one time I felt it was a scariest moment of my life.
I thought for I thought I was I don't know what I thought, but I was scared was a scariest moment of my life. I thought for I thought I was,
I don't know what I thought, but I was scared.
And I'm like, I don't know what I'm trying to say.
I was scared.
So it's awful.
Would not recommend.
But nobody felt like they could just go up
to the hell's angels guys and be like,
hey, do your job and protect us.
She didn't tell.
Because most of them, most people, were terrified by them.
They didn't really come off as helpful.
Like, you know, yeah.
They're not very approachable.
So later in the concert, Jefferson Airplane was playing,
okay?
And once again, someone in the crowd knocked over
one of the bikes by the stage.
Oh no, a hellsangial pulled the guy to the ground
and just started pounding on him.
Beatin' is fuckin' ass.
This really disturbed the lead singer of the band,
Marty Ballon.
Marty was just watching like his fans
suffering getting beat up and that's
not what he came to do. He came to play music. Like it was not cool. So Marty he
tried to jump in and be like, Hey, come on chill. It's just a festival. Relax.
What the hell's angels? Well, they've turned. They've turned to Marty and they knocked
him out cold on stage in front of everyone.
Who gave them beer? I mean, if the talent they were hired to protect, they weren't even safe.
Then who is? And baby, things were about to get way worse. Apparently, one of the angels was
high out of his mind, so he turned his attention to the stage where the band Crosby, Stills and Nash were playing.
And I guess he picked up one of the spokes off of his motorcycle, and he turned to one
of the singers, Stephen Stills.
He walked right up to him, and just started stabbing him in the leg over and over again.
I don't know, he's on drugs.
Stephen was carried away so he
obviously gets some medical attention. But even after this happened, the festival
just kept going. So the Grateful Dead was supposed to open for the Rolling Stones.
So the Grateful Dead, they're in a helicopter, you know, being copped in, okay?
But once they get to the venue and they see from up top,
they look down, they're looking,
and they see like a zombie apocalypse-looking situation
of high, angry people.
It was clear to them that there was no,
there seems to be no stage, okay?
And then eventually, word got back to them that there were musicians who were actually injured
and most of all, security was a flop.
So, helicopter, they're like, oh shit, that doesn't look good.
So at this point, they're like, you know what?
We need to get the hell out of here.
This is not going to work.
So instead, they helicoptered, just kept going, okay?
They're like, fuck that, we'll do a drive-by.
Now that they were performing,
the crowd had to wait an extra two hours
before the rolling stones would come on.
So it's packed, porta-potties,
probably full, no water, no food.
Just alcohol, drugs, party, you get it.
So they're weighing two hours, okay?
I mean, the venue itself, it wasn't like fully lit.
So for two hours, you're just kind of sitting in the dark
or like, you know, and who knows if someone's taking a shit
in front of you, they're pooping on your shoes.
Just shitting on your shoe, you don't know,
till you smell it.
Okay, so then, you don't know, till you smell it.
Okay, so then, also there were rumors, there had been many rumors that there were multiple
women who gave birth at Ultimont.
I know, I know.
Imagine giving birth in that.
I mean, yeah, imagine.
But if you were one of them, please call in or leave a comment below. I want to hear about your experience as the baby or the mother.
Great. So by the time the Rolling Stone showed up, people were just rowdy, restless, mad, and see, blah, etc, etc.
Bad vibes. According to Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane,
she said, quote, the vibes are bad.
I had expected the loving vibes of Woodstock,
but that wasn't coming at me.
This was a whole different thing, and oh, vibes.
When the stones start getting ready to play their show,
the crowd goes what?
It was finally happening, right?
All the suffering for hours and hours
was finally gonna be worth it.
But this is, this is all too much.
So, you know, apparently,
just minutes after Mick Jagger showed up,
some guys were like,
Oh, who are you?
When they just goes up to Mick Jagger
and punches him in the face.
He he he he.
Yeah, welcome to the festival, friend.
You've been initiated in, but unlike the grateful dead,
Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones,
they couldn't just turn around and leave.
This whole thing was their idea,
and they needed the festival footage
for their documentary, okay?
Take the stage and play regardless.
Just ignore it, you guys.
Just ignore that punch to the face.
Just keep going.
So some people had left because they just didn't want to wait,
okay, but plenty of people, they did stay.
And it's been reported that between four to five thousand people
were just pushing their way to the edge of the stage,
just trying to get closer.
Like thousands of people, okay?
And these people were expecting one hell of a show
after what they were put through that night.
Do you better dance, monkey dance?
Right after the Rolling Stones started playing,
the crowds started shoving each other
and shouting at the stage,
just getting out all that pent-up energy
from standing around all day
and watch some of the footage of the festival
and honestly the Rolling Stones, they look a little scared. They were not expecting this, okay? And
plus, they were really disturbed by the way the Hells Angels were treating the crowd.
Mick at one point tries to do some damage control. He essentially tells the crowd like, hey,
He essentially tells the crowd like, hey, hey, hey, I'm not gonna play if you guys don't settle down
Like being a parent, you know, I mean he was doing this for everyone's safety But they didn't take it like that. They took it like children and it made them angrier
People started risking the wrath of the angels and climbing those expensive speaker towers
risking the wrath of the angels and climbing those expensive speaker towers, all so they could get a glimpse of their favorite band.
One of those fans was an 18 year old man named Meredith Hunter.
Hunter had come all the way from Berkeley to attend this free festival and he came with
his girlfriend.
He was going to the festival specifically to see the Rolling Stones.
I mean, apparently he was a huge fan. So after waiting hours, you know, going just inpatient,
Hunter's girlfriend, she was like, I wanna leave, babe.
But Hunter insisted on staying, you know,
he's gotta see the stones.
Like so many other people,
Hunter decided to climb the sound equipment
so he could get a better view.
Unfortunately, he was spotted by an angry member
of the Hell's Angels.
They pulled Hunter down,
they slammed him onto the ground,
and they started being the shit out of him.
Before he got to Ultima,
Hunter's sister had warned him.
At the time, Alameda County,
where the festival was taking place,
was known for its racism,
and Hunter was black.
It was reported that he packed a gun for self-defense.
And while the angels were beating him up, Hunter just kept trying to get away.
And when he finally managed to pull away from them, he pulled out his gun.
There are some reports that say Hunter was going to shoot the Rolling Stones, or he was
going to shoot like someone else with his gun.
And there are other reports as say Hunter was high out of his mind that he could barely walk,
but no one really knows because what happened next happened so fast.
A hell's angel named Alan Pacerro saw Hunter's gun, so he rushed over, he pulled out a knife,
and he stowed Hunter in the side and the back over
and over again.
While that's happening, the rolling stones, they could tell something was wrong, but
they couldn't see what was happening.
They couldn't see what was going on, so they stopped playing.
Some people in the crowd watched the whole thing go down and desperately tried to get hunter
some help, but according to witnesses, the hell's angels blocked the way of anyone who was trying
to get Hunter medical attention.
Mick Jagger noticed something was happening.
He even called into the microphone,
like, we've got someone here.
Is there a doctor trying to, you know,
get some help for the guy?
And Mick has told reporters they considered stopping the show,
but the crowd, most likely likely would have even gotten crazier
and would have, quote, degenerated
into a full-scale riot.
Honestly, probably true.
Yeah.
So the stones they just kept playing.
Nobody came to help Hunter.
And sadly, he was declared dead at the scene.
It happened all before the rolling stones even finished
their set. Now here's the saddest thing. Those cameras that were recording the festival, you know,
the footage for the Rolling Stones, it actually captured Hunter's last moments live on camera.
Yeah, and then in the footage you can see Alan attacking Hunter, and they even used the footage
from the festival in the criminal murder trial that happened against Allen.
Allen was convicted of murder,
but then he was released a few years later.
Yeah, I don't know.
The court had decided that he had the right
to kill Hunter out of self-defense.
I fucking roll.
Sadly, like Hunter wasn't even the only person
who died at the festival.
There was one man that sadly we don't have the name of, his identity was never released,
but he too, he had died the night of the festival.
There was an irrigation ditch nearby, and I guess he had gone over there.
He took some LSD, he had gone over there, and he had drowned.
Mark Fieger and Richard Sovlov were sitting the group of people around a campfire
after the festival had ended. So they are on the side of the street at the Ultima on Speedway.
When fucking that and nowhere they were suddenly struck by a sedan. Jesus. I mean, and on top of
that, whoever did it, they fled the scene, believing the two men dead.
Mark and Richard were both only about 22 years old,
and they never found the fucking driver.
The ultimate festival disaster was on the front covers
of a ton of newspapers all weekend.
The people of Valimita County were not,
they were not expecting this foolery going on.
They thought I was going to be again chill vibes hippies. But unfortunately, you know news,
the end of the 60s, there was like a lot going on and by next week people had moved on.
The story was no longer interesting and that was it. No one was talking about how the speedway property
was damaged or how cars were stolen,
how tons of people were injured or killed.
And all of this, especially Hunter's murder,
represented a horrible end to an era of progress, right?
It was like, what the fuck happened?
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Now let's get back to today's story.
For years, the stones went out of their way
to not talk about this festival thing at all.
They're like, what festival? We don't know her.
No, that never happens, a lie. They still tour today and their concerts have been described
today as extremely professional and tightly organized the first. That was a quote. I know, wow.
So if you ever meet them, for me, we ask, hey, what was up with that thing that I really
happened to the ultimate speedway thing?
And just see what they say.
I want to know.
Thank you.
Keith Richards eventually commented on the festival to the Washington Post saying, quote,
it was just sort of a nightmarish day, not just for us, but for everybody.
And quote, between this and the death of Sharon Tate,
I know out of left field, but think about,
if see out of the 60s.
So the death of Sharon Tate, this awful,
festival situation, people declared that the spirit
of the 60s was officially dead.
It was getting real violent, wasn't it?
It seemed like not the positive things
that had happened in the decade were completely gone.
Civil rights, gender equality, all the peace and love that came with counter-culture movements,
nobody had that warm, fuzzy, optimistic feeling anymore. For a while, the Rolling Stones were known
as, quote, that band that was responsible for Altamum and grew. And their reputation was only saved
when they released the footage from their tour in 1970.
It was a documentary called Gimmy Shelter.
Gimmy Shelter.
The documentary was about their legacy, okay,
and it kind of like saved their ass
and gave them their, it gave them back their good name
because honestly, their tour looked cool as shit.
They kind of glossed over the rest.
Or how it ended, we should say.
It reframed their narrative
as a once-in-a-lifetime rock band.
And the ultimate festival was just a little bump in the road.
You know, it was no big deal.
Never happened, really.
That Ultimat writer Joel pointed out that the stones didn't do the right thing when
it came to the Ultimat saying, quote, the few times they've addressed it.
There has not been the slightest acceptance of responsibility.
The stones left town without paying any of their bills.
That was a pirate trip.
They came to the island.
They ransacked it for booty,
and young maids, and then they made it back home.
And quote, drag them, y'all.
So they ended up having to face one scary consequence,
though, after the film premiered,
the Rolling Stones actually faced multiple assassination
attempts by the Hells Angels.
But, I guess I never got to them.
Nowadays, Ultimont is known as like the evil cousin to Woodstock.
Ultimont was a free spirit.
Ultimont just wanted to be different.
Okay.
Yeah.
They're like, they mean alone dad.
It got like all his heat for bringing the peace in love movement of the 60s to an end
And like again no one really even got in trouble for the festival
It was essentially one big blame game everyone said it was the grateful dead's fault
Yeah, it was their fault or some blame the Rolling Stones
Their fault or they were, it was the angels.
Yeah, I mean, they were just looking, it was a lot of that.
No one wanted to own up to it, obviously, you know.
I think we can agree that that shitty, especially for the families of the people who were killed.
Great, but friends, let me just say this.
Ultraman is what happens when you cut corners
and go with the cheaper, less safe option.
That's the takeaway, right?
Yeah.
So next time you go to the festival
and you have to go through security
and they have to like, search you.
Don't roll your eyes, okay?
There's a reason why.
They're trying to take your money.
Just kidding. They're trying to take your money. Just kidding.
They're trying to help and make sure no one's gonna give you know, they're just trying
to make sure things are safe.
You welcome.
Well, what do you have to say?
Anyone?
Notes?
Feedback?
Suggestion.
You guys never add anything.
Striving me nuts.
Paul's dead.
I don't know if you know this.
I'm just gonna keep pointing it out, okay?
Well, listen, thanks for listening. Thanks for being here and hanging out with me.
Let me tell you about next week because next week we'll be talking about a ground-breaking human rights movement
that many people are not familiar with. This movement took on the government, the education system, and even the Vietnam War.
Yeah, and it was led by a couple of badass activists that created a union so powerful.
They still take on US politicians to this very day. Next week we'll be talking about the Chicano
movement. Snaps. I'll see you there, babe.
And also you can join me over on my YouTube
where you can watch these episodes
on Thursday after the podcast airs.
And while you're there,
you can also catch my murder, mystery, and make up.
Let's just fuck off.
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey
Sarian High, Dunia McNeely from Three Arts, Kevin Grush, and Matt Enlowe from Maiden Network.
A big thank you to our writers, Joie Scavuzzo, Katy Burris, Allison Floboz, and me, Bailey
Surion. Production lead, Brian Jaggers. Research provided by
Sander Elmore and the Dark History Researcher team.
Special thank you to our expert Nicholas Maryweather and Jessica Charles.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sarian. Thank you so much.
I'd love to hear your guys' reactions to today's story,
so make sure to use the hashtag Dark History over on social media so I can follow along.
so make sure to use the hashtag dark history over on social media so I can follow now. Hadi said, quote,
I love how Bailey is so relatable and awkward.
Something that always makes me laugh is when she tries to explain her laughter.
I'm laughing because that's funny, Hadi. I agree. I am awkward. I mean, look at me.
I'm trying to like read your comment. I think I need glasses, but I'm in denial.
Because if I get glasses, then I can't wear lashes.
Laughing is how I deal with my trauma.
And sometimes when I get really uncomfortable,
I just laugh.
I won't tell you about the time
that I accidentally laughed a little bit
at someone's funeral.
I'm so sorry, God.
It's not because I was laughing.
It's because I was just so deeply uncomfortable.
And you couldn't hear me, I swear.
Except the guy next to me.
I know, I'm going to hell. I'm so sorry, God. I pray about it every night, Hattie.
It's a lot.
Poor Hattie, I'm dropping all my trauma on her.
Hattie, are you my new therapist?
Rebecca Sturt said,
quote, can you please do a dark history episode
on the history of psychiatry, Bailey?
It's so fascinating, honestly terrifying.
And, well, Rebecca, I was thinking about this.
I was on the toilet.
I read your comment and I was like,
she's onto something here.
You are.
I mean, hello, duh.
We should, because I'm sure if we look back, we're gonna find so much awfulness.
Thanks, Becca, coming through with the darkness.
Diane Marie said, quote, I just realized dark history has an actual theme song.
Bailey has come so far.
I'm glad.
Oh my god, thank you, Diane.
Yeah.
I also love our new intro music.
It's so cute.
Also, where'd you get that blouse?
I love it.
It looks so good on you.
Would you say that's a short truth, Diane?
I love it on you, girl.
Work.
I hope you have a good,
russier day.
You make good choices. And I'll be talking to you next week. I hope you have a good rest of your day. You make good choices and I'll
be talking to you next week. Good bye!