The Red Dog Saloon is a bar and live music venue located in
Virginia City, Nevada. The bar played an important role in the history of the
psychedelic music scene.
Folk music enthusiast Mark Unobsky bought the
Henry Comstock’s house in Virginia City. Then used the building to open a folk club with Chandler A. Laughlin III (1937-2012), a folk club owner, and Don Works in the early 1960s.
In April 1963, Chandler established a family identity among approximately fifty people who attended the traditional, all-night
Native American peyote ceremony. This ceremony combined a psychedelic experience with traditional Native American spiritual values;[citation needed] these people went on to sponsor a new genre of musical expression at the venue.[1]
During the summer of 1965, Laughlin[2][3][4][5] recruited much of the original talent of the traditional folk music and psychedelic rock.[1] He and his friends created what became known as "The Red Dog Experience," featuring previously unknown musical acts, such as
Big Brother and the Holding Company,
The Charlatans, The Wildflower and others — who played in the refurbished saloon during 1965-1966. There was no clear delineation between "performers" and "audience" in the bar. During, which music psychedelic experimentation and
Bill Ham's first primitive light shows came.[1][6][7]
LSD manufacturer
Owsley Stanley lived in
Berkeley during 1965 and provided LSD that became a part of the experience. At the saloon, The Charlatans were the first psychedelic rock band to play live whilst on LSD.[8]
References
^
abcWorks, Mary (Director) (2005). Rockin' At the Red Dog: The Dawn of Psychedelic Rock (DVD). Monterey Video.
^The Santa Cruz Sentinel, Travus T Hipp "was an independent-minded old cuss who was the very picture of the great American freethinker and hellraiser that always seemed to find a hospitable habitat in the West. For decades, he has contributed free-wheeling sometimes caustic opinions on the maddening state of the human animal to radio stations all over California and Nevada, but KPIG remained...."
^Virginia City News, "He was also one of the founding partiers at the original Red Dog Saloon in the mid-'60s with his wife, Lynn Hughes, and Don and Roz Works. "Most of what you heard about the Red Dog was not only true, it was understated," he told the Appeal. "We had six women in period costume, and the theory of the Red Dog was, when your feet hit the floor in the morning, you were in a B Western movie,..." Retrieved Jan 3, 2014