1960s counter culture venue brought big names to Vancouver - Action News
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British Columbia

1960s counter culture venue brought big names to Vancouver

Music promoter Jerry Kruz brought psychedelic bands like the Grateful Dead to Vancouver in the 1960s.

Summer of Love's psychedelic sounds

7 years ago
Duration 5:24
Jerry Kruz was behind the Grateful Dead's first free show

Jerry Kruz, the influential music promoter behind Vancouver's psychedelic club,The Afterthought, narrowly avoided a career in the priesthood.

"My mother told me I was supposed to be a priest and that's what Iwas raised up to be," said Kruz.

But not long after enrolling inseminary, Kruzhad dropped out and started a coffee house instead.

In 1965, when folk musicians like Tom Northcott andDon Crawford wanted to transition to rock 'n' roll, Kruz's coffee shopwas the perfect venue. In 1966, he even hostedthe Grateful Dead when they played their first free concert.

At the time, hippies and drug culture ran counter to the mainstream and attracted the ire of then Vancouver Mayor Tom Campbell.

Even the promotional materials produced for Kruz's shows received criticism. Kruz recalled one poster promoting a Tom Northcott Trio show that depicted flowers around Northcott's head.

"I remember the police [and city officials]coming to me and saying that I was suggesting that people should get high, which was not the intent,"he toldhostGloriaMacarenkoonCBC'sOur Vancouver.

"Of course, everybody did [get high]. But that droveTom Campbell daffy."

Jerry Kruz says the Grateful Dead's first free concert was in Vancouver, not San Francisco. (CBC)

Could Vancouver become a hotbed for counter cultural music again, like it did in 1967's Summer of Love?

"We'll never see exactly what we saw then,"Kruzsaid, "There were so many groups in Vancouver. They were all trying to get recognized," he said.

While the music industry has changed dramatically, Kruzstill sees hope.

"Everything is about sponsorship now," he said, "But I realize that the whole street [music] thing that is happening just morphed from what we were doing for free in Stanley Park."

To watch Jerry and Julie Kruz's interview with Gloria Macarenko on Our Vancouver,click here.