Details, Explanation and Meaning About Blue Cheer

Blue Cheer Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Blue Cheer was a San Francisco based power trio of the late 1960s. Original personnel were singer/bass guitarist Dick Peterson, guitarist Leigh Stevens and drummer Paul Whaley. The band was named after a strain of LSD promoted by underground chemist and Grateful Dead backer Owsley Stanley; the drug had taken its name from a popular detergent.

Their first hit was a cover version of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues" from their debut album Vincebus Eruptum (1968). (The single peaked at #14 on the Billboard pop charts, and the album peaked at #11.)

The group's sound was hard to categorize, but was definitely blues-based, psychedelic, and very loud. The band has been subsequently acclaimed as an influence on garage rock, punk music, heavy metal, and grunge. Julian Cope has written, "In 1968, nothing but nothing in America and Britain sounded as brutal as Blue Cheer except for the Velvet Underground." [1]

The group underwent several personnel changes before the 1968 release of Outsideinside, and then through yet more changes before 1969's New! Improved! Blue Cheer, followed by Blue Cheer. 1970 saw the release of Human Being and then 1971's Oh! Pleasant Hope. After Leigh Stevens was replaced by Randy Holman, formerly of Los Angeles garage rock band The Other Half, in 1969,Blue Cheer's style changed to a more commercial hard rock sound a la Steppenwolf or Iron Butterfly.

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