The 1960’s music transformation was instrumental (ðŸ¤) in creating new genres of listening entertainment. One of the first groups to bring psychedelic songs to American ears was the Austin, Texas group: 13 Floor Elevators and then California bands followed suit. The Electric Prunes: Too Much to Dream achieved #11 and Jefferson Airplane’s bolero style, White Rabbit ran to #8 on the 1967 charts. Psychedelic Music was then picked up by the Superstar group, the Beatles, who released Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, and the rest is history. So where did the inspiration for psychedelic music come from you might inquire? It all goes back to the influx of fresh Baby Boomers who were born after WW2, whose conceptions were encouraged by governments that needed to reestablish depleted armies. As this huge group grew up, certain creative males were potty trained on potty chairs. They remembered the artificial sounds that their high pressure urine made when it was ejected from their inch long, stick straight out penises and hit the neoprene diverters installed on potty chairs especially made for boys. Also, the sound of their stools dropping into the porcelain coated steel bowls that slid out to empty created a haunting sound that Cold War Electronic Engineers soon duplicated in fuzz guitars and synthesizers. So now you know the real inspiration of the Psychedelic Music (Bowel) Movement. What will they think of next? Fart Rock?



