Mike Katz and Crispin Kott want to take you on a trip through Bay Area music history.
If you’re game, all you have to do is pick up a copy of “Rock and Roll Explorer Guide to San Francisco and the Bay Area,” their cool new book detailing where Jerry Garcia, Grace Slick, Tupac Shakur and other music stars lived, walked and worked in the region. It also covers a number of notable nonlocals, from Bob Dylan to Sid Vicious, who spent time in the area. The tome follows “Rock and Roll Explorer Guide to New York City.”
We recently had the opportunity to chat with the two authors, who have both relocated to Northern California from the East Coast — and browse through 10 iconic Bay Area music destinations. Katz now calls Monterey home, while Kott lives in Oakland.
Q: How did the idea for the Explorer books come about?
Mike Katz (MK): I’ve always been fascinated by the history of cities, particularly what makes them culturally unique. I also spent several formative years in New Orleans, where you can visit the actual places where jazz emerged as a distinctly American form of creative expression. Standing in those places and touching those buildings had a profound effect. It’s a powerful experience, not unlike visiting where the Declaration of Independence was signed, or where Lee surrendered to Grant.
Many years later in New York, Crispin and I attended a panel discussion with the surviving members of the Velvet Underground and listened to Lou Reed recount the many unexpected places where he and the others met, worked and essentially re-created themselves. We had talked about writing a book about New York’s rock ‘n’ roll history, but this was a ‘eureka’ moment.
Q: Why did you decide to do the next book on the Bay Area?
Crispin Kott (CK): After New York we knew we either wanted to tackle the Bay Area or Los Angeles. We went with the Bay Area in part because there was so much more to the story than what happened in the second half of the ‘60s. All that is in here too, but the Haight-Ashbury scene wasn’t the beginning of rock music in the Bay Area, and it wasn’t the end, either.

Q: A lot of people know about the S.F. rock landmarks — Fillmore, Haight-Ashbury, etc. But how much rock history exists outside of the 415?
MK: Lots! Oakland’s Blues and R&B roots date back nearly a century, and Berkeley has an extremely diverse history encompassing folk, blues, rock, and R&B, as well as some pioneering record labels. San Jose, Santa Clara, Stanford, Menlo Park, Palo Alto, and various other sites up and down the peninsula were both critical proving grounds and important performance locales for many important artists of the ’60s and beyond.
Q: The biggest city in the Bay Area is, of course, San Jose. Is there a lot of rock history to find in the land that gave us the Doobie Brothers?

MK: Yes indeed. The house that Tom Johnston lived in when he founded the Doobies was recently given historic status. Beyond that, San Jose can also boast the first gig by the Grateful Dead under that name, at one of Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests on December 4, 1965. That event was reportedly attended by Rolling Stones Keith Richards and Brian Jones following their own gig at the Civic Auditorium.
San Jose was a key location in the critically important folk music circuit of the mid-‘60s as well, attracting the young Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Ron “Pigpen” McKernan, Janis Joplin, Paul Kantner, and Jorma Kaukonen.
Kantner was a student at San Jose State and worked with Kaukonen at Benner’s, a local music store. Jorma even made extra money teaching guitar lessons there for quite some time. There’s plenty more, but I can’t give it all away here.
Q: What were some of the biggest surprises that came about while doing this book?
Stay connected with us on social media platform for instant update click here to join our Twitter, & Facebook
We are now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@TechiUpdate) and stay updated with the latest Technology headlines.
For all the latest Music News Click Here