Held in Monterey, California, on June 16–18, 1967, the Monterey Pop Festival was the first commercial American rock festival. Dunhill Records executive Lou Adler and John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas organized the festival around the concept of the successful Monterey Jazz Festival and staged it at that festival’s site. Featuring the first major American appearances of Jimi Hendrix and the Who, it also introduced Janis Joplin to a large audience and featured performances by the Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, the Byrds, Canned Heat, Buffalo Springfield, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar, and many others.
The timing of the festival was fortuitous: major record companies had just become aware of the commercial potential of the new rock music, and, as one witness said, “The action wasn’t on the stage; it was at the bar, where the record companies and the managers were in a heated bidding war.” The Who, Joplin, Hendrix, and the short-lived Electric Flag signed major record deals; Redding was introduced to a white audience; and the counterculture’s music gained new legitimacy, all as a result of the Monterey Pop Festival. Filmed by D.A. Pennebaker and recorded (although contractual problems kept the album that documented the event under wraps for two decades), the festival was thought to have been very successful. However, a 1968 festival was scrapped when it was discovered that the proceeds and the festival company’s bookkeeper had vanished.