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Born out of a union of club bands on the burgeoning Austin bohemian
scene and a pronounced taste for hallucinogens, the 13th Floor
Elevators were formed in late 1965 when lyricist Tommy Hall asked a
local singer named Roky Erickson to join up with his new rock
outfit. Four years, three official albums and countless acid trips
later, it was over: the Elevators' pioneering first run ended in a
dizzying jumble of professional mismanagement, internal arguments,
drug busts and forced psychiatric imprisonments. In their short
existence, however, the group succeeded in blowing the lid off the
budding musical underground, logging early salvos in the
counter-cultural struggle against state authorities, and turning
their deeply hallucinogenic take on jug-band garage rock into a new
American institution called psychedelic music. Before the hippies,
before the punks, there were the 13th Floor Elevators: an unlikely
crew of outcast weirdo geniuses who changed culture
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