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Big Sur: A Haven For Writers, Musicians (PHOTOS)

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 07/24/11 06:14 PM ET Updated: 09/23/11 06:12 AM ET

Big Sur

By Solvej Schou, Associated Press

BIG SUR, Calif. — The road to Big Sur is a narrow, winding one, with the Pacific Ocean on one side, spread out like blue glass, and a mountainside of redwood trees on the other.

The area spans 90 miles of the Central Coast, along Highway 1. Los Angeles is 300 miles south. San Francisco is 150 miles north. There are no train stations or airports nearby. Cell phone reception is limited. Gas and lodging are pricey.

(SCROLL DOWN FOR PHOTOS)

When you're there, though, Big Sur's isolated beauty is staggering. Fog settles into the steep flank of the Santa Lucia Mountains, above beaches lined with tide pools and massive rock formations. Guest houses are surrounded by thick walls of green foliage, and not much else.

Venerated in books by late authors Henry Miller and Jack Kerouac, it's no wonder then that Big Sur continues to be a haven for writers, artists and musicians such as Alanis Morissette and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, all inspired by a hybrid landscape of mountains, beaches, birds and sea, plus bohemian inns and ultra-private homes.

While Big Sur's influence on the arts has been turning up in poems, books and songs in American popular culture for nearly a century, its human history goes back much farther than that. Earliest inhabitants included the Native American Esselen tribe, followed by pioneers who settled the area in the late 19th century.

In the 1920s, American poet Robinson Jeffers meditated about Big Sur's "wine-hearted solitude, our mother the wilderness" in poems like "Bixby's Landing," about a stretch of land that became part of Highway 1 and the towering Bixby Bridge 13 miles south of Carmel. (Part of the highway near that bridge collapsed due to heavy rains this past spring, followed by a landslide nearby; the roadway reopened recently.)

Another poem by Jeffers, "The Beaks of Eagles," later inspired a Beach Boys' song on their 1970s album "Holland." In the early `70s, Beach Boys co-founder Al Jardine even built a recording studio, Red Barn, a 10-minute walk from Pfeiffer Beach, a picturesque oceanside expanse in the middle of Big Sur covered in lavender-tinted sand.

Among literary figures, Miller probably has the strongest association with the area. "Big Sur has a climate all its own and a character all its own," he wrote in his 1957 autobiographical book "Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch." "It is a region where extremes meet, a region where one is always conscious of weather, of space, of grandeur, and of eloquent silence."

Miller, famed for his explicit novel "Tropic of Cancer," lived and worked in Big Sur between 1944 and 1962, drawn to the stretch of coast's idyllic setting and a revolving cadre of creative, kind, hard-working residents.

Persuaded to move there by Greek artist Jean Varda, Miller initially stayed as a house guest of novelist Lynda Sargent at a log cabin built by Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth in the mid `40s with a grand coastal view of southern Monterey County. Later owners Lolly and Bill Fassett founded the open-air Nepenthe restaurant on the site in 1949. Writers, hippies and celebrities, from Clint Eastwood and Kim Novak to Man Ray and Dylan Thomas, flocked there. Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton shot a dancing scene for their film "The Sandpiper" at the restaurant in 1963. Nepenthe remains a popular tourist spot.

Miller's longtime Partington Ridge property 14 miles south of the Big Sur post office still exists, overlooking the ocean. Miller painted and wrote there, entertaining visitors ranging from young misfit fans of his work to established artists.

Beat Generation poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti also had a cabin in Big Sur, in the wilderness of Bixby Canyon. Kerouac, one of the Beats' most important writers, stayed in that cabin for a time, and wrote about it in his 1962 book "Big Sur," ranting as fictional alter-ego Jack Duluoz about his own real-life loneliness and alcohol-fueled delirium.

For Kerouac, the ocean became dangerous, and bridges, places of potential death. "I gulp to wonder why it has the reputation of being beautiful above and beyond its fearfulness, . those vistas when you drive the coast highway on a sunny day opening up the eye for miles of horrible washing sawing," Kerouac wrote.

Kerouac's book inspired the 2009 documentary "One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur" and its beautiful, melody-filled soundtrack by Jay Farrar of alt-country band Son Volt and Ben Gibbard of pop-rock group Death Cab for Cutie. A feature-length adaptation of Kerouac's book, from writer-director Michael Polish ("Twin Falls Idaho") and costarring Kate Bosworth, also recently wrapped filming.

Another entity that connects contemporary artists to an earlier generation is the Henry Miller Memorial Library next to Highway 1, founded by a friend of Miller's a year after he died in 1981. A wooden sign with yellow lettering leads to a lush, tree-lined outdoor performance space that has hosted the likes of Patti Smith, Arcade Fire and Phillip Glass. Shows are intimate, but also chilly, so bring a jacket.

"We have a precision here that's perfect. It's a humble little cabin, but it's located within this magnificent landscape," said Magnus Toren, the library's executive director since 1993. "Male and female artists have come and testified to me about being inspired by Henry's message that they received at 18, 19, 21. They almost kiss the floor when they come in."

Bearded frontman Robin Pecknold of on-the-rise indie band the Fleet Foxes wrote part of the band's new album "Helplessness Blues" at Toren's guest house. Other guest houses dotting the Big Sur hillside regularly host musicians like him. But the area also attracts plenty of regular tourists and other vacationers to historic inns such as the rustic Deetjens, south of the library, and the famed spiritual retreat site the Esalen Institute. More than a dozen galleries featuring local artists are nearby.

The Red Hot Chili Peppers mentioned Big Sur in their 2000 surf-and-sky-loving single "Road Trippin'" and Morissette sang about Big Sur on the tune "Torch" from her 2008 album "Flavors of Entanglement." Morissette also offered a simple but perfect tribute to Big Sur last fall on Twitter, when she posted a beachy picture of herself pregnant, staring off into the waves.

She wrote, simply, "big sur. my favorite place - am."

___

If You Go...

BIG SUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: http://www.bigsurcalifornia.org/

HENRY MILLER MEMORIAL LIBRARY: Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2574. Events held here include workshops, performances, readings, film screenings. http://www.henrymiller.org/

NEPENTHE RESTAURANT: 48510 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2345. Dinner entrees, $14-$39. Open for lunch and dinner. Café Kevah serves brunch, coffee and pastries beginning at 9 a.m. daily. http://www.nepenthebigsur.com/

DEETJENS BIG SUR INN: 48865 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2377. Rates range from $90-$250. http://www.deetjens.com/

ESALEN INSTITUTE: 55000 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 888-837-2536. Retreat center offering overnight stays, hot tubs, workshops and other activities. http://www.esalen.org/

When you're there, though, Big Sur's isolated beauty is staggering. Fog settles into the steep flank of the Santa Lucia Mountains, above beaches lined with tide pools and massive rock formations. Guest houses are surrounded by thick walls of green foliage, and not much else.

Venerated in books by late authors Henry Miller and Jack Kerouac, it's no wonder then that Big Sur continues to be a haven for writers, artists and musicians such as Alanis Morissette and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, all inspired by a hybrid landscape of mountains, beaches, birds and sea, plus bohemian inns and ultra-private homes.

While Big Sur's influence on the arts has been turning up in poems, books and songs in American popular culture for nearly a century, its human history goes back much farther than that. Earliest inhabitants included the Native American Esselen tribe, followed by pioneers who settled the area in the late 19th century.

In the 1920s, American poet Robinson Jeffers meditated about Big Sur's "wine-hearted solitude, our mother the wilderness" in poems like "Bixby's Landing," about a stretch of land that became part of Highway 1 and the towering Bixby Bridge 13 miles south of Carmel. (Part of the highway near that bridge collapsed due to heavy rains this past spring, followed by a landslide nearby; the roadway reopened recently.)

Another poem by Jeffers, "The Beaks of Eagles," later inspired a Beach Boys' song on their 1970s album "Holland." In the early `70s, Beach Boys co-founder Al Jardine even built a recording studio, Red Barn, a 10-minute walk from Pfeiffer Beach, a picturesque oceanside expanse in the middle of Big Sur covered in lavender-tinted sand.

Among literary figures, Miller probably has the strongest association with the area. "Big Sur has a climate all its own and a character all its own," he wrote in his 1957 autobiographical book "Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch." "It is a region where extremes meet, a region where one is always conscious of weather, of space, of grandeur, and of eloquent silence."

Miller, famed for his explicit novel "Tropic of Cancer," lived and worked in Big Sur between 1944 and 1962, drawn to the stretch of coast's idyllic setting and a revolving cadre of creative, kind, hard-working residents.

Persuaded to move there by Greek artist Jean Varda, Miller initially stayed as a house guest of novelist Lynda Sargent at a log cabin built by Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth in the mid `40s with a grand coastal view of southern Monterey County. Later owners Lolly and Bill Fassett founded the open-air Nepenthe restaurant on the site in 1949. Writers, hippies and celebrities, from Clint Eastwood and Kim Novak to Man Ray and Dylan Thomas, flocked there. Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton shot a dancing scene for their film "The Sandpiper" at the restaurant in 1963. Nepenthe remains a popular tourist spot.

Miller's longtime Partington Ridge property 14 miles south of the Big Sur post office still exists, overlooking the ocean. Miller painted and wrote there, entertaining visitors ranging from young misfit fans of his work to established artists.

Beat Generation poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti also had a cabin in Big Sur, in the wilderness of Bixby Canyon. Kerouac, one of the Beats' most important writers, stayed in that cabin for a time, and wrote about it in his 1962 book "Big Sur," ranting as fictional alter-ego Jack Duluoz about his own real-life loneliness and alcohol-fueled delirium.

For Kerouac, the ocean became dangerous, and bridges, places of potential death. "I gulp to wonder why it has the reputation of being beautiful above and beyond its fearfulness, . those vistas when you drive the coast highway on a sunny day opening up the eye for miles of horrible washing sawing," Kerouac wrote.

Kerouac's book inspired the 2009 documentary "One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur" and its beautiful, melody-filled soundtrack by Jay Farrar of alt-country band Son Volt and Ben Gibbard of pop-rock group Death Cab for Cutie. A feature-length adaptation of Kerouac's book, from writer-director Michael Polish ("Twin Falls Idaho") and costarring Kate Bosworth, also recently wrapped filming.

Another entity that connects contemporary artists to an earlier generation is the Henry Miller Memorial Library next to Highway 1, founded by a friend of Miller's a year after he died in 1981. A wooden sign with yellow lettering leads to a lush, tree-lined outdoor performance space that has hosted the likes of Patti Smith, Arcade Fire and Phillip Glass. Shows are intimate, but also chilly, so bring a jacket.

"We have a precision here that's perfect. It's a humble little cabin, but it's located within this magnificent landscape," said Magnus Toren, the library's executive director since 1993. "Male and female artists have come and testified to me about being inspired by Henry's message that they received at 18, 19, 21. They almost kiss the floor when they come in."

Bearded frontman Robin Pecknold of on-the-rise indie band the Fleet Foxes wrote part of the band's new album "Helplessness Blues" at Toren's guest house. Other guest houses dotting the Big Sur hillside regularly host musicians like him. But the area also attracts plenty of regular tourists and other vacationers to historic inns such as the rustic Deetjens, south of the library, and the famed spiritual retreat site the Esalen Institute. More than a dozen galleries featuring local artists are nearby.

The Red Hot Chili Peppers mentioned Big Sur in their 2000 surf-and-sky-loving single "Road Trippin'" and Morissette sang about Big Sur on the tune "Torch" from her 2008 album "Flavors of Entanglement." Morissette also offered a simple but perfect tribute to Big Sur last fall on Twitter, when she posted a beachy picture of herself pregnant, staring off into the waves.

She wrote, simply, "big sur. my favorite place - am."

___

If You Go...

BIG SUR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: http://www.bigsurcalifornia.org/

HENRY MILLER MEMORIAL LIBRARY: Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2574. Events held here include workshops, performances, readings, film screenings. http://www.henrymiller.org/

NEPENTHE RESTAURANT: 48510 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2345. Dinner entrees, $14-$39. Open for lunch and dinner. Café Kevah serves brunch, coffee and pastries beginning at 9 a.m. daily. http://www.nepenthebigsur.com/

DEETJENS BIG SUR INN: 48865 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 831-667-2377. Rates range from $90-$250. http://www.deetjens.com/

ESALEN INSTITUTE: 55000 Highway 1, Big Sur; or 888-837-2536. Retreat center offering overnight stays, hot tubs, workshops and other activities. http://www.esalen.org/

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By Solvej Schou, Associated Press BIG SUR, Calif. — The road to Big Sur is a narrow, winding one, with the Pacific Ocean on one side, spread out like blue glass, and a mountainside of redwood tre...
By Solvej Schou, Associated Press BIG SUR, Calif. — The road to Big Sur is a narrow, winding one, with the Pacific Ocean on one side, spread out like blue glass, and a mountainside of redwood tre...
 
 
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05:22 AM on 08/06/2011
I hope someone out there can help me to identify a singer/songwriter (American) who sang about Big Sur. I have tried Google but with no result.

I used to have an album (yes, the vinyl variety) which I bought second hand in some kind of second hand record store in England. It is one of the best albums I ever had. I have never seen it for sale before or since.

I cannot now find it (it is not with my other vinyl records) and I cannot remember the name of the artist.

The two things I remember about the album are:

At the beginning of the (I think) last track the artist says (in a laid back kind of way) something like, "[someone] and I are sitting around here .." and then he says that the next song is about Big Sur, and I think part of the lyric is "misty mountain"

There is another track in which I think the following words appear, "I thought you were my lady, and I believed every word"

I would love to get another copy of this album (or find it on iTunes if it was ever digitalised). Can anyone help? Perhaps the artist himself - I bet you might have lived around Big Sur.

Thanks in advance to anyone who can help.

Peter
06:25 PM on 08/03/2011
One of our favorite romantic resorts in California is Post Ranch Inn. The views overlooking Big Sur are incredible!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillsinister
12:26 AM on 07/26/2011
That is one of my favorite places on Earth. Truly magical.
Frances Gerdes
"worried well"
03:04 PM on 07/25/2011
Esalen is a state of consciousness as much as it is a physical place. It is a place where the sea meets the mountains and where we go to meet our sacred place. If you want to be in a peaceful place, go there.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
supertamsf
Tilting at windmills ..
02:48 PM on 07/25/2011
Majestic photos of Big Sur ruined by image of hoola-hoop hippie with mole on forehead. Ewww.
photo
El Pinche
HENNGGHHG!!??
03:57 PM on 07/25/2011
LOL!! That's what I thought, too.
07:16 PM on 07/25/2011
But much of the article is about the delightfully eccentric and creative people who live and have lived there, and I think she's pretty representative of a lot of the people I've known in the area.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
supertamsf
Tilting at windmills ..
07:55 PM on 07/25/2011
I disagree with her being representative of the area, nor would I put her in the same category as Jack Kerouac, Henry Miller or Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Big Sur is rugged, transcendent, sonorous - everything girl-with-plastic-hoola-hoop is not.
02:47 PM on 07/25/2011
STOP! Pay no attention to this article! Big Sur is a dreadful place, you don't want to go there. This is NOT the place you're looking for. It's full of big, nasty trees - and cliffs. Lots of cliffs. You could fall and hurt yourself. And hippies - don't even get me started about the hippies. Sure, they seem nice enough, but most of them are actually hard working, self reliant individualists. Peace and love, indeed! So just continue down the coast a couple of hundred miles and you can go to Disneyland. There they have an entire theme park with a much improved - and safer - recreation of California. All the best parts of the state without having to be exposed to actual nature. Or hippies.
04:03 PM on 07/25/2011
Fanned! Couldn't agree more! Do NOT go there! Lies, nothing but lies! And it's really, really crowded too. Did I say fanned already?
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quillsinister
12:27 AM on 07/26/2011
Ha. Now that you've scared them off, I'll see you at Nepenthe. :-D
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kndtloeser
Love everyone
11:00 AM on 07/25/2011
I have been going to Big Sur since the early 60's. My travels have taken me to many, many places and adventures. Big Sur is the place that is closest to my heart. The Coast Galley is my favorite art studio. They have changed ownership throught the years but have always managed to keep their original concept of having a range of items that will satify the serious or once in a while collector. The favorite place to stay is the Big Sur Campground. You will find yourself in a magnicant grove of red wood trees. I hope that you get a chance to go there and experience all of what Big Sur has to offer.
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10:17 PM on 07/24/2011
This is MY part of this country - land and sky and sea that infuse every hour with beauty and meaning. I live just between Big Sur and San Francisco, in sight of the sea and in the shadow of towering redwoods and majestic oaks - and accordingly count myself among the fortunate few on this planet.

This region is the spiritual home of West Coast liberalism - fiercely independent and fully functional - we work hard, are mindful of our communities and the environment - and know how to have a good time. Besotted by this beauty, we seek to preserve and sustain it - this is a hub of organic agriculture (my county has more farmers' markets than any other in the nation) of high tech, and of innovators who are working to marry the two and midwife green technology and true sustainability. Our cultural life is rich - art and music are everywhere.

There are no boarded-up neighborhoods here - no rusting industrial districts. When Republicanism's dark cloud swept over California and the USA - it turned back in the face of our determined resistance. And we've thrived in spite of it.

Long may our Eden retain its majesty and power...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
supertamsf
Tilting at windmills ..
02:53 PM on 07/25/2011
"This is MY part of this country" - Oh please.
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01:14 AM on 07/26/2011
Yup - this is where I live - I've covered every inch of these pics.

Jealous much?
04:16 PM on 07/25/2011
"I live just between Big Sur and San Francisco ..." oh really? You make them sound so close, when it's about a 3-4 hr. drive from North Beach to Nepenthe. You could be anywhere from Daly City (no majestic oaks there!) to San Jose (gridlocked traffic and very few trees), Marina & Seaside (mocked and unwanted stepchildren of the newly-arrived rich folks in Monterey and Carmel), but since 'your' county has more farmers' markets etc., I'm going to guess you're in Santa Cruz County, the southernmost part of which is at least 1-1/2 hours from Big Sur, if there's no traffic (and there always is). And if you think there's no boarded-up neighborhoods or empty industrial districts, or Republicans, between SF and Big Sur, you must not live here at all.
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01:25 AM on 07/26/2011
Who said anything about NO Republicans? Not I. I said no Republicanism - which is true. I do in fact live in SC county - and literally as I said, in sight of the ocean and in the shadows of oaks and redwoods.

You and I have crossed paths before - enough so I know that your doom-and-gloom handle is accurate and well-chosen.

I can't imagine going through life with the bitterness you carry and exude.

Marina and Seaside are gentrifying just now - I work there with some regularity - I'm a remodeler. Monterey and Carmel is where the OLD money is - if you truly knew the area, you'd know that.

Where might these boarded-up neighborhoods and industrial districts on the central coast be, exactly? - I don't see them - and my work takes me all around the region. In fact - at one time I lived in SC - and worked in SF.

I truly am among the fortunate few - and not least because YOUR world view hasn't infected me...
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03:10 AM on 07/26/2011
Yo, Cassandra 45, I live in Santa Cruz county. It is equidistant from Big Sur and San Francisco (depending on how one drives). Yes, the traffic has gotten worse—that would have happened especially 20 years ago during the Dotcom boom. SO WHAT?

Republicans are at a minimum, in our Eden, with the exception of Carmel. But then, they host the most pretentious on the central coast, including Thomas "Dimmer Switchy" Kincade's "art."

What on God's green earth is your point? You wanna come at me with ANYTHING about farms? Let me know.

Thank goodness I live in the most beautiful place I've been (within the U.S., that is).

I don't think anything you write is meaningful. Maybe you should be tilting at windmills.

Just a thought. #Perplexed
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbone99
cruisin' duality
09:58 PM on 07/24/2011
Stayed at the Big Sur campgrounds a month ago. We got there late , after a detour due to rockslide , yet the Chef at the Big Sur Inn , at the campground, opened the restaurant for us ,after 10 pm ,cooked us a wonderful meal and sang us some opera .

Staying at the campground with showers, and bathrooms is quite affordable , around $ 30 dollars /night. Unbelievably beautiful and fragrant .
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jokamachi
You're doing it wrong.
09:58 PM on 07/24/2011
Kerouac's long poem at the end of his novel Big Sur is a delight to read. Novel's not too shabby, either.