Cannabis in 1970s Music
How rock, reggae, funk, and outlaw country put weed at the center of popular music during the decade after Woodstock.
The 1970s is when cannabis stopped being a hippie in-joke and became open subject matter for chart-topping artists. Reggae globalized it, outlaw country normalized it for rural white audiences, and arena rock made bong hits part of the concert experience. A lot of what people 'remember' about the era — specific arrests, who turned the Beatles on, who smoked what — is genuinely documented in memoirs and court records. Other parts are folklore. This article tries to separate them.
Legal and cultural backdrop
The decade opened with the U.S. Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which placed cannabis in Schedule I [1]. Two years later the congressionally chartered Shafer Commission recommended decriminalizing personal possession — a recommendation President Nixon publicly rejected [2]. Despite that rejection, between 1973 (Oregon) and 1978 (Nebraska), eleven U.S. states reduced simple possession to a civil or low-level offense [3]. NORML, founded in 1970, became the public face of reform and cultivated relationships with musicians who would lend their names and money to the cause [3].
This is the policy environment in which 1970s artists wrote, recorded, and toured. Cannabis was illegal almost everywhere, but enforcement against middle-class users — and especially against famous ones — was inconsistent enough that openly singing about it carried less risk than it had a decade earlier.
Reggae and the globalization of ganja
No genre is more associated with cannabis in the 1970s than Jamaican reggae, and the association is not marketing — it is rooted in Rastafari religious practice, which treats ganja as a sacrament [4]. Bob Marley and the Wailers' international breakthrough with Catch a Fire (1973) and Natty Dread (1974) on Island Records brought that practice to a global audience [5]. Peter Tosh's 1976 solo single 'Legalize It' was explicit advocacy, not metaphor, and was banned from Jamaican radio at the time of release [6].
The Wailers' touring through the U.S. and U.K. in 1973–1976 put Rastafari iconography — including ganja — in front of rock audiences who had no prior exposure to it. By the end of the decade, the visual shorthand of dreadlocks, red-gold-green, and a spliff was firmly established in Western popular culture [5][6]. The folklore that 'reggae invented weed culture' is wrong — Jamaican ganja use predates reggae by decades [4] — but reggae is genuinely what carried that culture across borders.
Outlaw country and the Willie Nelson pivot
Country music had a complicated relationship with cannabis. Merle Haggard's 1969 'Okie from Muskogee' ('We don't smoke marijuana in Muskogee') was the cultural baseline. The 'outlaw country' movement of the mid-1970s — Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, Jessi Colter — broke from Nashville convention in production style, business arrangements, and personal habits [7].
Willie Nelson is the central figure here. By his own account in his 1988 autobiography, he switched from heavy drinking to cannabis in the early 1970s and credited it with prolonging his life and career [8]. He was arrested for possession in Waco in 1974, the first of several lifetime arrests [8]. Nelson's albums Shotgun Willie (1973) and Red Headed Stranger (1975) cemented him as a crossover figure, and his openly pro-cannabis stance helped detach weed from purely countercultural coding — a rural, working-class country star endorsing it changed who the 'typical' user looked like in the American imagination [7][8].
Rock, arena tours, and the bong on stage
Rock in the 1970s contained multitudes — and so did its drug references. Some are explicit: Black Sabbath's 'Sweet Leaf' (1971) opens with Tony Iommi coughing on a joint, a detail Iommi confirmed in his 2011 memoir [9]. Other references are coded or contested.
Paul McCartney's repeated cannabis arrests — Sweden 1972, Scotland 1973, Los Angeles 1975, and most famously Tokyo 1980 — were heavily covered in the contemporary press and are documented in court and customs records [10]. The earlier folklore that Bob Dylan introduced the Beatles to cannabis in August 1964 at New York's Delmonico Hotel is corroborated by multiple participants including journalist Al Aronowitz and is generally treated as established by Beatles biographers [11], but it is a 1960s event, not a 1970s one.
What was new in the 1970s was the openness of stadium-rock drug culture. Cheech and Chong's comedy albums (Big Bambú, 1972; Los Cochinos, 1973) treated weed as the central joke and won Grammy nominations [12]. The Grateful Dead's touring economy included a well-documented parking-lot vending scene. Peter Tosh famously lit a joint while performing 'Get Up, Stand Up' at the One Love Peace Concert in Kingston in 1978 in front of the Prime Minister and opposition leader [6].
Funk, soul, and disco — the under-told side
The 1970s cannabis story is usually told through white rock and Jamaican reggae, but Black American music of the decade is full of cannabis references too. Rick James, Funkadelic, and Curtis Mayfield's Super Fly soundtrack (1972) all engaged with drug culture, though Super Fly is more about cocaine and heroin than cannabis [13]. The genre coding matters: when white rock stars sang about weed they were typically read as countercultural; when Black artists did the same the framing in mainstream press was often more punitive, a disparity reflected in arrest statistics from the era [3]. This is documented but under-discussed in pop-music histories of the period.
What's myth and what's documented
A few persistent stories deserve flagging:
- 'High Times started the whole weed media thing.' Partially true. High Times launched in 1974 and was genuinely the first mass-market cannabis magazine, modeled in part on Playboy [14]. Underground papers had covered cannabis for years before, but High Times professionalized it.
- 'Every 70s rock song with a vague drug reference is about weed.' Folklore. Anecdote Songwriters from the era have confirmed some references (Sabbath's 'Sweet Leaf', Tosh's 'Legalize It') and denied others. Treat fan interpretation as interpretation.
- 'Bob Marley smoked a pound a day.' Folklore inflation. Anecdote Marley was a heavy daily user by all accounts, but the specific quantities cited online have no documented source.
- 'The 70s was when modern strains were bred.' Partially true. The 1970s saw the beginnings of the indoor sinsemilla movement in California and the Pacific Northwest, but most of the named-strain breeding work that defines modern cannabis happened in the 1980s [15]. Weak / limited
Sources
- Government U.S. Congress. Controlled Substances Act, Pub. L. 91-513, 1970.
- Government National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse (Shafer Commission). Marihuana: A Signal of Misunderstanding. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.
- Reported Dufton, Emily. 'The Surprising Story of Marijuana Decriminalization in the United States.' Points: The Blog of the Alcohol and Drugs History Society, 2017; see also Dufton, Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Marijuana in America (Basic Books, 2017).
- Peer-reviewed Rubin, Vera, and Comitas, Lambros. Ganja in Jamaica: A Medical Anthropological Study of Chronic Marihuana Use. The Hague: Mouton, 1975.
- Book White, Timothy. Catch a Fire: The Life of Bob Marley. New York: Henry Holt, 1983 (revised 2006).
- Book Campbell, Howard. 'Peter Tosh: The Legalize It Story.' Jamaica Observer feature, 2016; see also Steffens, Roger. So Much Things to Say: The Oral History of Bob Marley (W. W. Norton, 2017).
- Book Streissguth, Michael. Outlaw: Waylon, Willie, Kris, and the Renegades of Nashville. New York: It Books, 2013.
- Book Nelson, Willie, with Bud Shrake. Willie: An Autobiography. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1988.
- Book Iommi, Tony, with T. J. Lammers. Iron Man: My Journey Through Heaven and Hell with Black Sabbath. Da Capo Press, 2011.
- Reported 'Paul McCartney: A History of Drug Busts.' BBC News archive coverage of McCartney's 1972, 1973, 1975 and 1980 cannabis arrests.
- Book Lewisohn, Mark. Tune In: The Beatles — All These Years, Volume 1. New York: Crown Archetype, 2013. (Documents the 28 August 1964 Delmonico Hotel meeting with Bob Dylan and Al Aronowitz.)
- Reported Recording Academy / GRAMMY Awards historical database, Cheech & Chong nominations for Best Comedy Recording, 1973–1974.
- Book Werner, Craig. Higher Ground: Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Curtis Mayfield, and the Rise and Fall of American Soul. New York: Crown, 2004.
- Reported Forcade, Thomas King. Founding editorial materials, High Times magazine, 1974; see also Sheff, David, 'The Strange Life and Death of Thomas King Forcade,' High Times retrospective.
- Book Clarke, Robert C., and Merlin, Mark D. Cannabis: Evolution and Ethnobotany. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013.
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