During his time performing in
Cambridge, Wilson met the American guitarist
John Fahey, the "Father of American Primitive Guitar". With Fahey's encouragement, Wilson moved with Fahey to Los Angeles in 1965 with the aim of having Wilson assist with his UCLA master's thesis on
Charley Patton. Because Wilson forgot his glasses during the trip, Fahey gave him the nickname "Blind Owl" owing to his extreme nearsightedness, roundish facial features and scholarly nature. In one instance, when he was playing at a wedding, he laid his guitar on the wedding cake because he did not see it. As Canned Heat's drummer Fito de la Parra wrote in his book: "Without the glasses, Alan literally could not recognize the people he played with at two feet, that's how blind the 'Blind Owl' was." Once in Los Angeles, Fahey released
The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death. Wilson provided the liner notes under the pseudonym of "Charles Holloway". In 1966, Wilson recorded a series of traditional Indian ragas on Fahey's Takoma label but that set was not issued. Four of Wilson's ragas later appeared as the nine-part soundscape "Parthenogenesis" on Canned Heat's third album,
Living the Blues. A portion of "Raga Kafi" is performed on the chromatic harmonica. Fahey's 1992 album
Old Girlfriends and Other Horrible Memories features more of "Raga Kafi" in "Fear & Loathing at 4th & Butternut", although Wilson was not credited. In Los Angeles, Wilson met fellow blues enthusiast and record collector
Bob "The Bear" Hite at a record store. Together they founded
Canned Heat in 1965. The band's name was taken from Tommy Johnson's 1928 song "Canned Heat Blues", about an alcoholic who turned to drinking the cooking fuel
Sterno. Originally beginning as a jug band, Canned Heat initially consisted of Hite on vocals, Wilson on bottleneck guitar, Mike Perlowin on lead guitar, Stu Brotman on bass, and Keith Sawyer on drums. The group landed gigs at the
Ash Grove in
Hollywood, and, after Perlowin dropped out, Hite invited his friend
Henry "The Sunflower" Vestine, from
Frank Zappa's
Mothers of Invention, to join on guitar.
Johnny Otis produced the group's first full-length album in 1966. It featured Hite, Wilson, Vestine, Brotman, and new drummer
Frank Cook in Otis's studio just off Vine Street in Los Angeles. The record was not released until 1970, and
Vintage, as it was titled, has since become the most repackaged and bootlegged record in Canned Heat's discography. Over a summer hiatus, Brotman left Canned Heat and was replaced by
Larry "The Mole" Taylor, an experienced session musician who had played with
Jerry Lee Lewis and
The Monkees. Canned Heat's first year was marked by infrequent gigs and public indifference. Wilson later told
Melody Maker, "The first year we were together, we worked for three weeks. We'd get a gig, play three days and get fired ... because we refused to be a human jukebox." After a particularly disastrous engagement, the group briefly disbanded in August 1966. Wilson and Vestine moved on to join the Electric Beavers, an ensemble featuring a full horn section. The band lasted for a short time on a rehearsal basis only. Canned Heat re-formed in November 1966. During a gig at the Ash Grove, Canned Heat earned the attention of singer-songwriter
Jackie DeShannon, who was married to the head of A&R at
Liberty Records, Bud Dain. In July 1967, the band released their first album,
Canned Heat, featuring reworkings of older blues songs, for Liberty Records. Their first big live performance was on June 17, 1967, at the
Monterey Pop Festival, where they performed renditions of "Rollin and Tumblin", "Bullfrog Blues", and "Dust My Broom".
DownBeat praised the band's performance: "Technically, Vestine and Wilson are quite possibly the best two-guitar team in the world and Wilson has certainly become our finest white blues harmonica man." Wilson wrote and sang the band's break-out hit, "
On the Road Again", an updated version of a 1950s composition by
Floyd Jones, on the band's second album,
Boogie with Canned Heat. In an interview with
DownBeat, Wilson remarked, "...on 'On the Road Again' I appear in six different capacities – three tamboura parts, harmonica, vocal, and guitar, all recorded at different times." "On the Road Again" peaked at number 16 on the
Billboard Hot 100, and at number 8 on the UK singles charts, which signified the band's popularity in Europe. Drummer Frank Cook left the band in December 1967 and was replaced by Adolfo "Fito" de la Parra. Canned Heat's third album,
Living the Blues, included the band's best-known song, also sung by Wilson, "
Going Up the Country". The song, an incarnation of Henry Thomas' "Bull-Doze Blues", was rewritten by Wilson and caught the "back to nature" attitude of the late 1960s. The tune was a hit in numerous countries around the world, peaking at number 11 in the US. The "rural hippie anthem" became the unofficial theme song for the
Woodstock Festival where Canned Heat performed at sunset on August 16, 1969. Although Canned Heat's live performance was cut from the original theatrical release of the
Woodstock film, they were featured in the 25th-anniversary "Director's Cut". The studio version of "Going Up the Country" was featured in the Woodstock film; and in recent years has been heard in television commercials for Geico Insurance, Subaru, and Pepsi. Around this time, Wilson became disillusioned with Canned Heat and considered quitting on several occasions. Upset over Vestine's July 1969 departure and becoming more averse to touring, Wilson expressed the possibility of still recording but not touring with the band. Wilson arranged to join Vestine's new band Sunn, and Frank Cook's group
Pacific Gas and Electric; however, both options fell through. Eventually Wilson ended up quitting Canned Heat for about two weeks in late 1969, and again shortly before his death in 1970. But each time, he felt guilty and decided to go on tour again. His increasing isolation became obvious, as footage of the band at this time showed Wilson standing apart from his bandmates, and often hiding behind rows of amps. Canned Heat's fifth album,
Future Blues, was released in August 1970 and featured the
Wilbert Harrison cover of "Let's Work Together". It became their biggest hit in the UK, reaching number 2 on the Singles Chart for 15 weeks. The cover features the band dressed as astronauts on the Moon, mocking the
flag-raising on Iwo Jima. The
upside-down American flag was Wilson's idea in response to America's social distress at the time, and his concern over the
first Moon landing a year before. However, retailers like Sears and K-Mart found the cover offensive and refused to stock the album. In May 1970, Canned Heat teamed up with
John Lee Hooker, fulfilling a dream of Wilson's of recording with one of his musical idols. It would be Wilson's last recording. The resulting double album, ''
Hooker 'N' Heat'', was the first in Hooker's career to make the charts. On the album, Hooker is heard wondering how Wilson was capable of following his guitar playing so well. Hooker was known to be a difficult performer to accompany, partly because of his disregard of song form, yet Wilson seemed to have no trouble at all following him on this album. Hooker states that "you [Wilson] musta been listenin' to my records all your life" and also stated that Wilson was the "greatest harmonica player ever". Released after Wilson's death, the album cover features a framed photo of Wilson on the wall behind the rest of Canned Heat. On a night off in Britain on June 30, 1970, Wilson went to see his old friend
Son House, who was performing at the 100 Club in
London. He sat in for "Between Midnight and Day" and "I Want to Go Home on the Morning Train". The show was recorded and originally released as
John The Revelator on Liberty in 1970. The session was a concept album with House narrating through his last European performance in a biblical format. It was reissued in 1995 with extensive liner notes by
David Evans as
Delta Blues and Spirituals on
Capitol Records and was posthumously dedicated to Wilson. The last live footage of Wilson was taken at Canned Heat's performance at the
Kralingen Music Festival,
Rotterdam, Netherlands, on June 26, 1970. Wilson appeared with Canned Heat performing "One Kind Favor" during a party scene in the film
The Naked Zoo, which was released in 1971. ==Personal life==