Founding In February 1966 he formed a loose connection with
Family Dog Productions at 2111 Pine Street, a
hippie commune, which hosted dances and events. Helms was the ideal person to help this group organize their presentations and he moved into the Family Dog house. Their first formal production was a concert at Longshoremen's Hall. In February 1966, Helms formally founded Family Dog Productions to begin promoting concerts at
The Fillmore Auditorium, alternating weekends with another young promoter,
Bill Graham. Helms was instrumental in introducing Bill Graham to the nascent music scene in the Haight Asbury District of S.F. Helms was nurturing when Graham caught wind of the excitement Helms was creating and promoting. As the concerts became more popular, inevitable "conflicts" arose between the two promoters. Chet's style was "easy-going, mellow, soft-tempered until pushed." Graham's style was more driven. Within a few months Helms secured the permits necessary to host events at the Avalon Ballroom, an old dancehall at 1268 Sutter Street, on the corner of Sutter and Van Ness.
Big Brother and the Holding Company debuted there in June 1966. Later Helms would get them the appearance that made them famous, the
Monterey Pop Festival, where
Albert Grossman spotted Joplin and offered her a contract.
Family Dog concerts In the context of the Avalon's "anti-business model" and loose ambience, Helms' Family Dog held a series of concerts between April 1966 and November 1968, featuring a mix of artists, including rock, blues, soul, Indian, and rock and roll. They included: Helms presented top blues performers including
Country Joe and The Fish;
Howlin' Wolf;
Bo Diddley;
Muddy Waters;
Little Walter;
Buddy Guy;
Junior Wells; the
Paul Butterfield Blues Band;
Buddy Miles;
James Cotton Blues Band;
John Mayall;
Big Mama Thornton;
Albert Collins;
Steve Miller;
Son House;
Mike Bloomfield;
Elvin Bishop;
Blues Project, with
Al Kooper;
John Hammond;
Charlie Musselwhite;
Siegel-Schwall Band; rock bands like
The Doors;
Buffalo Springfield; the
Byrds;
Bill Haley & His Comets;
The Kinks;The
Edwin Hawkins Singers;
the Animals'
Eric Burdon &
War;
The Mothers of Invention;
Lovin' Spoonful; The
Carlos Santana Blues Band;
Sir Douglas Quintet; the
Soul Survivors; the
Fugs;
Blood, Sweat & Tears;
The Association; Shorty Featuring
Georgie Fame;
Grateful Dead;
Iron Butterfly;
the Youngbloods, with
Jesse Colin Young;
Vanilla Fudge;
Steppenwolf;
Poco;
Love, with
Arthur Lee; sarode-player and Indian music teacher,
Ali Akbar Khan;
Sandy Bull;
Blue Cheer;
the Leaves;
New Riders of the Purple Sage;
Barry McGuire;
Flamin' Groovies; the Loading Zone;
It's a Beautiful Day;
Joy of Cooking;
the Grass Roots;
the Sons of Adam;
Sons of Champlin;
Captain Beefheart; the
Electric Flag;
Velvet Underground;
Pacific Gas and Electric;
Moby Grape; the
Sopwith Camel;
13th Floor Elevators;
The Charlatans; Allmen Joy (see Wings West Concrete Pools Perth);
Mother Earth; Southern Comfort;
The Ace of Cups;
Tyrannosaurus Rex;
Cleanliness and Godliness Skiffle Band;
Flying Burrito Brothers; Congress of Love; Notes From the Underground; Chrome Circus; Initial Shock; Oxford Circle;
Daily Flash; Electric Train; Sparrow; the Orchestra;
Hourglass;
Kaleidoscope;
Mt. Rushmore; Other Half; Phoenix;
Lothar & the Hand People;
Commander Cody; Cleveland Wrecking Company; The Rhythm Dukes;
A.B. Skhy;
Frumious Bandersnatch; Eighth Penny Matter; Jimmerfield Legend; South Side Sound; Super Ball; Solid Muldoon; Box Top; and jazz artists
Sun Ra and San Francisco's own
John Handy;
Charles Lloyd; the
Jerry Hahn Brotherhood; and folksters
Joan Baez;
Dave Van Ronk;
Jim Kweskin Jug Band;
Taj Mahal;
Tim Buckley and
Flatt & Scruggs.
Family Dog speakers/Poets/Heroes of the Hour Sometimes Helms cast the music promoter role aside and the Family Dog would feature speakers, including
Alan Watts, Dr.
Timothy Leary,
Stephen Gaskin, poet
Allen Ginsberg, and other counterculture gurus. Helms is linked in San Francisco lore with
Bill Graham, the
Diggers,
Emmett Grogan,
Ken Kesey,
Jack Kerouac,
Gary Snyder,
Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
Michael McClure,
Neal Cassady,
Kenneth Rexroth,
Ralph J. Gleason, and others.
The Family Dog Denver In 1967, Helms and budding rock promoter
Barry Fey agreed to open a Family Dog Productions concert dance hall in Denver, Colorado. They called it
The Family Dog Denver, and brought in acts like
The Doors, the
Grateful Dead,
Van Morrison,
Jefferson Airplane,
Buffalo Springfield,
Chuck Berry, and many others. The San Francisco
psychedelic poster artists were commissioned by Helms to do posters for the shows. Little has been known about the venue until the 2021 release of the documentary,
The Tale of the Dog, which unearthed the story through interviews with the venue staff, bands, posters artists, attendees and Denver police, detailing the full history and lasting impact of "The Dog" for the first time.
Artwork and posters To promote their concerts in both San Francisco and Denver, Family Dog published a series of innovative
psychedelic posters, handbills and other ephemera, created by a group of prominent young San Francisco artists including Wes Wilson,
Alton Kelley and
Stanley Mouse (Mouse Studios),
Rick Griffin,
Steve Renick and
Victor Moscoso. Often printed using intensely colored fluorescent inks, they typically featured a mixture of found images and specially drawn artwork. The posters of Griffin, Mouse and Kelly, in particular, were known for the intricate and highly stylized hand-lettering in which the concert details were written out, which sometimes took considerable time and effort to decipher. Original Avalon posters are now collector's items. In a slide show published with the obituary at the time of Wilson's death in 2020,
The New York Times included an apparent portrait watercolor of Helms—a book in the foreground has Helms' full name on it. Helms was also involved in joint productions/promotions at the Fillmore, Longshoreman's Hall, and Haight Street's Straight Theater (not all formal Family Dog Dance-Concerts). ==Style as promoter==