Picture it: San Francisco, late 1967. Pink Floyd are anonymous British freaks on their first American tour, Janis Joplin is the explosive local star fronting Big Brother and the Holding Company, and everyone is marinating in acid, blues and feedback. Into this walks a young Roger Waters with a bottle of Southern Comfort and a plan.
What happened next is one of those small rock stories that tells you everything about ego, gender, booze and the collision between London psychedelia and Bay Area chaos. It ends with Janis walking onstage, Roger humiliated backstage, and an empty bottle that became an in-joke in Pink Floyd’s camp for months.
Pink Floyd’s disastrous first U.S. tour
By late 1967 Pink Floyd had scored UK hits with “Arnold Layne” and “See Emily Play” and released their debut album, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. Their managers pushed for a U.S. tour, but bungled work permits meant the first run of San Francisco dates had to be cancelled at the last minute.
When the paperwork finally cleared, the “tour” was reduced to an eight day sprint. According to Barry Miles’ book Pink Floyd: The Early Years, excerpted on the Just Backdated blog, the band flew out on 1 November 1967 and almost immediately found chaos: Syd Barrett was unstable, the promotion was confused, and the West Coast crowds were expecting something very different from Floyd’s avant London sound.
The crucial date was 4 November 1967 at Winterland Auditorium in San Francisco. That night Pink Floyd made their American live debut, third on the bill behind local heroes Big Brother and the Holding Company with Janis Joplin, plus singer songwriter Richie Havens. A Janis Joplin tour timeline and contemporary listings confirm Big Brother’s headlining status that weekend. A Bill Graham poster for the weekend’s shows, catalogued as BG‑91, bills Pink Floyd’s “first ever American concert appearance” alongside Big Brother and Havens at the Fillmore Auditorium and Winterland, 2 to 4 November.
The bill that brought them together
Those November shows looked roughly like this:
| Date | Venue | Headliner | Other acts |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2–3 Nov 1967 | Fillmore Auditorium / Winterland | Big Brother & the Holding Company | Pink Floyd, Richie Havens |
| 4 Nov 1967 | Winterland | Big Brother & the Holding Company | Pink Floyd, Richie Havens |
So before the myth, there is a simple fact: Pink Floyd and Janis Joplin really did share a bill that weekend in San Francisco, with Joplin the undisputed headliner and Waters the unknown English bassist on the undercard, as confirmed by the BG‑91 poster.

Fillmore West, Winterland and a common mistake
Many retellings place this episode at “Fillmore West”. Historically that cannot be right. Promoter Bill Graham did not open Fillmore West (the old Carousel Ballroom on Market Street) under that name until July 5, 1968.
In late 1967 Graham’s San Francisco empire revolved around the original Fillmore Auditorium and the larger Winterland ballroom a few blocks away. The BG‑91 poster and contemporary gig lists, including Joplin’s timeline, show Pink Floyd and Big Brother spread across those two venues on 2 to 4 November. So the encounter almost certainly happened backstage at one of those Graham shows, most likely Winterland on the night of Floyd’s U.S. debut.
Janis Joplin and her liquid weapon of choice
To understand why Roger thought a bottle of booze would impress Janis, you have to know just how closely she was identified with a particular drink. Biographers and contemporaries agree that Joplin was a heavy drinker and that her favourite alcoholic drink was Southern Comfort, the sweet New Orleans born whiskey liqueur, a reputation echoed in a profile of the brand.
She was rarely photographed without a bottle in hand, often taking swigs between verses on stage. A spirits profile on Southern Comfort notes that the brand was “a favorite of rock royalty like Janis Joplin” and that she regularly appeared onstage with it, to the point where the company thanked her publicity by buying her a lynx fur coat and matching hat.
In other words, offering Janis Joplin a bottle of Southern Comfort in 1967 was a bit like offering Keith Richards a carton of Marlboros and a Telecaster. You were not just bringing a gift, you were walking into an established ritual. And you were kidding yourself if you thought you controlled what happened next.
Roger Waters discovers Southern Comfort the hard way
Barry Miles’ account of the tour already paints a vivid picture of that first San Francisco stop. He quotes Waters recalling Winterland as “an amazing disaster” thanks to Barrett’s state and describes the cultural shock of sharing a bill with Big Brother. Waters remembered expecting something mind blowing and instead hearing “bluesy country rock” and “chunka, chunka, chunka with Janis Joplin singing the blues”, as recounted in The Early Years extract.
In the same passage Miles notes that the band and crew were showered with pot and hospitality, while the non smokers Nick Mason and Roger Waters were “introduced by Janis Joplin to the sweet tasting delights of Southern Comfort”. It is a telling detail. Before any attempted seduction, Joplin is already the one initiating the English boys into her chosen poison, according to Miles’ account.
Decades later, a 2013 Billboard interview (now paywalled) apparently prompted Waters to retell the story in a more comic key. A Brazilian piece on Whiplash, summarising that interview and a video commentary by critic Regis Tadeu, adds the scene most fans now know: Waters learns that Janis “is practically addicted” to Southern Comfort, slips out to a market to buy a full bottle and waits at the side of the stage like a nervous suitor.
At a break between songs, he finally makes his move. According to Tadeu’s retelling, Roger offers, “Do you want a sip?”, aiming for cheap charm. Janis just takes the bottle and heads back to the mic. Six or seven songs later she walks off, hands him back the bottle, now completely empty, and disappears to get ready for the next set. Roger is left standing there with nothing but glass and wounded pride, as the Whiplash piece has it.
From grand gesture to running joke
As the Whiplash story has it, that little scene became comedy gold inside Pink Floyd. The others apparently teased Waters for months as the guy who tried to pick up Janis and only managed to buy her a drink. Syd Barrett, already slipping out of reality, was the only band member too far gone to clock the humiliation, according to Regis Tadeu’s retelling.
The details here are secondhand and very likely embellished, but they line up with several reliable threads. We know from Miles’ tour history and contemporary gig documentation that Floyd and Big Brother shared Winterland and Fillmore that weekend, that Janis introduced Waters to Southern Comfort, and that she was famous for killing a bottle during a performance, as noted in both her biographies and the Southern Comfort profile. The image of her downing Roger’s “bribe” mid set and vanishing fits both her appetite and his later reputation for misjudging people offstage.
Either way, the power dynamic is unmistakable. Waters may one day have become the architect of The Wall and the most controlling man in Pink Floyd, but in this story he is the wide eyed provincial getting schooled by a harder living, more charismatic American star.

British psychedelia meets West Coast excess
This tiny anecdote also says a lot about the musical culture clash of 1967. Waters’ own words in The Early Years show he was underwhelmed by Big Brother’s loose blues rock compared to the more structured, conceptual experiments coming out of London from bands like Cream and The Who, a contrast he makes explicit in the Barry Miles extract.
Yet in San Francisco, it was Janis and her “chunka chunka” backing band who owned the stage and the crowd. Pink Floyd were the fragile weirdos with the broken frontman, stuck in the opening slot and struggling to make their light show work in an American hall. The audience did not care about English tape loops when Joplin could detonate “Ball and Chain” three feet from their faces.
Seen that way, Waters turning up with a bottle of SoCo is almost symbolic. Britain was bringing conceptual ambition and sonic sophistication. America replied with a 5 foot 5 Texas singer who could drink the bottle dry before the encore and still out sing the room.
Syd Barrett, the ghost at the edge of the frame
The punchline that “only Syd did not notice” because he was too far gone is darkly funny and horribly accurate. Everyone who has written seriously about that tour agrees it was defined by Barrett’s collapse. Waters himself called it an “amazing disaster” and the American campaign was cut short in part because Syd simply could not function night after night, as shown by the aborted tour dates and the tour histories.
So while we laugh at Roger being turned into the butt of the joke, there is another tragedy humming away at the edges. Within a few months Barrett would be out of Pink Floyd, Joplin would be marching toward the destructive peak of her own addictions, and that ridiculous empty bottle would be just one more relic of the moment when the 60s burned brightest and most wastefully.
What this story really tells us
Rock history usually frames Waters as the ruthless mastermind who steamrolled his bandmates and fought David Gilmour for control of the Pink Floyd name. The SoCo anecdote shows the young Roger as something else entirely: insecure, a little naive with women, and completely outclassed socially by a Texas blues shouter who had zero interest in being anyone’s conquest.
For Janis, it is a reminder that her legendary appetite was not just a cartoon. She really did drink hard, she really did lean into the Southern Comfort image, and she really could turn a man’s best laid plans into a sight gag without breaking stride, as her biographies and the Southern Comfort feature both underline.
For the rest of us, it is a perfect miniature of why the 1960s rock world still fascinates people who grew up in later decades. The music was revolutionary, but so were the egos, the bad decisions and the moments where a future arena god stood miserably in the wings, holding an empty bottle and realising that tonight, at least, he was not the star.
Some myths take a whole concept album to explain. This one only needs Janis, Roger and 750 millilitres of Southern Comfort.



