Inside the "Nitrous Mafia"

Hippie crack: it's a familiar sight (and sound) at summer music festivals. Folks line up to drop $5 for a balloon of laughing gas. And then another. And another. For the dealers of N20, called the "Nitrous Mafia" by some, this is big business. But many jam bands and fans consider nitrous to be a big bummer. From this week's Village Voice cover story, titled "Tales of Hippie Crack":

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Throughout the year, the Nitrous Mafia travels from state to state, selling balloons at concert sites. The scene in Williamsburg is only a small preview of what happens in summer, when the outdoor festival season kicks into gear. During these campground events, which last two to four days, the Mafia, which is divided into two rings, based in Boston and Philadelphia, can burn through hundreds of nitrous tanks. With the ability to fill up to 350 balloons per tank, which they sell for $5 and $10, they can bank more than $300,000 per festival, minus expenses. Year after year, security guards at these events attempt to crack down on the illicit business, but, in most cases, they're outmatched by a phalanx of menacing gas dealers who have little regard for unarmed concert personnel.

And for some musicians and their fans, the illicit trade is a bummer. "It has a negative impact on the entire scene," says Don Richards, the tour manager for Umphrey's McGee, ranked the No. 4 jam band in a recent Rolling Stone poll. "It's a very controlling group, to the point where I've seen people get beat up."

"It's something that should be left to the dentist's office," says Josh Clark, the lead vocalist for the San Francisco–based jam band Tea Leaf Green.

"Inside the Nitrous Mafia, an East Coast Hippie-Crack Ring"