zaterdag, augustus 08, 2009

Max Yasgur’s speech


Max Yasgur’s speech to the crowd can be repeated (at least in part) by almost everyone who has ever seen the film made about the Woodstock festival:

Max Yasgur at his farm

“I’m a farmer…(interrupted by a cheer from the audience)…I don’t know how to speak to twenty people at one time, let alone a crowd like this. But I think you people have proven something to the world — not only to the Town of Bethel, or Sullivan County, or New York State; you’ve proven something to the world. This is the largest group of people ever assembled in one place. We have had no idea that there would be this size group, and because of that you’ve had quite a few inconveniences as far as water, food, and so forth. Your producers have done a mammoth job to see that you’re taken care of… they’d enjoy a vote of thanks. But above that, the important thing that you’ve proven to the world is that a half a million kids — and I call you kids because I have children that are older than you are — a half million young people can get together and have three days of fun and music and have nothing but fun and music, and I – God Bless You for it!”


Max died less than four years later – and his farm has been broken up and sold off. What’s for sale is only a small part of the original farm where the festival happened all those years ago. But no matter how often it changes hands, for the Woodstock nation, it’ll always be “Yasgur’s Farm.”

Woodstock, de moeder aller popfestivals


Het Woodstock Music and Art Festival was een rockfestival dat in augustus 1969 plaatsvond op een weideveld van de veeboer Max Yasgur in Bethel, New York, zo'n 65 km buiten Woodstock.

Het festival, onder het motto "three days of peace and music", wordt door velen beschouwd als het belangrijkste muziekfestival ooit.


Hoewel tien- tot twintigduizend mensen werden verwacht, lag het uiteindelijke bezoekersaantal rond de 500.000, waarvan de meesten geen entreegeld hadden betaald. Daarnaast waren nog eens drie miljoen mensen naar het terrein onderweg.

Er viel veel regen (No Rain, No Rain, No Rain, scandeerden de tienduizenden), en de consumptie van alcohol en drugs was aanzienlijk.

Er waren veel te weinig voorzieningen getroffen voor het onverwacht grote aantal bezoekers, zodat de sanitaire nood en andere ongemakken soms hoog opliepen.


Het Woodstockfestival was een hoogtepunt van de tegencultuur van de jaren '60 en van het hippietijdperk.

Tijdens het festival werden twee baby's geboren.

Tot de optredende artiesten behoorden o.a.: The Band, Canned Heat, Joe Cocker, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Crosby Stills Nash & Young, Grateful Dead, Tim Hardin, Richie Havens, Jimi Hendrix, The Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin, Santana, Ten Years After en The Who.


En de beelden...ach, die spreken voor zich!

Woodstock - 40 Years On: Back to Yasgur's Farm


If it had all been sunshine and clockwork, with a tidy profit on the morning after, no one would have said another word. Instead, the Woodstock Music & Art Fair, held August 15th to 17th, 1969, near Bethel, New York — a refugee-camp experience officially declared a state disaster area on the second day — became an anniversary industry.

And business is booming. In addition to these six new releases, the 1970 documentary, Woodstock, is out as a deluxe DVD set. The 1970 soundtrack and its 1971 sequel, Woodstock Two, are back on CD. Then there are the books, replica tchotchkes and commemorative events, mostly drawing on an artfully massaged memory of that weekend's accidental wonder: That amid the frozen traffic, stressed food and medical services, and oceanic mud, "Half a million young people can get together and have three days of fun and music — and have nothing but fun and music!" as the late Max Yasgur, the farmer who welcomed the horde on his land, said from the stage on Sunday morning.

Yasgur's breakfast speech, edited on the Woodstock album, appears in full on Woodstock — 40 Years On, a small but telling example of the box's documentary detail and momentum. Its six CDs contain virtually all of Woodstock and Woodstock Two plus tracks from a 1994 box, then another 38 previously unreleased songs and actualities. All but three of the 32 acts that played are represented (the exceptions, because of licensing issues, include the Band and, strangely, Ten Years After, who are on the 1970 album). Everything is in the order it happened, as it happened. There are bum notes (musicians were high, burnt or both) and bumpy mixes (recording conditions were just shy of wartime). But the result, combined with the full-length performances in the Woodstock Experience packages, is the most comprehensive and satisfying account so far of the main reason why Yasgur's acres became an instant city of freaks, including me: the music.

Some of the history gets a valid rewrite. The Grateful Dead's set was a notorious disaster, beset by equipment problems. But the salvaged 19-minute "Dark Star" is good trippin', one of the mostly heavy-rock weekend's few truly psychedelic flings (especially considering the bad acid MC John Morris keeps warning the crowd about). Singer-songwriter Bert Sommer was left out of the movie and the original albums. But the folk-rock strains of "And When It's Over" and Sommer's high, rippling voice suggest a Tim Buckley-in-waiting. (That, sadly, is where he stayed. Sommer died in 1990.) And, honestly, Country Joe McDonald's "F-U-C-K" cheer never felt as mutinous and euphoric on record as it did that Saturday in the open air. The bigger gas is a long excerpt of acid-flecked garage rock from his later appearance with the Fish.

There is a solid shot of Creedence Clearwater Revival's roots-'n'-TNT set and more of the Who's enraged dead-of-night assault, if not enough of either. Pete Townshend's amp-gutting solo in "Amazing Journey" at least partly explains why he didn't hesitate to whack Abbie Hoffman into the pit when the yippie bolted onstage after "Pinball Wizard." (Hoffman: "I think this is a pile of shit while John Sinclair rots in prison!" Townshend: "Fuck off my fucking stage!")

That exchange underscores a dirty, overlooked truth of Woodstock. The biggest massed-youth moment of the decade was also the least political: straight-up capitalism (if you bought a ticket, like I did) and hip escapism. The most direct comment on the real state of the nation — Vietnam, urban riots, civil protest — only came on Monday morning, as most of the mob headed home: Jimi Hendrix's wrenching firefight guitar adaptation of "The Star-Spangled Banner." If it hadn't been in the movie, most of the Woodstock Nation would have missed it altogether.

Hendrix's uneven but epochal finale was finally released in its near-entirety in 1999. Three of the full sets in the Legacy series are even better. (Each volume is a double CD with the act's 1969 studio LP, a drag if you already own the latter.) Sly and the Family Stone were the only deep-R&B act on the bill, and from the shotgun start — a scat-and-gallop "M'Lady" into the smiling swagger of "Sing a Simple Song" — Stone is at the height of his party-politics command. (A year later, he was sinking into drug-and-paranoia twilight.) Jefferson Airplane's Sunday-dawn show is truly "morning maniac music," as singer Grace Slick famously put it: fast and gnarly, spiked with crossed-sword vocals. The convulsive jam out of "Wooden Ships" would have blown minds at any hour.

The Janis Joplin and Johnny Winter shows are, in turn, uneven and near great. She sings with familiar fire but leads her big band with less assurance. He goes overlong on the solos but locks in with his original Texas rhythm section: drummer Uncle John Turner and bassist Tommy Shannon.

But for pure shock, nothing beat Santana's 45 Woodstock minutes. It was one of their first East Coast gigs; the set was their then-unreleased debut LP. And I still clearly remember guitarist Carlos Santana's furious trills cutting the Saturday-afternoon heat over the band's Latin-railroad charge. As far as I'm concerned, for that alone, the rest of the mess was worth it.

Woodstock: 40 years later

Realization of a dream


By the time we got to Woodstock: 40 years later



NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Woodstock lives -- on stage, on film, in books and TV news clips, and forever in the memory of anyone who came of age in the '60s.

Forty years after the three-day music festival that celebrated peace and love during a time of protest and anger at the Vietnam War, Woodstock nostalgia is in full commercial flow.


A little ironic, considering that the festival famously became a "free concert" after it drew hundreds of thousands more people than the 200,000 that organizers had planned at $18 per ticket.

Survivors from some of the acts that played Aug 15-17, 1969 will again take the stage on what was Yasgur's Farm, but is now the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in upstate New York.

The "Heroes of Woodstock" show on Aug 15 features the Levon Helm Band, Jefferson Starship, Ten Years After, Canned Heat, Big Brother and the Holding Company and Country Joe McDonald.


Meanwhile the movie "Woodstock" has been re-released in a 40th anniversary director's cut, along with the 2-CD soundtrack, while Rhino Records has put out a 6-disc box set featuring every performance at Woodstock.

And later this month, director Ang Lee will debut "Taking Woodstock," a movie about a man working at his parents' motel who inadvertently sets in motion the concert.

But for many, the definitive story of that Summer of Love is "The Road to Woodstock," a book by Michael Lang, one of the organizers of the festival.

"There was this impression that there was a beautiful field and a bunch of people turned up and some bands were in the area and they put up a stage and played," Lang told Reuters. "It actually took 10 months of planning!"

He and his partners had planned on 200,000 people attending the event, and they actually sought the help of the Army Corps of Engineers for some of the logistics.

"But they must have got wind of what was happening. They canceled a meeting at the Pentagon the day before, so we were left on our own," Lang said.

Coming at the height of the Vietnam War and the anti-war movement that divided America mostly along generational lines, it is perhaps hardly surprising the military did not want to get involved with what was viewed as a hippie festival.

So Lang and his partners were left to stage a show that featured 32 of the top musical acts of the time and an audience Joni Mitchell referred to as "half a million strong."

"Woodstock was the realization of the dream," Lang said of an event known as much for its mud, bad acid and miles-long traffic jams on the New York Thruway, as for its music.

"But it was not frustrating, I enjoy solving problems. It was exciting at the time, there was no blueprint and we made it up as we went along," said Lang.

"There were a lot of similarities with what is going on now in the world," he said. "It was a time of the first Earth movement, the ecology movement, which was very important for our generation."

That summer 40 years ago was notable also because man walked on the moon for the first time and America was horrified by Chappaquiddick, when a car driven by Senator Edward Kennedy ran off a bridge resulting in the death of his young woman passenger, and the Charles Manson murders.

There was also the issue of war - Vietnam then, Iraq now. "After eight years of the Bush administration, I could see we were in a very dark moment again," said Lang.

"And then the inauguration of Obama was portrayed in the New York Times and other papers as 'a Woodstock moment.'"

Lang, a music producer and promoter, also organized concerts on the 25th and 30th anniversaries of Woodstock, featuring more contemporary artists. But from Richie Havens, who opened the original Woodstock, to Jimi Hendrix, who closed it, it is the musicians he remembers most.

"There were three surprises -- Joe Cocker, who was unknown at the time; Carlos Santana stood out - you knew a superstar was being born. And Sly Stone. His energy was beyond anything I had ever experienced. I was camped out on the corner of the stage and I saw them all," said Lang.

(Reporting by Steve James; Editing by Patricia Reaney)

BEATLES-FANS VIEREN 40 JAAR ABBEY ROAD

Beatles-fans vieren 40 jaar Abbey Road
Duizenden fans van de Beatles zijn vanmorgen Abbey Road overgestoken.




Zebrapad
Ze herdachten dat precies 40 jaar geleden (8 aug 1969) John, Paul, George en Ringo werden gefotografeerd op een zebrapad van Abbey Road voor de cover van hun gelijknamige album.

Webcam
Veel fans hadden zich verkleed in Sergeant Pepper-kostuums of droegen John Lennon-brilletjes. Abbey Road Studios had een webcam neergezet. Miljoenen mensen moeten de beelden tegelijk bekeken hebben, omdat de hele site van de studio al na twee minuten crashte.

Labels: