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Woodstock

Posted on April 8, 2019September 27, 2020 by artpickles

by Arjun Ghosh  

Fifty years ago, on August 15–18, 1969, in the Catskill Mountains, northwest of New York City, at Max Yusgur’s 600-acre dairy farm near White Lake, 70 km southwest of Woodstock, three days and nights of music, peace and togetherness took place that would re-define a generation. Who would be forever known as the “Woodstock Generation”.

Woodstock was the brainchild of Michael Lang, Artie Kornfeld, Joel Rosenman, and John P. Roberts. Roberts and Rosenman financed the project. Lang had some experience as a promoter, having co-organized a festival on the East Coast the prior year — the Miami Pop Festival.

Courtesy: allthatsinteresting.com

 

It’s hard to believe today that Woodstock nearly did not happen. For, the initial search for a venue resulted in a series of disappointments. The original venue Wallkill, New York, had to be abandoned due to the opposition of the townspeople, as was the second choice Saugerties, New York because of the landowners’ objection and the third venue a 300 acre industrial park also in Wallkill, New York had to be given up for the same reason. Finally a realtor took Lang to Yasgur’s  600 acre farm that would be the final venue. Yasgur’s land formed a natural bowl sloping down to Filippini Pond on the land’s north side. The stage would be set up at the bottom of the hill with Filippini Pond forming a backdrop, which would go down in the annals of Woodstock as the skinny-dipping venue where young men and women would express their total freedom from conventions.

Courtesy: allthatisinteresting.com

 

Getting the bands

It also seems strange today that organizers had real difficulty getting big name bands to sign up to perform for an event, that is iconic today and the bands that did perform have had their names indelibly inscribed in the history of rock and roll. But that is exactly the second hurdle the organizers faced in April 1969. Creedence Clearwater Revival became the first act to sign a contract for the event, agreeing to play for $10,000 (equivalent to $68,000 today).  As Creedence drummer Doug Clifford later commented, “Once Creedence signed, everyone else jumped in line and all the other big acts came on.” 

Courtesy: YouTube.com

Courtesy: allthatisinteresting.com

 

The Festival

Initially Woodstock was not a free concert and tickets for the three-day event cost $18 in advance and $24 at the gate (approximately $120 and $160 today). Around 186,000 advance tickets were sold, and the organizers anticipated approximately 200,000 festival-goers would turn up.

However on August 15, 1969, as the festival kicked off, an unprecedented thing happened. Thousands and thousands of young people started pouring in, till the crowd swelled to an astonishing 500,000 strong that no one had anticipated. Those without tickets simply walked through gaps in the fences, and the organizers were forced to make the event a free concert. Though, the festival left its promoters nearly bankrupt, their ownership of the film and recording rights more than compensated for the losses after the release of the hit documentary film in 1970. Massive traffic jams stretched right up to the New York state thruway, so that most of the performers had to be helicoptered in. And so three days and nights of unprecedented music, peace and love started, the reverberations of which are still echoing today.

The Music

Woodstock was the place where all the different genres of rock and roll exploded on the stage. From psychedelic rock, folk rock, blues rock, roots rock, every form of rock and roll with the biggest names in the business performing. The other aspect of the music was the anti-establishment protest. In the era of the Vietnam War, with its attendant anti-draft and anti-war protests, and the disillusion with the rat race of middle class America, rock music always a mirror of the times and youth, reflected all these themes.

Thirty-two acts performed in Woodstock over the three days and nights. The festival kicked off with Ritchie Havens.

Havens was followed by heavy weights like Tim Hardin, Melanie, Arlo Guthrie and Joan Baez.

Courtesy: allthatisinteresting.com

The performances carried on till 2 am in the morning.  The next day another set of musicians took over at noon starting with Country Joe McDonald at the end of whose set the rain started pouring in. Undeterred the crowd started having fun sliding in the mud in a joyous expression of enjoying nature in all its forms. The crowd then went into a spontaneous rain chant and as the rain stopped Carlos Santana (guitar and vocals) and his band with Mike Shrieve, the youngest drummer in the festival, Gregg Rolie (keyboards, lead vocals), Neal Schon (guitar, vocals) and Michael Carabello (percussion) took over.   

The next afternoon as the people drifted back from the woods and fields where they had finally gone off to snooze, Joe Cocker and the grease band from England hit the stage in a hard rock cover of the Beatles song “A Little Help from My Friends”

For a gathering of 500,00 young people for three days and nights, with the widespread use of mind expanding substances (I refuse to call them drugs), food running short in the area, camping out in the open, with a section of the audience like the Hells Angels prone to violence, it would seem a recipe for disaster to the establishment. However not a single incident of violence happened over the three days and nights. In fact the people shared whatever food and water that could be found with each other and helped each other. The entire atmosphere was of love, peace and togetherness. The youth of America proved to the world that left to themselves the young people could live and enjoy themselves in harmony, in glaring contrast to the war mongering rat race of their parents’ generation and the established order in America of the times. It was a moment in time, the likes of which probably would never be seen again.

2 thoughts on “Woodstock”

  1. Bob says:
    April 13, 2019 at 7:53 AM

    Beautifully documented. Nice one Arjun

    Reply
  2. ashok(Charlie) says:
    April 13, 2019 at 9:28 AM

    Great write-up Arjun.Enjoyed every word.
    ..

    Reply

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      • Saints Or Sinners – Ruskin Bond Treats Every Character Equally
      • Ever Raised Any Eyebrows, as You liked Reading While Walking? Milkman by Anna Burns
      • Samaresh Basu
      • Ayn Rand & Me
      • United We Revolt
      • Swapan Kumar and his Sleuth — The Cornerstone of Bangla Pulp Fiction
      • Subhas Mukhopadhyay: Portrait of a People’s Poet
      • A Legend Passes Away. A Legacy Remains. Forever.
      • Manto – Man With Unprocessed Raw Words
    • Art
      • Evolution of the Indian Art – Is it going to reach every corner soon?
      • Woodstock
      • I got the Blues
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part I
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part II
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part III
      • Kalamkari – Reviving the Ancient Art of Storytelling
      • Madhubani – A Celebration of Mithila Art
      • Women & Art
      • Hiran Mitra’s Japan Diary
      • LGBT & Art
    • movies
      • Dogman – An Exciting Thriller for Dog Lovers
      • The Adorable Teachers and Professors in Movies
      • Evolution of The Indian Film Industry : From Black & White to OTT
      • Evolution of Bengali Cinema— the Cultural Nuances, Portrayal of the Society and the Transformation in Popular Culture – Part 1
      • When the Characters on Screen Can Hear It Too — Diegetic Sounds in Indian Cinema
      • An Abstract Hunt for the Meaning of life – The Top Layer Philosophy of “The Banshees of Inisherin”
      • Cut, Chop, Cook, Clean, Repeat – The Great Indian Kitchen
      • Arvind Desai Ki Ajeeb Dastaan
      • Rituparno Ghosh: Actor and Rebel
      • The Making of Tamas
      • Ritwik Ghatak’s Partition Trilogy
      • 127 Hours
      • Naseem
      • Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda
      • Qissa
      • Arvind Desai Ki Ajeeb Dastaan
      • Perfect Days – Finding Joy In Every Moment – Philosophy
      • Movies That Came Ahead of Their Time
    • Culture
      • Queer Languages – The Secret Code for Survival
      • The Revolutionary Dancers – Bringing Changes with Movements in Space
      • Skydiving In the Land of Multicolor Ashes – Banaras
      • Omar Khayyam’s Potions of Wisdom for Writers, Poets, and Rebels
    • Thoughts
      • Where are the Happy Coincidences of Hrishikesh Mukherjee & PG Wodehouse?
      • The Story of Love
      • Rationality of being Agnostic
      • Marilyn Monroe – Max Factor
      • You often penetrate my Mind
      • Poets of Passion – Rumi & Tagore
      • Once Upon a Time…in Advertising
      • Love Letter To Gulzar Saab
      • Books, Movies and Some Random Philosophy
      • Love and ‘Other Factor’
      • If you can’t fix it, you gotta stand it!
      • ‘Re-framing Stigma’ ⁠— LGBTQ and HIV
      • Unpacking the Transgenders (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2019
    • History
      • A Brief History of Bengal’s Sweat Meat & The Portuguese Influence
      • The Zenana System : History, Education & the Cosmopolitan Set-up
      • Kanpur as the centre of Revolutionary Activities
      • Shekhawati — Havelis Reiterating The Tales of Glorious Days
      • Mata Hari – The Weeping Mother Who Turned Into A Dancer & Spy.
      • Partition Literature — Was The Partition of India a matter of ego satisfaction?
      • Did the Muslims of India opt for the Partition of India?
      • The Partitions of Bengal I
      • Partitions of Bengal (II)
      • Qissa
      • The Woman Who Loved – Orchha, Madhya Pradesh
    • philosophy
      • Rabindranath Tagore and Buddhism: The Philosophy of Peace & Compassion
      • Loneliness & solitude – The Pain & Paradox
      • The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath – Virtual Tour Inside A Depressed Mind
      • Fakir Lalon Shah – Voice of the Poor
      • Nietzschean Bad Conscience in Koreeda’s Shoplifters
      • Sigmund Freud and Psychoanalysis
  • INCEPTION
  • CONTACT
  • Beauty