Summary
Giftable 50th anniversary commemorative with never-before-seen images and original interviews. Hear from performers and attendees in their own voices! Featuring Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and The Grateful Dead, as well as unsung audience members and folks behind the scenes. This compendium remembers all the people who made the three days of peace and music an impossible success.
The world today feels far removed from the one in which Woodstock was possible, where half a million strangers congregated peacefully for three days.
Longtime music writer Daniel Bukszpan offers insights on how the festival is still making an impact on pop culture, while candid interviews, set lists, and beautiful photographs relive the beautiful chaos and once-in-a-lifetime performances at Yasgur's farm.
With images by renowned photographers, including Amalie R. Rothschild and Elliott Landy, including the cover photo of Janis Joplin.
Author Notes
Daniel Bukszpan is freelance writer and the author of The Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal and The Encyclopedia of New Wave . He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Excerpts
Contents Foreword Introduction BEGINNINGS Michael Lang Artie Kornfeld Joel Rosenman John Roberts John Morris Chris Langhart Chip Monck Bill Hanley The Hog Farm Bill Graham Abbie Hoffman Arnold Skolnick Joshua White Max Yasgur Word of Mouth Artists Who Didn't Perform The Locals Getting There The Traffic Elliott Landy It's a Free Festival THE PERFORMERS: DAY ONE Richie Havens Swami Satchidananda Sweetwater Bert Sommer Tim Hardin Ravi Shankar Melanie Arlo Guthrie Joan Baez First Aid The Brown Acid Food Where's the Bathroom? THE PERFORMERS: DAY TWO Quill Country Joe McDonald Santana John Sebastian The Keef Hartley Band The Incredible String Band Canned Heat Mountain Grateful Dead Creedence Clearwater Revival Janis Joplin Sly and the Family Stone The Who Jefferson Airplane Drugs News Coverage Technical Difficulties THE PERFORMERS: DAY THREE Joe Cocker Country Joe & The Fish Ten Years After The Band Johnny Winter Blood, Sweat & Tears Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young The Paul Butterfield Blues Band Sha Na Na Jimi Hendrix ENDINGS Garbage Coming Home Births and Deaths Dick Cavett Soundtrack Album The Documentary Index Photo Credits Resources Bibliography Acknowledgments Creedence Clearwater Revival AUGUST 16, 1969 Set list: Born on the Bayou / Green River / Ninety-Nine and a Half (Won't Do) / Commotion / Bootleg / Bad Moon Rising / Proud Mary / I Put a Spell on You / The Night Time Is the Right Time / Keep on Chooglin' / Suzie Q Creedence Clearwater Revival was one of the most popular bands of the 1960s. They hailed from the San Francisco Bay Area but stayed away from the region's trademark psychedelic jams. Instead, they focused on the three-minute single, and they were masters of the form. "We grew up listening to Top 40 radio, and so the three-minute single, two-and-a-half-minute single, was the format," said bassist Stu Cook. He said that when they reached the festival grounds in Bethel, they saw a lot of familiar faces. The experience that they had backstage bore no resemblance to the one that the audience was having. "We hung out with Santana's people, the people from Bill Graham's organization took care of us," he said. "We hung out with him and drank wine and smoked weed, ate great steaks. Backstage was a different world and a half from the audience, for sure." One thing that Bill Graham's organization could not provide was a reprieve from the hours of delays that plagued the entire festival. Cook said that the band endured a wait of several hours before they could finally set foot on stage. "There was a lot of technical difficulties throughout the evening," he said. "We were supposed to play at ten on Saturday night, and I don't think we got on the stage until after one." According to those who saw it, their set was a great one. Many audience members said it was one of the best performances of the weekend. "Creedence was perfect," said Mark Yessin, who was twenty when he watched their set. "I thought the performance was great." The band does not appear in the documentary or on the soundtrack. Cook said that singer and guitarist John Fogerty refused to allow it on the grounds that the band had played too poorly. Cook was adamant that he was wrong about that. "We had some technical problems at the start of the set," he said. "They were worked out, but I know John was irritated to no end about the problems that he was having, so maybe that caused him to have a different take on the evening. But we really did deliver that night. It was one of those not-ideal circumstances, but you try and rise to the occasion, and I believe we did." When the set was over, the group left for their next concert. The contrast between that event and Woodstock could not have been clearer. "We played the next day in a large circus tent with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band somewhere in New Jersey," Cook said. "One night you're playing to half a million people, the next night you're playing to maybe five thousand or less. It was night and day for sure. It was like, 'Wow, we just played for half a million people, and now we can count everybody here.'" Three months later, the group released their fourth studio album, Willy and the Poor Boys, which was their third of 1969. Contemporary reviews called it their crowning achievement, but despite the accolades, the group only had three records left in them. Guitarist Tom Fogerty, John Fogerty's older brother, left in 1970, and in 1972, they released Mardi Gras , their final album. The record was savaged by such critics as Rolling Stone's Jon Landau, who called it, in a scathing review, "the worst album I have ever heard from a major rock band." The group disbanded in October 1972, in a famously bitter breakup over such issues as management woes and personal problems among band members. Even the death of Tom Fogerty in 1990 couldn't make a dent in the acrimony, and when the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993, John Fogerty refused to perform with them, according to Ultimate Classic Rock. Despite the lingering bad feelings, Cook said that the music he made with the group will endure long after those details are forgotten. "It's a very unhappy story, what started out as junior high school buddies playing in a rock and roll band, to the heights that we achieved for a period," he said. "But the music lives on, and it's definitely a good catalog. So at least we didn't screw that part up." Excerpted from Woodstock: 50 Years of Peace and Music by Daniel Bukszpan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.