Woodstock----Give Me An F

Without Prejudice




In 1969 two Wall street men were running out of ideas for a TV series they wanted to create. In fact they were so out of ideas they placed an ad in the Wall Street Journal. The ad stated that two men with money were looking for interesting investment ideas.




They sifted through one weird idea after another until landing on a proposal by two music mad guys. They said that a lot of music artists lived at Woodstock and how about they asked them to sing at a concert in the local area? Imagine getting people the likes of Dylan or The Band, who lived near Woodstock to perform ? And make money by charging entry.



The idea was mad but no madder than the other weird proposals. So the two men went ahead with the Music Festival, calling it Woodstock, An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace And Music" .. .



That idea grew into Woodstock the three day festival of Music and Art and Peace that became legend in the hearts and minds of the Baby Boomer generation. The idea of Woodstock as a location had to be changed to Bethel, but the premise was the same. And the people came and came and came.



They thought they would get maybe 20,000 people and sold tickets for that many. But over a million came early, before the stage was even built and they put up tent citiies And it looked like another million were on their way.



Helicopters hovered overhead trying to capture the vista of travelling nomadic peacemakers to the farmers field. Through mud and dirt they clambered the makeshift tracks and roads. To see the artists perform but also to be there, just be there for peace and love and art and music.



In droves they came, with their kids and babies, girlfriends and boyfriends, men and women united in a cause, a festival of peace and art and love. So many people, a mulltitude on the mount of Farmers Hill at Bethel.



The logistics were terrible, it rained for 5 days in the lead up to the festival, the promoters could have a stage 24 hours beforehand or fences, but not both. So they opted for a stage and the fences were never put up. It was insane. And it became a free festival to most.



The ticket holders way behind the people that had arrived early and stayed for free. Janis was there, and Joan Baez, John Sebastian, Folk singers and rock champions sang their hearts out across the rolling hills and everywhere there was love and peace and magic.



The first on was a humble man, dressed in an orange robe, no top teeth, with a guitar. He sang a sweet song of heartache at leaving a lover, "I Can't Make It Anymore", Richie Havens. And there right there on the stage, he made up a new song, just played the chords and added the words,



" Freedom"



and the crowd rose as one to their feet and joined him. Chanting along with him for Freedom and when he left there was sheer silence for a while. Then a voice calls out,



" Give me an F,



Give me a U,



Give me a C,



Give me a K,



"Whats that Spell?



"Whats that Spell?



And the camera pans to Country Joe McDonald and the Fish. Country Joe with his sweat band, a gap in his front teeth, grinning, a gold earring flashing in the light and starts with a simple guitar riff and the words,



"Come on all you big strong men,

Uncle Sam needs your helping agin,

Got himself in a terrible jam,

Way down yonder in Vietnam,



And the crowd erupts, stands to its feet, en masse, as he urges



"Come on all You Fuckers, How we gonna stop the War, unless you sing a little louder "



and the crowd as one, sing a little louder. And magic is happening, right there on that field, and later in our lounge rooms, as the youth of America stand and sing for Freedom, Freedom to stop the war in Vietnam.



Its a gooseflesh moment, not a goose stepping moment of hate, it's a goose flesh moment of love and purity. Of Protest and the concert becomes something other than it was intended to be.



It becomes a band of hope, huge hope, that more people can be rallied in the name of hope and love than can be rallied to hate and kill.





Excerpt From Wikipedia



Woodstock was initiated through the efforts of Michael Lang, John Roberts, Joel Rosenman, and Artie Kornfeld. It was Roberts and Rosenman who had the finances. Lang had experience as a promoter and had already organized the largest festival on the East Coast at the time, the Miami Pop Festival, which had an estimated 100,000 people attend the two day event.



Roberts and Rosenman placed the following advertisement in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal under the name of Challenge International, Ltd.



: "Young men with unlimited capital looking for interesting, legitimate investment opportunities and business propositions".



Lang and Kornfeld noticed the ad, and the four men got together originally to discuss a retreat-like recording studio in Woodstock, but the idea evolved into an outdoor music and arts festival, although even that was initially envisioned on a smaller scale, perhaps featuring some of the big name artists who lived in the Woodstock area (such as Bob Dylan and The Band).



There were differences in approach among the four: Roberts was disciplined, and knew what was needed in order for the venture to succeed, while the laid-back Lang saw Woodstock as a new, relaxed way of bringing business people together.



There were further doubts over the venture, as Roberts wondered whether to consolidate his losses and pull the plug, or to continue pumping his own finances into the project.



In April 1969, newly-minted superstars Creedence Clearwater Revival were the first act to sign a contract for the event, agreeing to play for $10,000. The promoters had experienced difficulty landing big-name groups prior to Creedence committing to play. Creedence drummer Doug Clifford later commented "Once Creedence signed, everyone else jumped in line and all the other big acts came on."



Given their 3:00 a.m. start time and non-inclusion (at Creedence frontman John Fogerty's insistence) in the Woodstock film, Creedence members have expressed bitterness over their experiences at the famed festival.



Woodstock was designed as a profit-making venture, aptly titled "Woodstock Ventures". It famously became a "free concert" only after it became obvious that the event was drawing hundreds of thousands more people than the organizers had prepared for. Tickets for the event cost $18 in advance (equivalent to $75 in 2009 after adjusting for inflation) and $24 at the gate for all three days.



Ticket sales were limited to record stores in the greater New York City area, or by mail via a post office box at the Radio City Station Post Office located in Midtown Manhattan. Around 186,000 tickets were sold beforehand and organizers anticipated approximately 200,000 festival-goers would turn up.



Selection of the venue



The crowd and stage in 1969. The concert was originally scheduled to take place in the 300-acre (1.2 km2) Mills Industrial Park (Mills Industrial Park)) in the town of Wallkill, New York, which Woodstock Ventures had leased for $10,000 in the Spring of 1969.



Town officials were assured that no more than 50,000 would attend. Town residents immediately opposed the project. In early July the Town Board passed a law requiring a permit for any gathering over 5,000 people. On July 15, 1969, the Wallkill Zoning Board of Appeals officially banned the concert on the basis that the planned portable toilets would not meet town code.



Reports about the ban, however, turned out to be a publicity bonanza for the festival. Max Yasgur's dairy farm in 1968.According to Elliot Tiber in his 2007 book Taking Woodstock, Tiber offered to host the event on his 15 acres (61,000 m2) motel grounds, and had a permit for such an event.



He claims to have introduced the promoters to dairy farmer Max Yasgur. Lang, however, disputes Tiber's account, and says that Tiber introduced him to a real estate salesman, who drove him to Yasgur's farm without Tiber. Sam Yasgur, Max's son, agrees with Lang's account. Yasgur's land formed a natural bowl sloping down to Filippini Pond on the land's north side.



The stage would be set at the bottom of the hill with Filippini Pond forming a backdrop. The pond would become a popular skinny dipping destination. The organizers once again told Bethel authorities they expected no more than 50,000 people. Despite resident opposition and signs proclaiming, "Buy No Milk. Stop Max's Hippy Music Festival",



Bethel Town Attorney Frederick W. V. Schadt and building inspector Donald Clark approved the permits, but the Bethel Town Board refused to issue them formally. Clark was ordered to post stop work orders. The late change in venue did not give the festival organizers enough time to prepare.



At a meeting three days before the event, organizers felt they had two choices. One option was to improve the fencing and security which might have resulted in violence; the other involved putting all their resources into completing the stage, which would cause Woodstock Ventures to take a financial hit.



The crowd, which was arriving in greater numbers and earlier than anticipated, made the decision for them. The fence was cut the night before the concert.



The festival





The influx of attendees to the rural concert site in Bethel created a massive traffic jam. Fearing chaos as thousands began descending on the community, Bethel did not enforce its codes. Eventually, announcements on radio stations as far away as WNEW-FM in Manhattan and descriptions of the traffic jams on television news programs discouraged people from setting off to the festival.





Arlo Guthrie made an announcement that was included in the film saying that the New York State Thruway was closed. The director of the Woodstock museum discussed below said this never occurred.To add to the problems and difficulty in dealing with the large crowds, recent rains had caused muddy roads and fields.



The facilities were not equipped to provide sanitation or first aid for the number of people attending; hundreds of thousands found themselves in a struggle against bad weather, food shortages, and poor sanitation. On the morning of Sunday, August 17, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller called festival organizer John Roberts and told him he was thinking of ordering 10,000 New York State National Guard troops to the festival.



Roberts was successful in persuading Rockefeller not to do this. Sullivan County declared a state of emergency. Jimi Hendrix was the last act to perform at the festival. Because of the rain delays that Sunday, when Hendrix finally took the stage it was 8:30 am Monday morning.



The audience which had peaked at an estimated 400,000 people during the festival, was now reduced to about 30–40,000 by that point; many of whom merely waited to catch a glimpse of Hendrix before leaving during his show. Hendrix and his band performed a two hour set.



His psychedelic rendition of the U.S. national anthem, "The Star-Spangled Banner" occurred about 3/4 into their set (after which he morphed into "Purple Haze"). The song would become "part of the sixties Zeitgeist" as it was captured forever in the Woodstock film.



Hendrix's image performing this number wearing a blue-beaded white leather jacket with fringe and a red head scarf, has since been regarded as a defining moment of the 1960s.



John Fogerty's Comments From Creedence Clearwater Revival (The Water People, Yvette ! )



Recalling Creedences 3am Start at Woodstock



“We were ready to rock out and we waited and waited and finally it was our turn ... there were a half million people asleep. These people were out. It was sort of like a painting of a Dante scene, just bodies from hell, all intertwined and asleep, covered with mud.



And this is the moment I will never forget as long as I live: a quarter mile away in the darkness, on the other edge of this bowl, there was some guy flicking his Bic, and in the night I hear, 'Don't worry about it John. We're with you.'”



I played the rest of the show for that guy. “”



Although the festival was remarkably peaceful given the number of people and the conditions involved, there were two recorded fatalities: one from what was believed to be a heroin overdose and another caused in an accident when a tractor ran over an attendee sleeping in a nearby hayfield.



There also were two births recorded at the event (one in a car caught in traffic and another in a hospital after an airlift by helicopter) and four miscarriages. Oral testimony in the film supports the overdose and run-over deaths and at least one birth, along with many logistical headaches.



Yet, in tune with the idealistic hopes of the 1960s, Woodstock satisfied most attendees. There was a sense of social harmony, which, with the quality of music, and the overwhelming mass of people, many sporting bohemian dress, behavior, and attitudes helped to make it one of the enduring events of the century.



After the concert, Max Yasgur, who owned the site of the event, saw it as a victory of peace and love. He spoke of how nearly half a million people filled with possibilities of disaster, riot, looting, and catastrophe spent the three days with music and peace on their minds.



He states that



"if we join them, we can turn those adversities that are the problems of America today into a hope for a brighter and more peaceful future..."



Sound



The Sound for the concert was engineered by Bill Hanley, whose innovations in the sound industry have earned him the prestigious Parnelli Award. "It worked very well," he says of the event. "I built special speaker columns on the hills and had 16 loudspeaker arrays in a square platform going up to the hill on 70-foot [21 meter] towers. We set it up for 150,000 to 200,000 people.





Of course, 500,000 showed up." ALTEC designed 4×15" marine ply cabinets that weighed in at half a ton apiece, stood 6 feet (1.8 m) tall, almost 4 feet (1.2 m) deep, and 3 feet (0.91 m) wide. Each of these enclosures carried four 15-inch (380 mm) JBL D140 loudspeakers. The tweeters consisted of 4×2-Cell & 2×10-Cell Altec Horns.



Behind the stage were three transformers providing 2,000 amperes of current to power the amplification setup. For many years this system was collectively referred to as the Woodstock Bins.



Performing artists



: List of performances and events at Woodstock Festival Thirty-two acts performed over the course of the four days:



Friday, August 15 – Saturday, August 16



Artist Time Notes



Richie Havens 5:07 pm – 7:00 pm



Swami Satchidananda 7:10 pm – 7:20 pm Gave the opening speech/invocation for the festival



Sweetwater 7:30 pm – 8:10 pm Bert Sommer 8:20 pm – 9:15 pm Tim Hardin 9:20 pm – 9:45 pm



Ravi Shankar 10:00 pm – 10:35 pm Played through the rain



Melanie 10:50 pm – 11:20 pm



Arlo Guthrie 11:55 pm – 12:25 am



Joan Baez 12:55 am – 2:00 am She was six months pregnant at the time



Saturday, August 16 – Sunday, August 17 Artist Time Notes



Quill 12:15 pm – 12:45 pm



Country Joe McDonald 1:00 pm – 1:30 pm Joe later performs with Country Joe and the Fish



Santana 2:00 pm – 2:45 pm



John Sebastian 3:30 pm – 3:55 pm



Keef Hartley Band 4:45 pm – 5:30 pm



The Incredible String Band 6:00 pm – 6:30 pm



Canned Heat 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm



Mountain 9:00 pm – 10:00 pm



Grateful Dead 10:30 pm – 12:05 am their set was cut short after the stage amps overloaded during "Turn On Your Love Light"



Creedence Clearwater Revival 12:30 am – 1:20 am



Janis Joplin with The Kozmic Blues Band[28] 2:00 am – 3:00 am



Sly And ; the Family Stone 3:30 am – 4:20 am



The Who 5:00 am – 6:05 am Briefly interrupted by Abbie Hoffman



Jefferson Airplane 8:00 am – 9:40 am



Sunday, August 17 – Monday, August 18



Artist Time Notes



Joe Cocker and The Grease Band 2:00 pm – 3:25 pm After Joe Cocker's set, a thunderstorm disrupted the events for several hours.



Country Joe and the Fish 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm Country Joe McDonald's second performance.



Ten Years After 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm



The Band 10:00 pm – 10:50 pm



Johnny Winter 12:00 am – 1:05 am Winter's brother, Edgar Winter, is featured on three songs.



Blood, Sweat & Tears 1:30 am – 2:30 am



Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young 3:00 am – 4:00 am An acoustic and electric set were played. Neil Young skipped most of the acoustic set.



Paul Butterfield Blues Band 6:00 am – 6:45 am



Sha Na Na 7:30 am – 8:00 am



Jimi Hendrix / Band of Gypsys 9:00 am – 11:10 am



Declined invitations



Bob Dylan, in whose "backyard" the festival was held was never in serious negotiation. Instead, Dylan signed in mid-July to play the Isle of Wight Festival of Music, on August 31. Dylan set sail for England on the Queen Elizabeth 2 on August 15, the day the Woodstock Festival started.



His son was injured by a cabin door and the family disembarked. Dylan, with his wife Sarah, flew to England the following week. Dylan had been unhappy about the number of hippies piling up outside his house in the nearby town of Woodstock.



The Beatles/John Lennon, presents two scenarios as to why The Beatles did not perform. The first is that promoters contacted John Lennon to discuss a Beatles performance at Woodstock, and Lennon said that the Beatles would not play unless there was also a spot at the festival for Yoko Ono's Plastic Ono Band, whereupon he was turned down.



The website claims the more likely explanation is that Lennon wanted to play but his entry into the United States from Canada was blocked by President Richard Nixon.



The Beatles were, in any case, on the verge of disbanding. Also, they had not performed any live concerts since August 1966, three full years before the festival (not including their impromptu rooftop concert given on January 30, 1969 a few months before).



Jeff Beck Group: Jeff Beck disbanded the group prior to Woodstock. "I deliberately broke the group up before Woodstock." Beck says. "I didn't want it to be preserved".



The Doors were considered as a potential performing band, but canceled at the last moment; according to guitarist Robby Krieger, they turned it down because they thought it would be a "second class repeat of Monterey Pop Festival", and later regretted that decision.



Led Zeppelin was asked to perform, their manager Peter Grant stating: "We were asked to do Woodstock and Atlantic were very keen, and so was our U.S. promoter, Frank Barsalona. I said no because at Woodstock we'd have just been another band on the bill". However, the group did play the 1st Atlanta International Pop Festival on July 5, as one of 22 bands at the two-day event.



Woodstock weekend, Zeppelin performed south of the festival at the Asbury Park Convention Hall in New Jersey. Their only time out taken was to attend Elvis Presley's show at the International Hotel in Las Vegas, on August 12.



The Byrds were invited, but chose not to participate, figuring Woodstock to be no different from any of the other music festivals that summer. There were also concerns about money. As bassist John York remembers: "We were flying to a gig and Roger [McGuinn] came up to us and said that a guy was putting on a festival in upstate New York. But at that point they weren't paying all of the bands. He asked us if we wanted to do it and we said, 'No'.



We had no idea what it was going to be. We were burned out and tired of the festival scene. [...] So all of us said, 'No, we want a rest' and missed the best festival of all.'"



Tommy James and the Shondells declined an invitation. Lead singer Tommy James stated later: "We could have just kicked ourselves. We were in Hawaii, and my secretary called and said, 'Yeah, listen, there's this pig farmer in upstate New York that wants you to play in his field.' That's how it was put to me. So we passed, and we realized what we'd missed a couple of days later."



The Moody Blues were included on the original Wallkill poster as performers, but decided to back out after being booked in Paris the same weekend.



Spirit also declined an invitation to play, as they already had shows planned and wanted to play those instead, not knowing how big Woodstock would be.



Joni Mitchell was originally slated to perform, but canceled at the urging of her manager to avoid missing a scheduled appearance on The Dick Cavett Show.



Lighthouse declined to perform at Woodstock.



Roy Rogers was asked by Lang to close the festival with Happy Trails but he declined.



Procol Harum was invited but refused because Woodstock fell at the end of a long tour and also coincided with the due date of guitarist Robin Trower's baby.



Jethro Tull also declined. According to frontman Ian Anderson, he knew it would be a big event but he did not want to go because he did not like hippies and other concerns including inappropriate nudity and the money being right.



Media coverage Very few reporters from outside the immediate area were on the scene. During the first few days of the festival, national media coverage emphasized the problems. Front page headlines in the New York Daily News read "Traffic Uptight at Hippiefest" and "Hippies Mired in a Sea of Mud".



Coverage became more positive by the end of the festival, in part because the parents of concertgoers called the media and told them, based on their children's phone calls, that their reporting was misleading.



The New York Times covered the prelude to the festival and the move from Wallkill to Bethel.Barnard Collier, who reported from the event for the Times, asserts that he was pressured by on-duty editors at the paper to write a misleadingly negative article about the event.



According to Collier, this led to acrimonious discussions and his threat to refuse to write the article until the paper's executive editor, James Reston, agreed to let him write the article as he saw fit. The eventual article dealt with issues of traffic jams and minor lawbreaking, but went on to emphasize cooperation, generosity, and the good nature of the festival goers.



When the festival was over, Collier wrote another article about the exodus of fans from the festival site and the lack of violence at the event. The chief medical officer for the event and several local residents were quoted as praising the festival goers. Middletown, New York's Times Herald-Record, the only local daily newspaper, editorialized against the law that banned the festival from Wallkill.



During the festival a rare Saturday edition was published. The paper had the only phone line running out of the site, and it used a motorcyclist to get stories and pictures from the impassable crowd to the newspaper's office 35 miles away in Middletown.



Woodstock (film) The documentary film, Woodstock, directed by Michael Wadleigh and edited by Thelma Schoonmaker and Martin Scorsese, was released in 1970. Artie Kornfeld (one of the promoters of the festival) came to Fred Weintraub, an executive at Warner Bros., and asked for money to film the festival.



Previously, Artie had been turned down everywhere else, but Fred Weintraub became his hero and, against the express wishes of other Warner Bros. executives, Weintraub put his job on the line and gave Kornfeld $100,000 to make the film.



Woodstock helped to save Warner Bros at a time when the company was on the verge of going out of business. The book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls details the making of the film. Wadleigh rounded up a crew of about 100 from the New York film scene.



With no money to pay the crew, he agreed to a double-or-nothing scheme, in which the crew would receive double pay if the film succeeded and nothing if it bombed.



Wadleigh strove to make the film as much about the hippies as the music, listening to their feelings about compelling events contemporaneous with the festival (such as the Vietnam War), as well as the views of the townspeople.



Woodstock received the Academy Award for Documentary Feature. The film has been deemed culturally significant by the United States Library of Congress.



In 1994, Woodstock: The Director's Cut was released and expanded to include Janis Joplin as well as additional performances by Jefferson Airplane, Jimi Hendrix, and Canned Heat not seen in the original version of the film.



In 2009, the film was re-released on DVD. This release marks the film's first availability on Blu-ray disc. Another film on Woodstock named Taking Woodstock was produced in 2009 by Taiwanese filmmaker Ang Lee.



Albums Two "soundtrack" albums were released. The first, Woodstock: Music from the Original Soundtrack and More, was a 3-LP (later 2-CD) album containing a sampling of one or two songs by most of the acts who performed. A year later, Woodstock 2 was released as a 2-LP album.



Both albums included recordings of stage announcements (e.g., "[We're told] that the brown acid is not specifically too good", "Hey, if you think really hard, maybe we can stop this rain") and crowd noises (i.e., the "rain chant") between songs.



In 1994, a third album, Woodstock Diary was released. Tracks from all three albums, as well as numerous additional, previously-unreleased performances from the festival, but not the stage announcements and crowd noises, were reissued by Atlantic as a 4-CD box set titled Woodstock: Three Days of Peace and Music.



An album titled Jimi Hendrix: Woodstock also was released in 1994, featuring only selected recordings of Jimi Hendrix at the festival. A longer double-disc set, Live at Woodstock (1999) features nearly every song of Hendrix's performance, omitting just two pieces that were sung by his rhythm guitarist.



In 2009, Joe Cocker released a live album of his entire Woodstock set. The album contained eleven tracks, ten of which were previously unreleased. In 2009, complete performances from Woodstock by Santana, Janis Joplin, Sly & the Family Stone, Jefferson Airplane, and Johnny Winter were released separately by Sony BMG/Legacy, and were also collected in a box set entitled The Woodstock Experience.



Also in 2009, Rhino Records issued a 6-CD box set, Woodstock: 40 Years On: Back to Yasgur's Farm, which includes further musical performances as well as stage announcements and other ancillary material.



Aftermath "Peace and Music" Woodstock monument with plaques by sculptor Wayne C. Saward and erected in 1984 on the festival site. (Note that John Sebastian's surname is misspelled as "Sabastian" Max Yasgur refused to rent out his farm for a 1970 revival of the festival, saying "As far as I know, I'm going back to running a dairy farm." Yasgur died in 1973, but his son still runs the dairy farm.



Bethel voters tossed out their supervisor in an election held in November 1969 because of his role in bringing the festival to the town. New York State and the town of Bethel passed mass gathering laws designed to prevent any more festivals from occurring. In 1984, at the original festival site, land owners Louis Nicky and June Gelish put up a monument marker with plaques called "Peace and Music" by a local sculptor from nearby Bloomingburg, Wayne C. Saward (1957–2009).



Attempts were made to prevent people from visiting the site, its owners spread chicken manure, and during one anniversary tractors and state police cars formed roadblocks. 20,000 people gathered at the site in 1989 during an impromptu 20th anniversary celebration.



In 1997 a community group put up a welcoming sign for visitors. Unlike Bethel, the town of Woodstock made several efforts to cash in on its notoriety. Bethel's stance changed in recent years, and the town now embraces the festival. Efforts have begun to forge a link between Bethel and Woodstock.



Approximately 80 lawsuits were filed against Woodstock Ventures.[by whom?] The movie financed settlements and paid off the $1.4 million dollars of debt Woodstock Ventures had incurred from the festival. Max Yasgur's Farm in 1999In 1984 a plaque was placed at the original site commemorating the festival.



The field and the stage area remain preserved in their rural setting. A concert hall has been erected up the hill, and the fields of the old Yasgur farm are still visited by people of all generations.



In 1997, the site of the concert and 1,400 acres (5.7 km2) surrounding was purchased by Alan Gerry for the purpose of creating the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. The Center opened on July 1, 2006, with a performance of the New York Philharmonic.



On August 13, 2006, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young performed to 16,000 fans at the new Center — 37 years after their historic performance at Woodstock. The Museum at Bethel Woods opened in June 2008. The Museum contains film and interactive displays, text panels, and artifacts which explore the unique experience of the Woodstock festival, its significance as the culminating event of a decade of radical cultural transformation, and the legacy of the Sixties and Woodstock today.



Woodstock 40th anniversary



There was worldwide media interest in the 40th anniversary of Woodstock in 2009. A number of activities to commemorate the festival took place around the world. On August 15, at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts overlooking the original site, the largest assembly of Woodstock performing alumni since the original 1969 festival performed in an eight-hour concert in front of a sold-out crowd.



Hosted by Country Joe McDonald, the concert featured Big Brother and the Holding Company performing Janis Joplin's hits (she actually appeared with the Kozmic Blues Band at Woodstock, although that band did feature former Big Brother guitarist Sam Andrew), Canned Heat, Ten Years After, Jefferson Starship, Mountain and the headliners,



The Levon Helm Band. At Woodstock, Levon Helm played drums and was one of the lead vocalists with The Band. Paul Kantner was the only member of the 1969 Jefferson Airplane line-up to appear with Jefferson Starship. Tom Constanten, who played keyboard with the Grateful Dead at Woodstock, joined Jefferson Starship on stage for several numbers. Jocko Marcellino from Sha Na Na also appeared, backed up by Canned Heat.



Richie Havens, who opened the Woodstock festival in 1969, appeared at a separate event the previous night. Crosby, Stills And Nash and Arlo Guthrie also marked the anniversary with live performances at Bethel earlier in August 2009.



Another event occurred in Hawkhurst, Kent (UK), at a Summer of Love party, with acts including two of the participants at the original Woodstock, Barry Melton of Country Joe and the Fish and Robin Williamson of The Incredible String Band, plus cover bands for Santana and the Grateful Dead.



On August 14 and 15, 2009, a 40th anniversary tribute concert was held in Woodstock, IL and was the only festival to receive the official blessing of the "Father of Woodstock", Artie Kornfeld.Kornfeld later made an appearance in Woodstock with the event's promoters.



Also in 2009, Michael Lang and Holly George-Warren published The Road to Woodstock, which describes Lang's involvement in the creation of the Woodstock Music And Arts Festival, and includes personal stories and quotes from central figures involved in the event.



Cultural references As one of the biggest rock festivals of all time and a cultural touchstone for the late Sixties, Woodstock has been referenced in many different ways in popular culture. The phrase "the Woodstock generation" became part of the common lexicon.



Tributes and parodies of the festival began almost as soon as the final chords sounded. Charles Schulz is said to have named his recurring Peanuts bird character Woodstock in tribute to the festival. In April 1970.



Mad magazine published a poem by Frank Jacobs and illustrated by Sergio Aragonés titled "I Remember, I Remember The Wondrous Woodstock Music Fair" that parodies the traffic jams and the challenges of getting close enough to actually hear the music.



In 1973, the stage show National Lampoon's Lemmings portrayed the "Woodchuck" festival, featuring parodies of many Woodstock performers.







Contemporary culture continues to remember Woodstock, with Time magazine naming "The Who at Woodstock – 1969" to the magazine's "Top 10 Music-Festival Moments" list on March 18, 2010.





In 2005, Argentine writer Edgar Brau published Woodstock, a long poem commemorating the festival. An English translation of the poem was published in January 2007 by Words Without Borders

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