What's more monumental than a 44th anniversary?  This  is Woodstock's.  500,000 long-haired stoned  members of my generation attended this three-day open air music  festival.   I was not one of them.  But at least I admit it.    For  every person who attended there was another thousand who said they  attended but really spent that weekend doing chores for mom.     And  while half a million rain soaked, bathroom deprived, hippies grooved on  three days of love and understanding, I was in LA bombarded by news  updates on the Charles Manson murders.
I did see the movie  WOODSTOCK that came out the next year.  Jesus, did that scene look  crowded!  And uncomfortable!   Yeah, Hendrix and Janis were great, but  good God, I’d have to go three days without a toilet!   I always thought  the tagline for the film should have been, “Great Music! Stereophonic Sound! Clean Rest Rooms!”
But  like I said, anyone who was east of the Mississippi in the summer of 69  says they attended Woodstock.   In fairness, some who didn’t were  probably so loaded they thought they were there.   When their favorite Woodstock act was Katy Perry that’s a clue.
But one friend of mine claimed he was there and I believe him.  Why?  Because this is what he said, “Most of the time the music was really bad.”     Everyone remembers the headliners – Crosby, Stills, & Nash, the  Who, Joe Cocker – but there were a lot of no-name bands that screeched  through endless sets.   Again, I wasn’t there so I didn’t hear for  myself, but there’s probably a reason the movie didn’t include Quill  (doing a 40 minute set consisting of four songs), the Keef Hartley Band,  the Grease Band, and six or seven other headliners that died on the  editing room floor.  He said at times it was also hard to hear and  impossible to see.   There’d be hippies staggering around completely  lost.  Babies screaming, people talking through the music.
Another person
 I know was there was Grace Slick, lead singer of Jefferson Airplane.   As luck would have it I met her and talked about it.  What  a cool lady.  She said the groups were housed at a nearby motel and  airlifted by helicopter to a field behind the stage.  So for most of the  festival she watched bored musicians shoot pool.
She and the  "plane" arrived on the scene at 9 pm, but the program was running just a  tad long.  They didn't get on stage until 6 am.   Not the best time I  would imagine to perform rock n' roll.  But she thought it was an  incredible experience and seeing 500,000 people from the air was a sight  she'll never forget.
Amazingly, there were only two deaths.  One  from an overdose (duh!) and the other was run-over by a tractor.   But  considering the number of people, in such close quarters, with precious  little food and shelter, the fact that there weren’t riots and chaos,  and new Scientology chapters says a lot about my ge-ge-generation.
Woodstock  was a statement of peace (I think it was made just before the Sha-na-na  set).   And a declaration of unity.   Whether we were there or not I’m  sure we’d all like to go there now – to recapture those old feelings, to  feel a sense of shared purpose, to buy a summer home we could escape to  on the weekends.
For more on the '60s I recommend my book -- THE ME GENERATION... BY ME (GROWING UP IN THE '60s).  It chronicles all the many epic events of the decade I didn't personally attend.  But the Kindle version is very cheap.   And it's the perfect Labor Day gift.  Here's where you go to get yours! 
Chủ Nhật, 18 tháng 8, 2013
The 44th anniversary of Woodstock
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