Home > Entertainment > Music > Music Genres, Trends & Scenes
Created on: August 25, 2009 Last Updated: August 26, 2009
"It's really amazing. It looks like some kind of Biblical, epochal unbelievable scene!"
- Jerry Garcia (The Grateful Dead)
"A bunch of stupid slobs in the mud."
- Grace Slick (The Jefferson Airplane)
Yeah, Woodstock divides folks, even folks supposedly on the same side. Whatever your feelings on the famous Woodstock Festival, currently celebrating its 40th anniversary, it's impossible to deny its lasting impact and cultural importance. For a number of reasons I felt like re-watching the movie that was made of the event that fateful weekend. I've seen it before a number of times -usually on anniversaries it seems. I remember a party in '99 with it on in the background via VH1 and I remember seeing it constantly on the monitor of the video store I was working at in '89.
One of which being the upcoming release of Ang Lee's TAKING WOODSTOCK featuring comedian Demetri Martin as Elliot Tiber who came in at the last minute to offer his property for the event after it was banned from its original location.
I just borrowed my brother's DVD of it from the late 90's - as Martin Scorsese, who was assistant editor on the project, said the film "has shape-shifted quite a bit over the years" so I felt I was fine with the 1994 "Director's Cut" and didn't need to shell out for the new lavish 40th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition for an anniversary re-viewing you know? This was an old school DVD - it didn't even have a proper menu and the video quality was pretty VHS but that's apt because that's how I saw it originally so screw digital remasterings! For now anyway.
The film makers had some fun with the standard ratings disclaimer at the beginning of the film - the "R" starts to ignite at the sound of Jimi Hendrix's "Star Spangled Banner" guitar solo.
It extends to the word "Restricted" which quickly goes up in flames and the implication is clear - this movie is fiery cataclysmic stuff, watch out. That notion though disappears rapidly once you see laid back shots of farm fields and hippie folk arriving to take them over. Workers building the stage and setting up sound equipment while people arrive - some in colorfully painted vehicles, some on foot climbing through holes in the fence.
This all goes on a bit too long as it's a while before we see an actual live performer. We hear studio versions of Crosby, Stills & Nash and Canned Heat tunes with a split screen image showing simultaneously Michael Lang talking to a reporter from ABC News while the second half of the screen
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
The Phenomenon that was "Woodstock"
by Raven West
There are very few times in a person's life when one is totally unaware of the immense importance of one single event.
I was ten in 1969. My musical taste or the awareness of music at that time was influenced by what I would hear on the radio
by Pearl Cawley
Got back an hour ago so I'm loopy after an eternal car ride from Upstate NY. The Woodstock 40th anniversary thingie
"It's really amazing. It looks like some kind of Biblical, epochal unbelievable scene!"
- Jerry Garcia (The Grateful Dead)
Make love not war! Big orange Volkswagen's with peace signs and flower power painted all over them. Does this era ring a
View All Articles on: The Phenomenon that was "Woodstock"
Helium Debate
Cast your vote!
Trance music festivals: Is it all about the drugs?
Click for your side.
Featured Partner
Nature's Voice Our Choice's mission is to preserve, conserve, and restore water resources in communities throughout the world through public awareness, education, and the implementation of projects that use applied science and traditiona...more