Woodstock 50 was scheduled to take place for three days in mid-August. Just days before the event, organizers have called off the festival planned to commemorate the legendary 1969 celebration of peace, love and music.
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Woodstock 1969: a shift in pop culture
A three-day festival of "peace and music" on a farm field in New York became the epitome of the counterculture movement of the 1960s. As Woodstock 50 is officially cancelled, here's a look back at the real thing.
Image: imago/United Archives
A culture-shifting event
The iconic music festival from August 15-18, 1969 was actually held some 95 kilometers (60 miles) from the town of Woodstock itself, on a farmland in Bethel, New York. The name came from Woodstock Ventures, the investment group behind the festival. Billed as "An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music," it became a pivotal event in cultural history.
Image: imago/United Archives
A mass celebration of counterculture
"By the time we got to Woodstock, we were half a million strong," sang Joni Mitchell in tribute to the festival in 1970. Rather than buying tickets, the crowds tore down the fence on the first day. The festival attracted over 400,000 people — twice as many as the organizers had anticipated. As Mitchell later said, the participants could feel "they were part of a greater organism."
Image: imago/United Archives
Walk or take a helicopter instead
There was such a high volume of traffic that it took eight hours to drive the some 150 kilometers from New York City to Bethel. To reach the site, festival goers had to leave their cars behind and walk the last stretch — an average of 24 kilometers (15 miles) each on foot. Some of the performers had to be flown in by helicopter — as did over 500 kilos (1,100 pounds) of food.
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Freedom
It was folk singer Richie Havens who opened the festival on Friday, August 15. He improvised one of the most iconic songs of the event, "Freedom," right on the spot. With the other opening acts caught in the traffic, Havens played on for hours, weaving lyrics from old spirituals into his songs.
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A little help
In the 1970 Oscar-winning documentary, Woodstock became world famous. Through film and recording rights, the promoters of the event, nearly bankrupt after the festival, were able to more than recoup their losses. The film includes Joe Cocker's memorable "With a Little Help from My Friends." After the singer's set, a thunderstorm disrupted the concerts for several hours.
Between acts, public announcements from the stage helped people in the crowd who'd lost each other meet again — or warned about bad drugs: "The brown acid that's circulating around is not specifically too good..." Fueled by the music, the feeling of community and psychedelic drugs, hippies found their trip rewarding, despite the chaos, shortage of food, the rain — and lots of mud.
Image: picture-alliance/AP
Women in a man's world
Among the 32 acts that performed during the weekend, only three women took to the stage as solo artists: Joan Baez (picture), Janis Joplin and Melanie. Other female performers included Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane as well as Licorice McKechnie and Rose Simpson of the Incredible String Band. Baez was six months pregnant at the time.
Image: AP
Make love, not war
Maybe not many festival participants were naked in the crowd of half a million, but the nudity of a few contributed to the festival's legendary status. Disrobing in public was nearly inconceivable in the prudish United States back then, but for those who were there, it was simply another way of expressing freedom and tolerance.
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An epic conclusion
Jimi Hendrix had insisted on closing the festival and was also the highest-paid performer of the event. Scheduled to start at midnight, he ended up taking the stage on Monday at 9 am due to delays. By that time, most of the crowd had left. But those who stayed were rewarded with a legendary two-hour performance, which included the guitarist's distorted take on the "Star-Spangled Banner."
Image: picture-alliance/MediaPunch/P. Tarnoff
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"Woodstock 50 today announced that the three-day festival to celebrate its 50th anniversary has been canceled," the organizers said in a statement on Wednesday.
The tribute festival to mark the 50th anniversary of the legendary 1969 celebration of peace, love and music was scheduled for August 16-18.
"We are saddened that a series of unforeseen setbacks has made it impossible to put on the festival we imagined with the great lineup we had booked and the social engagement we were anticipating," said Michael Lang, co-founder of the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival. "We released all the talent so any involvement on their part would be voluntary. Due to conflicting radius issues in the DC area many acts were unable to participate and others passed for their own reasons."
The cancellation did not come as a complete surprise, as the organizers experienced a series of setbacks. They were turned down at two proposed festival sites in upstate New York and lost funding. Headliners booked for the concerts, including rapper Jay-Z and pop star Miley Cyrus, also pulled out. The festival lineup in 1969 included The Who, Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix.
An alternative event
Woodstock 50 was called off, but there actually will be a celebration of the mythical festival at the original 1969 site.
On the anniversary weekend, Ringo Starr, Santana and Dan Fogerty are performing at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts: "Same place.Different time.Still historic," the website proclaims.
Guitar god and hippie icon Jimi Hendrix
Some call him the greatest guitarist of all time, but Jimi Hendrix was much more than a rock'n'roll star. He transcended boundaries in just four short years, and influenced generations of guitarists to come.
Image: IMAGO
Jimi Hendrix, early days
Jimi Hendrix's career began in various bands where he played rock'n'roll or cover songs — which soon bored him. When he founded his first band, he experimented with electronics, playing techniques and amplifiers and invented the sound with which he hit the music scene in the late 1960s like a meteorite. There is good reason he later called himself "The Man from Mars."
Image: IMAGO
The Jimi Hendrix Experience
England, 1966: Jimi Hendrix, drummer Mitch Mitchell (left) and bassist Noel Redding as the newly formed The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Their first album was released a year later, and "Are You Experienced" climbed to number two in the UK Charts, just behind the Beatles' – who were Hendrix fans — "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Starstock/Photoshot
'Experience' in Monterey
Off to the US, where Hendrix played alongside The Animals, Janis Joplin, The Who and various other top acts at the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 to a crowd of 90,000 — many more than the expected 10,000 festival goers. Hendrix's wild show included smashing and burning a guitar. As the "Los Angeles Times" put it, Jimi left the stage having "graduated from rumor to legend."
Image: Bruce Fleming/AP Images/picture-alliance
Teeth, lips, tongue
A guitar was more than just an instrument to Jimi Hendrix – it was also a playground and a sex object. Left-handed, Hendrix had his right-handed guitars restrung with the bass string on top. It changed everything, becoming the basis of his signature sound. Playing with his teeth or tongue was just one of the many ways he expressed his unique style.
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Music history in Woodstock
August 1969: Jimi Hendrix was the headliner, and scheduled to play the grand finale on Sunday evening at the Woodstock festival. For various reasons, it was Monday morning before he came on stage. Most of the 500,000 visitors had already left. Undeterred, Hendrix played a legendary two hour set — and the most famous solo of his life on "Star Spangled Banner."
Image: imago images / United Archives
His last festival
September 1970: Wet and stormy weather delayed Jimi's performance at the "Love & Peace" festival on the Baltic Sea island of Fehmarn. 25,000 fans were miffed and many booed as he walked on stage a day late. Jimi's response: "Boo, boo....I don't give a fuck if you boo, as long as you boo in key....you mothers." The weather cleared, and Jimi played another epic 90-minute set.
Image: GP/MPI/Capital Pictures/picture-alliance
Last curtain call
Fehmarn was Jimi Hendrix's last big live concert. On September 17, he performed with Eric Burdon & War in a club in London. In his hotel room later that night, he couldn't sleep. He resorted to a fatal mix: a bottle of wine and a lot of sleeping pills. Jimi Hendrix choked on his own vomit and died of asphyxia. He was laid to rest in his home town of Seattle on October 1, 1970.