Material: Paper Size: 42x30cm
In August of 1969, the most famous music festival in American history occurred near Bethel, New York. It was a really remarkable event that changed everything. I picked the best 21 Woodstock photos and some fascinating facts about the festival! Keep on reading…
The 50 best crowd photos from Woodstock 1969.
I can smell these pictures.
Sometime in the late spring of 1969, I saw an ad in the paper for the Woodstock Festival
As the world's leading society of music professionals, the Recording Academy is dedicated to celebrating, honoring, and sustaining music's past, present, and future.
Woodstock, the iconic festival that rocked New York, took place the weekend of August 15-18, 1969. Unsurprisingly, it remains the most famous music festival in rock 'n' roll history.
Woodstock'94 Concert Poster (RARE, NM, ORIGINAL). Dimensions: 24? X 36? This is an original printing of the Woodstock 1994 Conc
I can smell these pictures.
It was a 3 day event that captured the spirit of the times: Woodstock. This epic festival is looked on fondly by an entire generation and became a legend
The Woodstock Festival was a three-day concert (which rolled into a fourth day) that involved lots of sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll - plus a lot of mud. The Woodstock Music Festival of 1969 has become an icon of the 1960s hippie counterculture. 1. The festival was organized in six months by Michael Lang, John Roberts, Joel Rosenman, and Artie Kornfield. Michael Lang aboard his BSA. The easiest way to get around the festival grounds. 2. There was a total of 32 bands who performed under the sun, beneath the stars, and in the rain. Woodstock line-up music poster. 3. The festival was originally scheduled to take place in Woodstock, NY but since there weren’t any suitable ground sites, it was moved to a town called Wallkill. Michael Lang festival organiser and his crew Wallkill then decided they didn’t want a sea of drugged-out hippies in their town, so they enforced a law that banned the festival from happening. The Infamous Wallkill moving poster speaks for itself. In mid-July, only a month before the festival, Max Yasgur offered his dairy farm in Bethel, NY to be the official location for the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair. Max & Miriam Yasgur, owners of the farm Woodstock was held on. Photo taken at their farm on the day after Woodstock. 4. The Woodstock Festival was released as a documentary in 1970 and was a great commercial success. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Woodstock movie poster (1970) 5. A live album of the concert was also released in 1970. Woodstock album cover 6. The couple featured on Woodstock’s live album cover, Nick and Bobbi Ercoline, are married. Nick and Bobbi Ercoline 7. An estimated number of 400,000 people attended the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair. View from the helicopter by Woodstock photographer Barry Z Levine. 8. The thousands of flower children who flooded Bethel created a huge traffic jam. On the road to Woodstock, 1969. Arlo Guthrie announced during his set that the New York State Thruway was officially closed. Arlo Guthrie performing at Woodstock Aug 15, 1969. He was the 7th performer on the first day of Woodstock. 9. Richie Havens wasn’t supposed to be the opening act, but the bands that were initially scheduled were late because of traffic. Richie improvised a song that would be forever associated with the Woodstock Festival: “Freedom.” Richie Havens performs his legendary set at at Woodstock in 1969. 10. Tickets for the three day event were sold for $18 in advance and $24 at the site. But due to the unexpected invasion of flower children, the festival became free. Woodstock tickets 11. A Jewish Community made 200 sandwiches for the attendees. These hearty sandwiches, served with pickles, were handed out by nuns. A nun at Woodstock 1969. 12. 90% of concert-goers smoked marijuana. Hippies smoking weed at the 1969 Woodstock Festival. 13. These groovy signs were made so attendees wouldn’t get lost. Sign "Gentle Path / Groovy Way / High Way" 14. Neil Young refused to be filmed for the movie while performing with Crosby, Stills & Nash. Crosby, Stills & Nash at Woodstock 15. Jefferson Airplane demanded $12,000 for their set, and The Who, Janis Joplin, and the Grateful Dead also wouldn’t perform until they were paid. Woodstock Jefferson Airplane crowd scene 16. Joni Mitchell was set to perform at the festival, but her manager advised her to stay back and appear on The Dick Cavett Show the next day. Joni Mitchell in 1969 17. John Lennon had an interest in performing at Woodstock, but he told organizers his entry into the U.S. was denied by President Nixon. John Lennon and Yoko Ono 18. There was a total of 80 lawsuits against Michael Lang and the organizers, which were eventually paid off from the Woodstock film. Taking_Woodstock-hist 19. There was a notorious thunderstorm toward the middle of the weekend, in which attendees chanted “No rain, no rain” to stop the rain fall. Woodstock rain 20. Jimi Hendrix closed the event on Monday morning, performing a two-hour set. By then there were only 30,000 attendees because of the rain. (via BuzzFeed)
Woodstock '94 is a music festival taking its inspiration from the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair, 1969.
The Woodstock Festival was a three-day concert (which rolled into a fourth day) that involved lots of sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll - plus a lot of mud. The Woodstock Music Festival of 1969 has become an icon of the 1960s hippie counterculture. 1. The festival was organized in six months by Michael Lang, John Roberts, Joel Rosenman, and Artie Kornfield. Michael Lang aboard his BSA. The easiest way to get around the festival grounds. 2. There was a total of 32 bands who performed under the sun, beneath the stars, and in the rain. Woodstock line-up music poster. 3. The festival was originally scheduled to take place in Woodstock, NY but since there weren’t any suitable ground sites, it was moved to a town called Wallkill. Michael Lang festival organiser and his crew Wallkill then decided they didn’t want a sea of drugged-out hippies in their town, so they enforced a law that banned the festival from happening. The Infamous Wallkill moving poster speaks for itself. In mid-July, only a month before the festival, Max Yasgur offered his dairy farm in Bethel, NY to be the official location for the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair. Max & Miriam Yasgur, owners of the farm Woodstock was held on. Photo taken at their farm on the day after Woodstock. 4. The Woodstock Festival was released as a documentary in 1970 and was a great commercial success. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Woodstock movie poster (1970) 5. A live album of the concert was also released in 1970. Woodstock album cover 6. The couple featured on Woodstock’s live album cover, Nick and Bobbi Ercoline, are married. Nick and Bobbi Ercoline 7. An estimated number of 400,000 people attended the Woodstock Music & Arts Fair. View from the helicopter by Woodstock photographer Barry Z Levine. 8. The thousands of flower children who flooded Bethel created a huge traffic jam. On the road to Woodstock, 1969. Arlo Guthrie announced during his set that the New York State Thruway was officially closed. Arlo Guthrie performing at Woodstock Aug 15, 1969. He was the 7th performer on the first day of Woodstock. 9. Richie Havens wasn’t supposed to be the opening act, but the bands that were initially scheduled were late because of traffic. Richie improvised a song that would be forever associated with the Woodstock Festival: “Freedom.” Richie Havens performs his legendary set at at Woodstock in 1969. 10. Tickets for the three day event were sold for $18 in advance and $24 at the site. But due to the unexpected invasion of flower children, the festival became free. Woodstock tickets 11. A Jewish Community made 200 sandwiches for the attendees. These hearty sandwiches, served with pickles, were handed out by nuns. A nun at Woodstock 1969. 12. 90% of concert-goers smoked marijuana. Hippies smoking weed at the 1969 Woodstock Festival. 13. These groovy signs were made so attendees wouldn’t get lost. Sign "Gentle Path / Groovy Way / High Way" 14. Neil Young refused to be filmed for the movie while performing with Crosby, Stills & Nash. Crosby, Stills & Nash at Woodstock 15. Jefferson Airplane demanded $12,000 for their set, and The Who, Janis Joplin, and the Grateful Dead also wouldn’t perform until they were paid. Woodstock Jefferson Airplane crowd scene 16. Joni Mitchell was set to perform at the festival, but her manager advised her to stay back and appear on The Dick Cavett Show the next day. Joni Mitchell in 1969 17. John Lennon had an interest in performing at Woodstock, but he told organizers his entry into the U.S. was denied by President Nixon. John Lennon and Yoko Ono 18. There was a total of 80 lawsuits against Michael Lang and the organizers, which were eventually paid off from the Woodstock film. Taking_Woodstock-hist 19. There was a notorious thunderstorm toward the middle of the weekend, in which attendees chanted “No rain, no rain” to stop the rain fall. Woodstock rain 20. Jimi Hendrix closed the event on Monday morning, performing a two-hour set. By then there were only 30,000 attendees because of the rain. (via BuzzFeed)
Woodstock '94 is a music festival taking its inspiration from the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair, 1969.
A review of vintage photos straight out of the historical Woodstock music festival of 1969 in Bethel, New York.
Photographing the Woodstock Festival (1969) In the summer of 1969, Mike Lang rode his motorcycle over to my house in Woodstock and asked if I would be interested in photographing a festival he was planning. It was one of the most important yeses I ever said. We didn’t talk about money except to say that we
Woodstock, given an Academy Award for Best Documentary on April 15, 1971.
Photographing the Woodstock Festival (1969) In the summer of 1969, Mike Lang rode his motorcycle over to my house in Woodstock and asked if I would be interested in photographing a festival he was planning. It was one of the most important yeses I ever said. We didn’t talk about money except to say that we
In the summer of 1969, half a million hopeful, peace-loving young people — ‘lured by music, the country and some strange kind of magic,’ LIFE wrote — came together on a dair…
Woodstock was supposed to be '3 days of peace and music' - but as these stories from right after the concert describe, it didn't exactly end up that way.
I spent a week at Woodstock 99 running one of the 11 field hospitals. We had over 1,000 volunteer medical people on the staff, from doctors to EMT's. Picture is of one of the 2 main stages. Copyright 2009 © Ken Traub All rights reserved no reproduction of any kind Allowed without permission
Joan Baez performing at the Woodstock Music & Arts Festival, August 16, 1969.
Revisit Woodstock and the story of the Summer of Love with Wade Lawrence, founding Director and Senior Curator at The Museum at Bethel Woods in Bethel, NY, the concert’s actual location. He will offer a multimedia look at the decade’s sweeping changes, as expressed through music, art, books, and ideas. He has curated numerous exhibitions on this theme, and blogs regularly on 50 Years of Peace & Music in honor of Woodstock’s 50th Anniversary. Special guest Arnold Skolnick, designer of the original Woodstock poster, will share the story of this iconic cultural symbol. A graphic artist and publisher of art books, Skolnick’s work has been exhibited at galleries throughout the northeast.