Posts Tagged ‘Michael Lang’

Book Review: Michael Lang (with Holly George-Warren), “The Road To Woodstock”

road-to-woodstock-cover-image-677x1024[1]When it comes to telling the true story of Woodstock, more properly known as “An Aquarian Exposition: The Woodstock Music and Art Fair,” it’s hard to imagine anyone better suited for the role than Michael Lang. Now, 40 years after the world-changing event and right on time for the various activities celebrating the anniversary, the man who conceived the festival has decided to tell his story in The Road to Woodstock, co-written with Holly George-Warren.

One thing you learn early on in his book is that Michael Lang is a die-hard optimist. There’s no dream that can’t be realized, no obstacle that can’t be overcome. That attitude served him well on the road to Woodstock, because to say there were obstacles to getting the festival up and running would be a major understatement. Lang also manages to find the good in people, and despite profound disagreements with his Woodstock Ventures partners and others, there is no mudslinging here. (more…)

DVD Review: “Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music Director’s Cut”

Woodstock - The Director's CutThere’s a well-known saying that if you think Woodstock was great, you weren’t there. The point is that the mud, drugs, lack of food and water, and often bad music made the whole thing a disaster for those who were there. I don’t know about where you live, but where I’m from in New Jersey, everyone of a certain age claims to have been there. I’ve even made that claim a couple of times. At least I was at the great, but now forgotten, Atlantic City Pop Festival two weeks earlier. If everyone who says they were there was actually there, there would have been millions of people rolling around in the mud, instead of the hundreds of thousands who were actually there.

Jeff Giles reviewed the Blu-ray version of the new 40th Anniversary Edition Director’s Cut of the Woodstock film a couple of weeks ago. I haven’t read Jeff’s review because I make it a point not to read any reviews of something that I’m working on until after I’ve finished my review. So this may end up being a point-counterpoint, or maybe we’ll agree on everything.

I first saw Michael Wadleigh’s film in a theater in New York City when it was released in 1970. It was the same night as the Knicks seventh game victory over the Lakers (the game where a hobbled Willis Reed provided one of the most inspirational performances in sports history), and since there were no vcr’s, and certainly no dvr’s yet, I missed the game. The things we do for love. I may have seen the film once in the years since then. The biggest surprise for me after all these years is that the film, so fondly remembered for the bands, is not about the music at all. It’s about people. The people who organized the whole thing. The people who went and lived to tell the tale. The townspeople who were massively inconvenienced that weekend. The man who cleaned the Port-O-Sans. (more…)

SXSW ‘09: Day Four

Les Paul lineupMy photos for SXSW Day Four are up on Picasa.

37,000 FEET OVER AMERICA — This 737 is headed east, about an hour from touchdown in Newark. I thought I’d take this opportunity to provide a recap of my activities on the fourth and final day of SXSW ’09.

I have to tell you that I more or less punted yesterday. Sore feet, an aching back, and the feeling that what I’d seen on Friday could not be topped, all led to my decision to kick back a little. That doesn’t mean that the day was without rewards. It’s simply impossible to attend SXSW without reaping some of the benefits just by walking around.

First I’d like to issue an apology to my friends in the wonderful Texas band Orange Is In. I was really looking forward to their afternoon gig yesterday, but a late start, and traffic on the way downtown caused me to miss their set. I hope that you’ll check them out though. I had the opportunity to see them play, and meet them, when they performed at The Saint in Asbury Park last year. They’re a really good band, and nice people as well.

My first stop was the Austin Convention Center for the Texas Guitar and Record Show. It was the most amazing collection of guitars that I’ve ever seen. Check out my photos to see what I mean. The one that stands out in my mind was a 1958 Gibson ES335 that was valued at $49,500, though there were a few others in that price range as well. The record part of the show was smaller, but there were some good finds, and prices were extremely reasonable.

Still at the Convention Center, I caught a 3:00 p.m. set by a band that was on my list. The Spinto Band, from Delaware, appeared on the SESAC Day Stage. Bands only get about twenty minutes in that venue, but I found the Spintos to be delightfully clever in terms of their songwriting, and their performance. Let’s put it this way … kazoo was a prominent interest in several of their songs, including one that featured dual kazoo. The Spinto Band has an album out on Park the Van Records. Check it out.

As luck would have, a wonderful panel called Woodstock: Untold Stories was starting nearby in the Convention Center just as the Spinto Band finished, so I headed over there. A stellar panel had been assembled for the occasion that included musicians who had played at Woodstock; Greg Rolie and Michael Shrieve of Santana, and Credence bassist Stu Cook. Noted producer and engineer Eddie Kramer (most famous for his work with Jimi Hendrix) who recorded and mixed the audio was on hand, as was the still-wacky leader of the Hog Farm, Wavy Gravy. Filmmaker Barbara Kopple (“Our Generation” a documentary about the three Woodstock Festivals, 1969, 1994, and 1999) took part. She’s working on a new film about the famous festival that will be on the History Channel in September. Michael Lang, producer of the original festival was there, still boyish with that mop of curly hair. In fact, as I write this, he’s sitting right across the aisle from me on the airplane. Michael’s book about the festival,the ultimate insider’s look,“The Road to Woodstock”, comes out on July 14. Oh, and how can I forget the great Jocko Marcellino from Sha Na Na?

The point of the panel was to promote the deluxe 40th anniversary dvd-blu ray edition of the great Michael Wadleigh film “Woodstock,” which will be released by Warner Home Video on June 9. The film includes a lot of concert footage that was not in the original film, and some of that footage was shown to us yesterday. I can tell you that it made me really excited about seeing all of the new material.

Continuing this back on terra firma …

By the time the Woodstock panel (and a nice after party with good free barbecue) was over, I was pretty much done. It was still late afternoon though, and the shuttles didn’t start running again until 10 p.m. So, although my heart, and feet, were not in it, I set my sites on the Bloodshot Records artist’s showcase at the Red Eyed Fly.

Bloodshot Records, out of Chicago, is one of the great indie labels, and perhaps the greatest when it comes to American roots music. They have a wonderful roster of artists, including Justin Townes Earle, who I mentioned in an earlier post. First up was a new Bloodshot artist, but a veteran performer, Exene Cervenka of the legendary L.A. punk band X. Her new sound is predominantly acoustic, but the songs echo the kind of stuff she was doing in X. Next came the Deadstring Brothers, who are your basic good time southern rock band, with sort of a Delaney and Bonnie vibe.

At this point, the shuttles were running again. I was done.

Look for my recap of the entire festival coming up in the next day or two.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]