Uh oh, the 40th anniversary of Woodstock is about a month and a half away. Did you remember? If not, its probably due to the distinct lack of buzz, seeing as there is no official concert scheduled, although boosters keep adding as yet in hopes that original co-producer Michael Lang will manage to put together a show in New Yorks Prospect Park.
A handful of mostly lame events are planned for different parts of the country, and a tour called Heroes of Woodstock featuring Mountain, Jefferson Starship, Tom Constanten (repping Grateful Dead) and others has 16 dates on the books (none in the Southeast). In all, though, it would seem as if folks have other things on their mind than memorializing the watershed cultural event.
That doesnt mean its a complete wasteland. Sony Music has released a well-thought-out group of reissues called The Woodstock Experience, five two-CD packages pairing a classic 1969 album and a complete Woodstock performance. Sony catalog artists Santana, Janis Joplin, Johnny Winter, Jefferson Airplane and Sly and the Family Stone got the treatment.
Thirty-three acts performed at the Woodstock Music & Art Fair from Aug. 15-18, 1969, including such long-forgotten names as Quill, Sweetwater, Keef Hartley Band and Bert Sommer. (The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, Bob Dylan, The Byrds and a handful of lesser-knowns declined invitations. Jeff Beck, Iron Butterfly and Joni Mitchell canceled.)
Only a handful of the performances have been immortalized, mostly via the 1970 film Woodstock and its soundtrack. And Sony can legitimately boast three of them in this collection: Sly, Santana and Joplin. Winter did not make it into the movie and while Jefferson Airplane were represented with two songs in celluloid, their set has not earned the same historical cachet as the top three.
Lets have us a closer look at these twofers. Ive ranked them on their merit as live performances.
This article appears in Jun 24-30, 2009.
