'It Was One Problem After Another': How Woodstock 50 Fell Apart
Woodstock 50 had nearly every resource a festival could ask for: storied brand name, massive financial backing and industry goodwill. Where did it all go wrong?
By DAVID BROWNE
By KORY GROW
AUGUST 18, 2019
A month before Woodstock 50 was announced, the festival was already in deep trouble. Last December, Michael Lang, the co-founder of the original 1969 event who had become its bemused-hippie symbol in subsequent decades, was in talks with an upstate New York racetrack for a fest that would mark the anniversary of the historic, if chaotic, cultural milestone he had overseen. The new festival would take place August 16th 18th, 2019, almost exactly 50 years after the original Woodstock.
Lang had begun negotiations with the international media company Dentsu Aegis to finance the event, writing in a December 4th email to the companys chief commercial officer, D.J. Martin, that he was imagining a crowd of 150,000. Dentsu thought government permits would cap attendance at 60,000. Lang, whose email signature includes a quote from counterculture author Ken Kesey (Put your good where it counts the most), contested that number: Where did you get that? he emailed back. Martin replied, From you.
Martin seemed agitated and concerned. If that is not the case, then you need to clarify the facts to the collective team, he wrote. We could end up in bad shape really quickly. Those words would eventually come back to haunt everyone.
Woodstock 50 had nearly every resource a festival could ask for: a storied brand name, financial backing from a multinational communications company, and agents eager to sign up their artists for sizable paychecks. The three-day show would not only celebrate rocks most iconic festival; it would connect the originals heritage to the Coachella generation via hip-hop artists and pop chart-toppers.
Instead, Woodstock 50 turned into a slow-moving train wreck. This
Rolling Stone investigation is based on three months of reporting, nearly 100 legal filings, and dozens of interviews with people connected to the festival, including artists, agents, managers, and government officials. Its the story of how the Age of Aquarius turned into the Age of Mercury in Retrograde and the unfulfilled promises left in its wake.
You cant magic one of these [Woodstocks] into happening, and thats what they tried to do with this, says David Crosby, one of the veterans of the first Woodstock who was booked for the anniversary festival. ...
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