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<text id=94TT1091>
<title>
Aug. 22, 1994: Music:Woodstock Suburb
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARTS & MEDIA/MUSIC, Page 78
Woodstock Suburb
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Twenty-five years later, there were clean-cut fans, Pepsi as
the official soft drink, and cash machines
</p>
<p>By Christopher John Farley--Reported by David E. Thigpen/Saugerties
</p>
<p> Well, it turns out everything didn't go exactly according to
plan. Despite the chain-link fence surrounding the 840-acre
site, despite the 550 state troopers, the metal detectors, the
confiscation of drugs and alcohol and the roaming private security
force with the Orwellian name "Peace Patrol," a bit of the anarchy
of the original Woodstock crept into its successor 25 years
later. Several hundred people crashed the gates. The transportation
system broke down early on, stranding huge numbers of fans and
making the roads impassable. The audience pitched tents all
over the grounds, despite pleas from the stage to do so only
in designated areas. Perhaps most telling, the overcrowding
made it impossible for workers to empty the 2,800 Port-O-Sans.
If there was one thing about Woodstock '94 that was going to
distinguish it from the original, it was that the Port-O-Sans
would work.
</p>
<p> Like the first festival, Woodstock '94 did not actually take
place in Woodstock. It was held over three days last weekend
in Saugerties, New York, and attracted about 255,000 people,
half the number who made up Woodstock Nation in Bethel, an hour's
drive away. The crowd was overwhelmingly white and middle-class.
The bands, 50 of them, were more diverse and included everyone
from sexy female rappers Salt N Pepa and trippy alternative
rockers Blind Melon to punk-funksters Red Hot Chili Peppers
and even soul crooner Joe Cocker, who reprised his Woodstock
'69 classic With a Little Help from My Friends.
</p>
<p> Rock has expanded since 1969--as these bands indicate, there
are now many thriving subgenres--but like sports heroes, the
performers have gotten smaller. There were no young musicians
at Woodstock '94 who compared in sheer potency to Pete Townshend
or Jimi Hendrix or Janis Joplin. Still, some turned in rousing
sets. Rapper B-Real of Cypress Hill flouted authority, smoking
a marijuana joint onstage and then throwing himself into the
crowd to surf on the hands of his fans. Guitarist-singer Melissa
Etheridge offered a punchy, joyous version of her pop-rock hit
Come to My Window. And the Irish rock group the Cranberries
won over the crowd with their moody, introspective sound. "We
expected ((the turnout)) to be large, but it was still a bit
of a surprise," says Cranberries guitarist Noel Hogan. "Once
we got onstage, it was just a vast sea of heads."
</p>
<p> The first Woodstock became a symbol of communalism by accident.
Says John Scher, an executive with Polygram Records, which invested
in Woodstock '94: "There's this myth that Woodstock was a free
festival. It wasn't a free concert at all, and it wasn't intended
to be a free concert." On that weekend in '69, the kids broke
down the fences; the promoters couldn't stop the influx, so
they gave in to the inevitable and announced that the show was
free. It was a huge money loser for its backers.
</p>
<p> This time around, the financial stakes were higher. To stage
the first concert, promoters spent $3 million; Woodstock '94
cost more than $30 million. Tickets to the original were $18;
this time they were $135 and had to be purchased in pairs. In
1969 there weren't even official T shirts; in 1994 there will
be an official CD-ROM. The Eco-Village, ostensibly devoted to
educating the public about the environment, resembled a strip
mall where you could buy clothes, camping gear and even Woodstock
air ($2 a bottle). The promoters will reap an estimated $5 million
to $8 million from pay-per-view fees: the concert was broadcast
in 27 countries.
</p>
<p> Corporate sponsors included Pepsi, which paid $2 million to
be the concert's official soft drink; Apple Computer; and Haagen-Dazs.
A Haagen-Dazs spokesman explained why his company wanted to
be linked to the festival: "This is a progressive event dedicated
to the idea that people can have it all. Peace on earth, great
music, high tech, great family life that blends perfectly with
our message--reward, indulgence and nutritional balancing."
Also Vanilla Swiss Almond.
</p>
<p> In an action that bespoke little peace and love, the organizers
of Woodstock '94 lodged an $80 million lawsuit against rivals
who tried to hold an event called Bethel '94. That festival
was to take place on the original Woodstock site and was to
include such performers as Melanie and Country Joe MacDonald,
who appeared in 1969. The suit was settled out of court. Although
Bethel '94 was later officially canceled, 12,000 people gathered
there spontaneously, and Woodstock veterans like Arlo Guthrie
stopped by to give free, impromptu performances.
</p>
<p> The naked capitalism of Woodstock '94 ran counter to the professed
ideals of many of the musicians who played there. The roster
included such "alternative" groups as Red Hot Chili Peppers,
Porno for Pyros and Candlebox, which are supposed to be anti-commercialism.
Some top alternative acts, such as Pearl Jam, rejected invitations
to appear at Saugerties, as did rocker Neil Young, another of
those who played the first Woodstock. The morals vs. money debate
raged among fans. "I refuse to participate in something I believe
is nothing more than making money off people's lust for the
past," said graduate student Tony Novosel, 41, in a message
sent over the Internet. But commercialism wasn't a problem for
Woodstock '94 attendee Suzanne Poretta, 24: "For three days
of music, camping and parking space, $135 is not bad. But this
no-alcohol thing I can't handle."
</p>
<p> The promoters of Woodstock '94, and some of the musicians, say
the commercialism can actually help support idealism. "((Woodstock))
is really corporate," admits bassist Mike Dirnt of the Berkeley
punk band Green Day. "But that's one of the reasons we're playing.
It's helping us make up a lot of the money we've lost touring,
being out there keeping our ticket prices low." The best-paid
acts received $250,000, and all will receive a share of ancillary
royalties. Promoter Scher of Polygram Records says he turned
down sponsorship offers from such companies as Marlboro, Coors,
Budweiser and Seagram's. "This is 1994. This is not 1969. What
everything costs is hundreds of times what it cost in 1969,"
he says. "Had we taken the beer sponsorships and liquor and
tobacco ads that were offered us, we probably could have lowered
the ticket price to $25."
</p>
<p> Despite these arguments, cynics, pundits and alternative-music
ideologues were predicting Woodstock '94 would be a corporatized
simulacrum of the original festival. A '60s myth would be used
to sucker the 16- to 30-year-old demographic. Woodstock '94
was seen as the ultimate musical sellout, the sort of thing
that made Kurt Cobain leave this world riding on a shotgun blast.
MTV, which televised some of the festival and launched a home-shopping
show during it, ran an ad for its coverage with the slogan,
"All you have to do to change the world is change the channel."
</p>
<p> But the totalitarian, exploitative horror show didn't quite
materialize. Over the three days, there was some chaos, but
the fans got along, remaining friendly and happy. Huge mosh
pits formed in which audience members danced and slammed into
each other in pools of mud. The music was good, and most people
didn't seem to let the involvement of Haagen-Dazs ruin it for
them. In the movie world, the sequel tends to earn about 60%
of what the original does. Less than a cultural milestone but
more than a concert, Woodstock '94 was the typical sequel--calculated, but about 60% as good as the real thing.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>