252 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
252 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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WOODSTOCK NATION
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Is It Real Or Is It Memorex
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by Gary Site
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Having survived last summer's mind-numbing hype of Woodstock '94,
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it's time to prepare for the fall onslaught, as retail capitalism gears
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up for a holiday marketing frenzy with a "radical" new twist: For
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with Woodstock '94, Inc.--and the not coincidental November 8th
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release date of the CD and who knows what other official
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memorabilia, timed. precisely for the Christmas rush --
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"alternative" capitalism has finally come into its own as a
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full-fledged partner with its presumably "mainstream" brother. And
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with that not quite startling development, the remains of the
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sixties' counter-culture can be said to have met its final degradation
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and humiliation.
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Stripped of political content or a social context like that of the
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sixties which might lend a potentially radical thrust to its
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subcultural forms of "rebellion"; immersed in childish notions of
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tribalism and poisoned by the myriad forms of New Age spirituality
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and superstition -- the detritus of the counterculture that has
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managed to survive into middle age and even reproduce itself in a
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younger generation, is not a pretty sight. It is nothing more, now,
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than another marketing niche: a matter of lifestyle, fashion and
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personal taste, to be serviced by "alternative" capitalists and
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retailers in much the same way L. L. Bean services its own would-be
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"rustic" customers, for the same reasons and by the same means.
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Indeed, to the very arguable extent that the counterculture ever
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confronted the dominant society with a radical political challenge,
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after the summer of 1994 it can be declared politically dead. And
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it's time to let the dead bury the dead.
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But first, a view of the boneyard. For if the counterculture is dead,
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Woodstock '94 was its cemetery. In this "event," we find hype
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squared. The spectacle unabashedly presented as spectacle. A mirror
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reflecting a mirror. Far from recreating the dubious "magic"
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mythically attributed to its legendary progenitor, in this
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made-for-tv "Woodstock theme-park" we find something worse than
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nothing: We find a vast spiritual emptiness and cultural vacuity
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more profound even than the void that exists where meaning should
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in the inner life of a generation so immersed in capitalism that huge
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numbers of people apparently can no longer recognize the difference
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between life and marketing strategy -- and hence, in a pathetic
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attempt to fill an emptiness that really is "null and void" (as a
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popular t-shirt slogan puts it), seeks to find "authentic" experience
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in a grotesquely hypertrophic replay of its parent generation's
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weekend in the mud and shit.
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And not just that. One of the more striking aspects of the whole
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affair is that for many of the pilgrims, Woodstock '94 was a chance
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to "experience" not the original festival as such but rather the
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original festival as it was filmed and edited for mass consumption.
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As pop-critic Jon Pareles of the New York Times put it, "They had
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seen the movie =D2Woodstock=D3; now they were determined to
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experience it." In short, they were seeking to relive an experience
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that no one ever had because literally no one "experienced" the highly
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edited commodity millions have consumed as a movie.
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Even some of the musical performances in the movie are probably an
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illusion, since it is known that at least one of the more famous
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musical moments -- Crosby, Stills and Nash's debut at the festival --
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was rerecorded in the studio prior to release because their live
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vocals were terribly off key. And needless to say, nowhere in the
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movie are we shown footage of the rock-and-roll royalty being
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pampered and feted with extravagant food and drink flown into the
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"disaster area" by helicopter -- while their fans went without in the
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rain and mud.
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Perhaps we should just be grateful that it was not "Apocalypse Now"
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that so many wished to "experience," but this style of "searching,"
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while doubtless sincere on the parts of many, mostly young people,
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represents something new: something perilously close to hype
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experienced as life and life experienced as hype.
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Ironically -- and this is the nature of hype -- what it does not
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represent is the thing that is sought. Whatever else may have been
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experienced at Saugerties last summer, what was not experienced
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was even the potential for an authentically alternative culture in
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any meaningful sense of the term, much less of any form of
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alternative politics, unless we are to use the terms alternative and
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popular culture as interchangeable synonyms, in which case under
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capitalism all is decisively lost.
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Woodstock '94 gives us alternative culture in the way Arm and
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Hammer gives us an alternative to Pepsodent, Volvo to Chrysler, and
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"alternative" rock to mainstream rock. Capitalism will create,
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market and sell as many "alternative" products or "experiences" as
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there are people to buy them. It will service as many "lifestyles" as
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there are people t "live" them. It will even sell us "anarchy" -- so
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long as that supposed "anarchy" remains a "lifestyle" or "personal
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philosophy," that is, a strictly cultural "statement" or "protest" that
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one registers with a spraycan or slogan on a jacket, but which poses
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little if any political threat to the established social order.
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But it has become banal to point to the "commercialism" of
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Woodstock '94 or the cultural vacuity it so magnificently displays.
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This was done for months in every mouthpiece of liberalism from
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the Village Voice to the New York Times, which featured article
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after article until one wanted to scream, contrasting Woodstock '69
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with its crassly megaprofit-oriented offspring.
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Yet, while this nostalgic contrast may have provided a ready
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organizing scheme for more articles than anyone ever cared to read
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about either Woodstock, it, too, is a lie. The truth is that Woodstock
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'69 was no less commercial in its intent than Woodstock '94. Both
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events were organized and promoted by more or less the same
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well-heeled yuppies with easy access to major banks and
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multinational corporate sponsors. Both events promised and returned
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hefty profits to their investors, as intended. (The original Woodstock
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may have become a "free" concert -- by default, because its
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promoters couldn't find a way to effectively ticket that many people
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-- but only a fool would believe that investors lost money on it,
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what with multimillion record, movie and video sales that have been
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ongoing now for twenty-five years.
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More important -- no matter how many lies are told to the contrary
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-- the truth is that the "original" Woodstock was not a political
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event either. It was no more political than its mutant offspring,
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despite the times. Indeed, it is amazing to see how many liberal
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commentators, who had little if any actual involvement in the social
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movements of the sixties and seventies, managed to raise this
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canard in article after article. Take Pareles again: =D2After the
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overflowing 1969 festival, scattered longhairs, underground music
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fans and antiwar sympathizers realized they weren't loners anymore:
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Woodstock certified the extent of Woodstock Nation. In 1994, the
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younger generation doesn't have an issue as starkly divisive as the
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Vietnam War, and it already knows it and dress code from MTV .... But
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people in their teens and 20's flocked to Woodstock '94 anyway,
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convinced that they had missed something.=D3 This breathtaking
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mouthful is a near-perfect example of the mythicisms that have
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grown up around Woodstock, mainly thanks to commentary like this,
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which amazingly ignores almost everything that happened in the
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sixties in order to create a memory that fits the desired myth and
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legend. First, it ignores the rather obvious fact that 1969 was the
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last year of "the sixties," not the first. Hence, to the arguable extent
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that there was a "Woodstock Nation" in fact as well as fancy, it had
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already seen itself in many events nearly as large and much more
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political than Woodstock.
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Where in this mythology are half a decade worth of antiwar
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demonstrations, for instance, many of which were quite large? What
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has happened to 1968's demonstrations and police riots at the
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infamous Chicago convention of the Democratic Party -- a much
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more seminal event for the political members of the sixties
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generation in America than Woodstock would ever be? Indeed, how,
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in this mythology, do we account for the huge "funeral of the hippy"
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in San Francisco, where thousands of the more politically conscious
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"freaks" symbolically buried their own counterculture, even as the
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media and other capitalist sharks were discovering and exploiting
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its huge financial rewards -- indeed, because these rewards were
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already known to such an extent that long before Woodstock the
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counterculture had become nea
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Where the hypemakers gave us the "Summer of Love," the more
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conscious members of the counterculture itself were giving us the
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"Funeral of the Hippy." Go figure. In any case, by 1969 many more
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"scattered longhairs" had probably met while hitchhiking on an
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ramp than ever would meet at Woodstock. Indeed, by 1969 the
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counterculture was well into its fade into mere fashion and
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lifestyleism.
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"Underground music fans?" Pareles will have to go a long way to
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show precisely how many of the most wildly successful, popular and
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wealthy performers in history somehow make the grade as
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"underground music." Woodstock's lineup in 1969 was about as
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"underground" as Madonna was in the eighties.
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But what irks most of all is the dragging in of Vietnam, the antiwar
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movement, and the political overtones these subjects generate, to
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all of these Woodstock reminiscences. Woodstock had nothing to do
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with Vietnam, or with the political activity of the time, apart from
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some inevitable overlap in the crowd, since most of the opposition
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to the war was conducted by young people and, needless to say, most
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of those young people enjoyed the rock music of the time.
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But Woodstock was hardly an expression of antiwar fervor. To the
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contrary, every attempt to politicize the gathering and turn its
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attention to the war and other political issues of the time was met
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with boredom at best and outright hostility at worst.
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For a great example of the boredom, listen to Country Joe McDonald's
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"Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" on the original soundtrack:
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McDonald, one of the very few movement activists, perhaps the only
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leftist, and definitely the only Vietnam veteran to perform at
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Woodstock, has to chide and cajole the audience into singing along on
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his most famous antiwar anthem. And, of course, the best example of
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antipolitical hostility doesn't appear in the film, although it became
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an apocryphal aspect of Woodstock for movement people: Peter
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Townshend of the Who whacking Abbie Hoffman in the head with his
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guitar, to put an end to Hoffman's attempt to speak to the crowd
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about the war. (I've never known quite what to say about poor Joan
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Baez's plodding version of "I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night."
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Perhaps some memories are best suppressed.) And, yes, Jimi Hendrix
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played a magnificent "Star Spangled Banner" which perfectly
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captured the intense, nerve-jangled feel of the time.
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So what. Let's face it: Woodstock '69 was hyped as three days of love
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and peace, whatever that was supposed to mean. But what Woodstock
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was, was a "good time." It was a chance to do one's thing and enjoy a
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huge party in the mud with lots of drugs, sex and the best rock and
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roll money could buy.
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What it was not, was a demonstration. No one went to Woodstock
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because they opposed the war in Vietnam. Indeed, probably many
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people went to Woodstock who did not oppose the war, and many
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more went to the festival without giving the war or the radical
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movements of the time a single sustained thought.
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Perhaps the most accurate measure of the type of "political" mind at
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work at Woodstock '69 -- and in much of the counterculture, too, it
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must be said -- is revealed by a quote from Woodstock Vision, a
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recent book of photographs by Elliot Landy. Landy, who was asked by
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Woodstock promoter, Mike Lang, to photograph the original festival,
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opens his book with photos of some streetfighting between police
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and demonstrators. "You could be the policeman or the
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demonstrator," Landy says, "but either way, you were still part of
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the fighting."
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In short, whether you were a resister or a repressor of resistance,
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you were somehow equally culpable for the violence of the time --
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an attitude, the logic of which inevitably leads to the apolitical
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passive-receptiveness that has come to characterize the remains of
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the counterculture, and which also necessarily translates into
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passive support of the dominant social order. So much for
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Woodstock's politics, as articulated by one of its "official"
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participants.
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Even as a party, in retrospect Woodstock can be seen less as a
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beginning of anything than as something of a last hurrah. Soon the
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counterculture would have a more concrete suicide at Altamont, to
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answer the earlier symbolic funeral of the hippies.
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Soon, too, the New Left and the antiwar movement wo
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have its last days in the sun: SDS exploded into various Maoist
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fragments and other sectarian absurdities that summer, at its last
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convention. The following year, 1970, saw the antiwar movement
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take to the streets for its last major demonstrations, which met
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with gunfire and military force at Kent State, Jackson State,
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Buffalo, Albuquerque and other cities around the country. The war
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would continue for another five years, virtually without opposition
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apart from the May Day demonstrations of 1972.
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It all seems so long ago. And, while "Woodstock '94: The Video" will
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be available any moment -- the perfect stocking-stuffer for all the
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hypesters on your list -- the challenge of creating a new left for our
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time still hangs in the historical air like a great question mark.
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