Woodstock '89

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By the weekend the stage and soundsystem had grown to accommodate the large crowd. Performers included Melanie and Savoy Brown, as well as many local artists including Will Hoppey, Ice Nine, Richard Prell, The Psychedelic Kitchen, Target, and Billy Mitchell, and Jack Hardy. The concert was recorded by Barry Benson and was available as "20th Anniversary Festival: A musical Documerntary of Woodstock '89". " An estimated 150,000 people passed by, or stopped to participate in the celebration of the 1969 concert." as reported by the Sullivan County Democrat, August 22, 1989.

Woodstock '89 or "The Forgotten Woodstock" was a rock concert that took place in August 1989 on the site of the original Woodstock concert of 1969 as a spontaneous celebration of the event's 20th anniversary.

The event began with a single folk guitarist who came to the site. It grew to a concert that 30,000 people attended, featuring mainly lesser-known bands. Wavy Gravy, the Woodstock All-Stars, and Al Hendrix, the father of Jimi Hendrix, appeared at the concert. Wayne Thiel played a small set of Hendrix material shortly before Al Hendrix came onto the stage. The band was called "Head First".

The gathering arose on the same days in August as the original festival, even though in 1989 this fell in the middle of the week.

A total lunar eclipse occurred during the concert on the night of August 16–17.

Musicians worked the lunar eclipse into performances; one sang his version of "Call Down the Moon." The actual performer "calling down the moon" was Jack Hardy in his song "The Hunter"

Although the property owners briefly attempted to charge $5 for parking, and a few people had made up simple t-shirts and simple food to sell at the event, there was virtually none of the commercialism that later marked the Woodstock '94 and Woodstock '99 concerts.

The event was not promoted, and at first it appeared there would be no stage, no lighting, and no performers until those things began arriving with the growing crowd. Food and beverages were not sold; participants brought their own supplies and bartered with each other.

Because participants were allowed to park vehicles next to their tents all across the site except in the main performance area, much of the field that was so densely covered by people in 1969 was filled again by this event, but this time by cars, psychedelic buses and upscale RV's as well.

ABC's morning program "Good Morning America" broadcast live from Max Yasgur's Farm, interviewing Wavy Gravy and Ken Kesey.

Ken Kesey was the founder of the Merry Pranksters. They are remembered for travelling across the United States in a psychedelic painted school bus enigmatically labelled "Further". The Pranksters were heavy users of marijuana and LSD, and in the process of their journey they are said to have "turned on" many people whom they introduced to these drugs.

The Pranksters' travels continued until 1969, when the bus - without Kesey - made it to the Woodstock rock festival. Kesey was pleased to have finally made the trip to Woodstock - for the 20th Anniversary.

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