NEW YORK, August 14, 2009

Peace, Love & Music: Woodstock Remembered

Forty Years Ago, Nearly Half-a-Million Baby Boomers Descended on an Upstate New York Farm and Defined Their Generation

  • August 1969 file photo shows couple hugging during Woodstock Music and Art Festival in Bethel, N.Y.

    August 1969 file photo shows couple hugging during Woodstock Music and Art Festival in Bethel, N.Y.  (AP Photo)

  • Photo Essay Woodstock: The Fans

    Nearly half a million people came for "Three Days of Peace" and music

  • Photo Essay Sounds of Woodstock

    A look at some of the musicians who rocked the iconic 1969 music festival

(CBS)  It was 40 years ago Saturday when almost half-a-million people descended on a farm in upstate New York to enjoy a music festival called "Woodstock." But what nobody knew then was the impact it would have on a generation.

The 1960s were filled with anger and confusion, "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith noted. There were wars, including the highly-controversial Vietnam War, civil rights riots and social revolutions -- along with a generation of American youth looking for their identity.

Pete Fornatale, author of "Back to the Garden: The Story of Woodstock," told CBS News, "It wasn't a generation gap, it was a generation chasm. Kids against their own parents, police against kids."

But for this generation, Smith noted, music was their refuge -- and they found their great escape on a farm in Bethel, N.Y.

"No one, including the promoters, anybody going to it and anybody performing at it, had any idea that that weekend going to be as big as it was," said Fornatale.

Nor, Smith added, did anyone realize how important it would be.

Defining musical moments happened at Woodstock, including Richie Havens' opening performance, in which he chanted, "Freedom, freedom," with the massive crowd joining in with him. Among the weekend's performers were now legendary musicians, including Jimi Henrix, who performed "The Star-Spangled Banner," Janis Joplin singing "Piece of My Heart" and Joan Baez, who performed "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot."

However, Smith said, the real stars of Woodstock were the 450,000 people who came for peace, love and music. Concert-goers didn't have bathrooms or food, but stayed despite the conditions, even riding out storms.

Max Yasgur, the farmer who leased his land for Woodstock, told the crowd that weekend, "I think you people have proven something to the world -- that half a million kids can come together for three days of fun and music and have nothing but fun and music."

Woodstock defined the generation, Smith pointed out; the baby boomers had found their bliss.

"Apart from everything else you can say about it," Fornatale said, "Woodstock made us feel the rapture of being alive."

However, as "Early Show" substitute co-anchor Jeff Glor said Friday, generations since have been trying to duplicate the experience -- with little success.

Glor said he covered Woodstock 1999, which he said turned into "a mess," with people getting hurt and fires breaking out. "It was a purely commercial venture," he said. "(Woodstock) was something else."

And Woodstock was "something else" for Smith, who recvalled it as a world removed from him at the time.

"In August the summer of '69, I had a brush cut, I was reporting for football practice at (college). It was a completely different world," he said, adding with a smile, "I caught up."

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by loveoflife August 17, 2009 1:36 AM EDT
I must say "Woodstock" was a moment in our lives that we will never forget! Unlike this generation we The Boomers changed the face of America so to speak with our words, music, and getting together in one place to celebrate Peace.
It did not matter who we were, how much money we had, or how many Things we had.


Sure, we had smoking , possibly pot, or hemp and or dubies as we called them!
yet we did not take money, steal, ...
We just played our guitars and sang...

so to all who attended "Peace"
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by AK-47_Justice August 15, 2009 11:03 AM EDT
"Defining musical moments happened at Woodstock, including Richie Havens' opening performance, in which he chanted, "Freedom, freedom," with the massive crowd joining in with him."
****************************************


Isn't this the "freedom" chant that the republican'ts hypocritically use as they attack everyone with a different opinion, and call them pot-smoking 'hippies'?

BTW, only 3,000 original tickets were printed and an estimated 450,000 attended Woodstock 40 years ago, where not one was arrested for any violent act! Today's polarized America is quite different!
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by sam-kiley August 15, 2009 8:41 AM EDT
bonjour
joyeux "remembering" il est vrai que les temps ont bien changé depuis les 60'..le fossé est bien là, mais avec un peu de volonté, les générations d'hier et d'aujourd'hui trouveront bien un ou des points communs sur lesquels ils s'entendront, nous ne pouvont pas en vouloir a cette génération aussi,
et lui faire porter le"chapeau" pardonnez moi l'expression,de tout ce qui se passe. nous avons notre part de responsabilté aussi..bye
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by skyk-2009 August 15, 2009 7:26 AM EDT
Woodstock defined a generation of Young People, not unlike the present one we see today, determined to change their nation and the world for the better. As the years go by we are coming to realize how effective they were. The Man sitting in the White House today is testimony to that fact beyond anything anyone can say.
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by fredfeken1 August 14, 2009 2:59 PM EDT
OMG I saw a breast in this report. Someone please call the FCC!
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