Col Mustard
Ambassador of Perseverance
So one of our colleagues has asked me and the members of this forum to tell
a few tales from our checkered past... especially regarding the '60s and '70s.
I don't think the telling should be limited to those of us who've gotten gray around
the muzzle. Since this is a thread made of spun yarn... I believe that anyone who
has a story should bring it. BRING IT!
Even if it's one you only heard about, but weren't born yet. Lay it on us.
There is no prize AFAIK... Unless one of the sponsors wants to donate one.
There are no rules, except the boundaries of decency. But in these days, the boundaries
of decency seem to be more like a gradient, or a slippery slope. So let's not be too
shy. Those were different times, and we shouldn't judge our choices and/or actions by
hindsight, unless we temper that with sardonic grace.
Maybe a couple of guidelines: The way I understood the request, it was for tales of
bands and venues that weren't actually famous. The big names of the day have gotten all
the ink. Let's talk about bands and gigs that the rest of us might have played or attended.
But even that isn't set in stone: Some of us might know of events that changed things for
the future. If this involved famous musicians of the day, so be it. Lay it on us.
Listen:
Did you know who it was that invented the stage monitor? According to legends
I've heard, it was Gracie Slick. I've also heard that it was "Bear" Owlsley who was
on the crew with the Grateful Dead, or Dan Healy who took over from Owlsley and
tried to simplify their stage setup, to everyone's relief.
Watch Gracie in this video from Woodstock 1969, struggling to hear, and performing with
her finger in her ear. Do you think those amps were loud? I believe they were. Any of
us who stepped out on that stage before that ocean of humanity would very likely have
turned everything up to 11. Do you see any stage monitors?
So figure that none of the performers had a clue what the mix might have sounded like.
This Woodstock concert was something no one knew could happen. The people who put
the festival together: rented the farm, built the stage, hired the sound crew, planned the
parking, built the fences, spoke with the local government and maybe got permits for a
reasonable size crowd, hired food vendors and arranged for a water truck... they had
no clue that 400,000 hippies would assemble. By the time everyone got to Woodstock,
they had to do the best they could with what they had. They were probably using
"side fills" at Woodstock, but Gracie needed her own... badly.
Things that didn't exist in 1969: Bottled water (it existed but was packaged in glass bottles
labeled "Perrier" and was expensive and heavy). Festival water was supplied by wells and
hoses and an army style water truck... oh and the rain.
Cell phones: No one carried any communication device. A few "walkie-talkie" type security
radios were used by festival staff, and by local police. Anyone who needed to make a call had
to find a "pay phone" which needs coins to operate. Very few of the 400,000 people made any
calls until they got far away from all that, days later. No calls. Imagine that. No calls in or out from a city of 400,000. (there were two deaths, and several births, but that's normal for a city of 400,000). One guy died from an overdose, and one guy passed out among the plants in a nearby farmer's field and was run over by a tractor, the farmer didn't see him.
Internet: There was no such thing. There was no cable TV... Radio and TV signals were
broadcast from towers. If your house was in the hills, you might have no reception.
Sound equipment of the day was designed for other venues and smaller crowds.
Personally, I think it's a miracle that the sound worked as well as it did.
I don't ever recall using monitors (or knowing what they were for)
when I played in the '70s, until my group got onto its first
"festival stage" in like 1977. I was amazed by how well we could hear. We didn't know
how to use the monitors, but learned very quickly. It was intuitive... as it should be when
you get "good sound" for the first time in your raggedy life.
I do recall sitting in a festival audience, tripping my brains out, and wondering why the performers
were fussing with the sound crew about the monitors. 'Just play some tunes, man... don't be
such a drag onstage." (I still feel that way). The show must go on.
Now, let's hear some more...
a few tales from our checkered past... especially regarding the '60s and '70s.
I don't think the telling should be limited to those of us who've gotten gray around
the muzzle. Since this is a thread made of spun yarn... I believe that anyone who
has a story should bring it. BRING IT!
Even if it's one you only heard about, but weren't born yet. Lay it on us.
There is no prize AFAIK... Unless one of the sponsors wants to donate one.
There are no rules, except the boundaries of decency. But in these days, the boundaries
of decency seem to be more like a gradient, or a slippery slope. So let's not be too
shy. Those were different times, and we shouldn't judge our choices and/or actions by
hindsight, unless we temper that with sardonic grace.
Maybe a couple of guidelines: The way I understood the request, it was for tales of
bands and venues that weren't actually famous. The big names of the day have gotten all
the ink. Let's talk about bands and gigs that the rest of us might have played or attended.
But even that isn't set in stone: Some of us might know of events that changed things for
the future. If this involved famous musicians of the day, so be it. Lay it on us.
Listen:
Did you know who it was that invented the stage monitor? According to legends
I've heard, it was Gracie Slick. I've also heard that it was "Bear" Owlsley who was
on the crew with the Grateful Dead, or Dan Healy who took over from Owlsley and
tried to simplify their stage setup, to everyone's relief.
Watch Gracie in this video from Woodstock 1969, struggling to hear, and performing with
her finger in her ear. Do you think those amps were loud? I believe they were. Any of
us who stepped out on that stage before that ocean of humanity would very likely have
turned everything up to 11. Do you see any stage monitors?
So figure that none of the performers had a clue what the mix might have sounded like.
This Woodstock concert was something no one knew could happen. The people who put
the festival together: rented the farm, built the stage, hired the sound crew, planned the
parking, built the fences, spoke with the local government and maybe got permits for a
reasonable size crowd, hired food vendors and arranged for a water truck... they had
no clue that 400,000 hippies would assemble. By the time everyone got to Woodstock,
they had to do the best they could with what they had. They were probably using
"side fills" at Woodstock, but Gracie needed her own... badly.
Things that didn't exist in 1969: Bottled water (it existed but was packaged in glass bottles
labeled "Perrier" and was expensive and heavy). Festival water was supplied by wells and
hoses and an army style water truck... oh and the rain.
Cell phones: No one carried any communication device. A few "walkie-talkie" type security
radios were used by festival staff, and by local police. Anyone who needed to make a call had
to find a "pay phone" which needs coins to operate. Very few of the 400,000 people made any
calls until they got far away from all that, days later. No calls. Imagine that. No calls in or out from a city of 400,000. (there were two deaths, and several births, but that's normal for a city of 400,000). One guy died from an overdose, and one guy passed out among the plants in a nearby farmer's field and was run over by a tractor, the farmer didn't see him.
Internet: There was no such thing. There was no cable TV... Radio and TV signals were
broadcast from towers. If your house was in the hills, you might have no reception.
Sound equipment of the day was designed for other venues and smaller crowds.
Personally, I think it's a miracle that the sound worked as well as it did.
I don't ever recall using monitors (or knowing what they were for)
when I played in the '70s, until my group got onto its first
"festival stage" in like 1977. I was amazed by how well we could hear. We didn't know
how to use the monitors, but learned very quickly. It was intuitive... as it should be when
you get "good sound" for the first time in your raggedy life.
I do recall sitting in a festival audience, tripping my brains out, and wondering why the performers
were fussing with the sound crew about the monitors. 'Just play some tunes, man... don't be
such a drag onstage." (I still feel that way). The show must go on.
Now, let's hear some more...
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