Access All Areas Winter Issue | Page 36

WINTER | COVER FEATURE WOODSTOCK The 60s counterculture movement defined 'the teenager' as an identity in its own right. And the resulting domino cascade found its world-changing crescendo in 1969 at Woodstock, where the youth’s complex relationship with the United States and the world found its focal point. The event's spirit was embodied in Hendrix’s epic performance of Star Spangled Banner – the electrified notes of which the rang out far beyond the confines of the dairy farm in Bethel, New York, where it took place. Over its four days, 15–18 August, Woodstock demonstrated the impact that a single live event can achieve in a manner rarely matched throughout history. Around 500,000 people united to watch 32 acts evoke a yearning for love, peace and an end to warfare. One of its founders, Michael Lang (co-creator, musical concert promoter, artistic manager, Woodstock) says he was the product of a generation that wanted to change the world. “Things were terrible in 1968. Martin Luther King Jr and president Robert F. Kennedy had been assassinated, and we wanted to make a last ditch effort to go out into nature and see if we could make things work on our own. And we did, on steroids.” “The 60s was a different time to be young, we were empowered, coming out of the Civil Rights Movement, into women’s rights and protesting a war (the Vietnam war) we felt should be stopped. When we created the model for Woodstock it was about uniting our counterculture and behaving in a better way than the world was.” Woodstock was set to have an iteration in 2019 to mark its 50th anniversary, billed as Woodstock 50. Just prior to its cancellation, it was announced the event had been reduced from three days to one day. It was cancelled on 31 July, 2019, after a series of permit and production issues, venue relocations, and artist cancellations. Lang discussed the event’s MO: “A lot of the new talent emerging now is very exciting, and we wanted the event to nod to our original roots, skipping the 70s, 80s, 90s, and 00s, and just focusing on now and the 60s. We booked Santana, which for me was a thrill.” Also producing New York’s AmsterJam, Lang remains an aficionado of festivals worldwide. “We’ve always, as a Woodstock brand, tried to make the world a better place, and will continue to do that through action and fundraising. I still attend festivals, and most recently attended Coachella. I must say I appreciated much about it: the site is amazing, and the organisers do well and are efficient, plus the sound is great everywhere.” Film is now Lang's chosen medium, as a producer/ director. Thsi is fitting as it was a hit documentary film, 36 Woodstock (1970), which helped immortalise the 1969 event. Just under a decade later, filmmakers would gain a further boost from event-minded individuals in the form of Access' next top festival the now legendary Sundance Film Festival. SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL Sundance kicked off in true style in Salt Lake City in August 1978, known then as the Utah/US Film Festival. The festival aimed to attract more filmmakers to Utah and was founded by Sterling Van Wagenen (then head of Wildwood, Robert Redford's company) and John Earle (serving on the Utah Film Commission at the time). Deliverance, A Streetcar Named Desire, Midnight Cowboy, and Mean Streets headlined the event, which featured the prestigious Frank Capra Award. In 1979, Robert Redford became the festival's inaugural chair. Four years later, in 1984, the event became known as Sundance, after Redford's character the Sundance Kid from the film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Sundance Film Festival festival director John Cooper says the event rode the wave of independent film becoming viable in the market place, supporting companies like Miramax, Strand, October Films. “We’re a community that has formed something of a wave and the festival has supported that. We think that stories change the world, and theories divide us. You have to open up people’s hearts and minds. “I believe films, and conscious documentaries make you reflect on life. They make you say, ‘I never thought of it that way’, so you’ll emerge as a changed person, and vote differently or perhaps be a better person.” Cooper is passionately dedicated to the medium of film (“I’ve watched around 500 movies in the last two months,” he says) and, while he is keen for Sundance "When we created the model for Woodstock it was about uniting our counterculture and behaving in a better way than the world was.