Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Dylan. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Woodstock Day 4: Joan Baez

Okay, I know it's not August 4th, but I fell a few days behind. My best friend from home is here and I should not have signed myself up for a project this big while on "vacation." So I'm gonna try to catch up quickly and sort of ignore that the days won't match up for a bit.

But back to Woodstock and today's hot topic: Joan Baez. She was 6 months pregnant during her 1 a.m. performance on August 16th. During her set, she talked about how her husband, David Harris, was arrested and imprisoned for 3 years because of draft-dodging (he also founded an organization that encouraged this behaviour). She was the last to perform on the first day of Woodstock.
Baez in 1963 performing at the March On Washington
Baez was considered the female counterpart of Bob Dylan and was an avid anti-war protester, especially through folk song. Though she does write her own songs, she's considered more of an interpreter of other musicians' works, both of past and present. She really started writing her own songs in the late '60s when her husband Harris turned her on to a more complex country rock style.

Her performance at Woodstock allowed her both a musical and political platform internationally and Baez was able to use her popularity for social protest. She is considered one of the most accomplished interpretive folksinger/songwriter of the 1960s.

Baez is still heavily involved in civil and human rights, gay rights, environmental causes, anti-war protests, and anti-poverty protests. In 2011, she was honored by Amnesty International by having the Joan Baez Award named after her for outstanding inspirational service in the global fight for human rights.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Woodstock Day 3: The Band

Hailing from Toronto, Ontario, The Band played on August 17th at 10 pm for just under an hour. At the time, The Band had only one album out, the cult favorite Music from Big Pink (1968). The album was named as such since they wrote music in a house that they had rented that they had affectionately named "Big Pink" in Woodstock, NY. They're a folk-rock band that was mentored and employed by Bob Dylan from 1965 to 1966.
"Big Pink" - The house that started it all!
In 1969, The Band consisted of Robbie Robertson on vocals and guitar, Rick Danko on bass and back-up vocals, Levon Helm on drums and mandolin and back-up vocals, Garth Hudson on sax and synth, and Richard Manuel on piano and organ.

They played seven of their eleven album songs, did a little bit of Dylan (for homage purposes), and closed with their hit "The Weight" which had been recently made popular in the film Easy Rider. They were not, however, included in the film Woodstock due to legal complications.
The Band on the way to the set to play at Woodstock
They've got some lovely tunes and a long discography (too long for this snippet in time, but perhaps another post). Though overlooked in music history, The Band, along with The Byrds, set the template for country and folk rock. Both Eric Clapton and George Harrison cite the band as a major musical influence. After taking a break from 1977 to 1983, The Band remained active until 1999 (the year that Rick Danko died).  They also played in Woodstock '94.

In 1989, The Band was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. The Band also received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008.

Twitter: @bobdylantheband