Woodstock (song)

"Woodstock" is a popular song written by Joni Mitchell and included on her 1970 album Ladies of the Canyon. The song was covered by Matthews Southern Comfort and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and has become a counterculture anthem.

Lyrics

"Woodstock"
Cover of the 1970 French single
Single by Joni Mitchell
from the album Ladies of the Canyon
A-side "Big Yellow Taxi"
Released April 1970
Format 7-inch single
Recorded 1970
Studio A&M Studios, Hollywood, California
Genre Folk rock[1]
Length 5:25
Label Reprise
Songwriter(s) Joni Mitchell
Producer(s) Joni Mitchell
Joni Mitchell singles chronology
"Chelsea Morning"
(1969)
"Woodstock"
(1970)
"Carey"
(1971)

Joni Mitchell composed the song based on what she had heard from her then-boyfriend Graham Nash about the Woodstock Music and Art Festival. She had not been there herself, since a manager had told her that it would, instead, be more advantageous for her to appear on The Dick Cavett Show. She composed it in a hotel room in New York City, watching televised reports of the festival. "The deprivation of not being able to go provided me with an intense angle on Woodstock," she told an interviewer shortly after the event.[2] David Crosby, interviewed for the documentary Joni Mitchell: Woman of Heart and Mind, stated that Mitchell had captured the feeling and importance of the Woodstock festival better than anyone who had actually been there.[3]

The lyrics tell a story about a spiritual journey to Max Yasgur's farm, the place of the festival, and make prominent use of sacred imagery, comparing the festival site with the Garden of Eden ("and we've got to get ourselves back to the garden"). The saga commences with the narrator's encounter of a fellow traveler ("Well, I came upon a child of God, he was walking along the road") and concludes at their ultimate destination ("by the time we got to Woodstock, we were half a million strong"). There are also references to the Vietnam War ("bombers riding shotgun in the sky...") in combination with the peaceful intent of the festival goers ("...turning into butterflies above our nation").[4][5]

Releases and cover versions

Joni Mitchell

Prior to its release on any album, Mitchell performed "Woodstock" at the 1969 Big Sur Folk Festival, one month after Woodstock. The solo performance can be seen in the festival concert film Celebration at Big Sur, released in 1971. Mitchell had not yet developed her distaste for large festival gigs.[6] Released on Mitchell's third album Ladies of the Canyon in March 1970, "Woodstock" served as the B-side for that album's single "Big Yellow Taxi." Mitchell re-recorded "Woodstock" for her two live albums, Miles of Aisles and Shadows and Light. The original track was included on the 1996 compilation Hits. Mitchell's original version featured a stark and haunting arrangement – a solo vocal, multi-tracked backing vocals, and a tremoloed Wurlitzer electric piano, all performed by Mitchell.

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

"Woodstock"
French single cover, 1970
Single by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
from the album Déjà Vu
B-side "Helpless"
Released March 1970
Format 7-inch single
Recorded July–December 1969
Studio
  • Wally Heider Studio C, San Francisco & Studio III, Los Angeles
Genre Rock
Length 3:54
Label Atlantic
Songwriter(s) Joni Mitchell
Producer(s) Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young singles chronology
"Suite: Judy Blue Eyes"
(1969)
"Woodstock"
(1970)
"Teach Your Children"
(1970)
Audio sample
  • file
  • help

About the same time that Ladies of the Canyon appeared, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's upbeat hard rock arrangement was released as the lead single from their 1970 Déjà Vu album. This version opens with a lead guitar lick played by Neil Young, who also plays the solo. Stephen Stills sings the lead vocal with backing harmonies from David Crosby and Graham Nash. The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young version of "Woodstock" is also notable for the stop-start instrument-patterns, just prior to the "We are stardust, we are golden..." chorus.[4]

Although Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young had learned the song from Joni Mitchell herself, the band's version slightly rearranged the lyrics from her original. They put the line, "we are billion year old carbon" — which only appeared in her final chorus — into each of the first three choruses. Then they replaced that line with "we are caught in the devil's bargain" in the last chorus, which was also in Mitchell's final chorus.

"Woodstock" was one of the few Déjà Vu tracks where Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young all performed their parts in the same session. Later the original lead vocal by was partly replaced with a vocal recorded by Stills who recalled: "I replaced one and a half verses that were excruciatingly out of tune." Neil Young disagreed, saying that "the track was magic. Then later on [Crosby, Stills & Nash] were in the studio nitpicking [with the result that] Stephen erased the vocal and put another one on that wasn't nearly as good."[7]

The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young version of "Woodstock" peaked at #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May 1970 and #3 in Canada.[8] A different recording of "Woodstock" by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young was played under the closing credits of the documentary film Woodstock released March 1970.

Personnel

Additional musicians

Matthews Southern Comfort

"Woodstock"
Single by Matthews Southern Comfort
from the album Later That Same Year
B-side
  • "Scion" (UK)
  • "Ballad of Obray Ramsey" (US)
Released
  • July 24, 1970 (UK)
  • November 1970 (US)
Format 7-inch single
Recorded 1970
Genre Folk rock
Length 4:26
Label Uni
Songwriter(s) Joni Mitchell
Producer(s) Iain Matthews
Matthews Southern Comfort UK singles chronology
"Ballad of Obray Ramsey"
(1970)
"Woodstock"
(1970)
"Mare, Take Me Home"
(1971)
Matthews Southern Comfort US singles chronology
"Colorado Springs Eternal"
(1970)
"Woodstock"
(1970)
"Mare, Take Me Home"
(1971)

"Woodstock" became an international hit in 1970 and 1971 through a recording by Matthews Southern Comfort. The group performed "Woodstock" on the Live in Concert program broadcast live by BBC Radio 1 on June 28, 1970 – frontman Iain Matthews would recall that the group required an additional song for their set on the scheduled radio session, and that the choice of "Woodstock" was his own suggestion, Matthews having just become familiar with the Joni Mitchell version as he had purchased her Ladies of the Canyon album earlier that week.[9] Due to the positive response to that song, the BBC contacted Matthews's label, Uni Records. According to Matthews, the label "had no idea what the [BBC] were talking about and contacted my management, who asked me about it. Uni suggested that we record the song and add it to the newly recorded Matthews Southern Comfort album: 'Later That Same Year'. I declined to mess with the completed album, but agreed to have them release the song as a single."[9]

According to Matthews his band's BBC Radio performance of "Woodstock" echoed the Joni Mitchell original: however for their studio recording of the song - made at the Willesden Green studio Morgan Sound - the band radically customized the song's arrangement.[10] Matthews would later admit to unease upon eventually meeting Joni Mitchell because he had changed the melody - (Ian Matthews quote:)"I couldn't reach [her] high notes"[10] - but Mitchell replied that she preferred his arrangement.[10] Matthews Southern Comfort bassist Andy Leigh would recall: "We took [the song] apart and reassembled it and we knew we had something. We were an album band. We didn't do singles." In fact, Uni had issued one single off each of the first two of the three Matthews Southern Comfort albums. "But we knew this [track]...was something special."[11]

MCA Records, Uni's parent company, agreed to release Matthews Southern Comfort's version of "Woodstock" only if the Crosby Stills Nash & Young version failed to chart in the United Kingdom; when that proved to be the case, MCA (Andy Leigh quote:) "reluctantly released ours because of that agreement but they wouldn't spend a penny on promotion...But our managers, who were excellent, hired a PR, a songplugger. Tony Blackburn, who had the breakfast show on Radio 1, played 'Woodstock' and kept playing it and other DJs started doing the same."[11] Matthews would recall that once Tony Blackburn made "Woodstock" by Matthews Southern Comfort his record of the week, "it began to sell 30,000 copies a day, eventually going from #10 to #1 in a week."[9]

Issued on 24 July 1970, "Woodstock" debuted on the UK Top 50 on 26 September 1970 and reached #1 on 31 October 1970 remaining there for two additional weeks: a #2 hit in Ireland, "Woodstock" also had widespread success on the European continent, charting in Austria (#15), Denmark (#9), Finland (#23), Germany (#27), the Netherlands (#17), Norway (#2), Poland (#2), and Sweden (#2). In early 1971, the track also reached #3 in South Africa, #4 in New Zealand,[12] and was a minor hit in Australia (#55).

In November 1970, "Woodstock" by Matthews Southern Comfort had its US single release on the group's regular US label, Decca Records, another MCA affiliate. Initially the single's US release had only marginal impact, with "Woodstock" by Matthews Southern Comfort spending six weeks on the 101-150 singles chart in Record World in December 1970 - January 1971 and then dropping off having peaked at #110.[13] However upon "Woodstock's" January 1970 single release in Canada - where a 30% Canadian Content radio airplay quota was being phased in - the track received airplay at least partially because of its Canadian authorship, and assisted by airplay on Canadian radio stations with US listeners - notably CKLW, the Windsor ON station credited with the track's Canadian "breakout"[14]- "Woodstock" accrued newfound US interest, debuting on the Billboard Hot 100 dated 6 March 1971 at #83 to rise to a #23 Hot 100 that May. In Canada "Woodstock" reached a #5 peak on the RPM 100 singles chart.

But by the time of the North American success of Matthews Southern Comfort's "Woodstock," the band was no more: an October 1970 shake-up at MCA Records (UK) had resulted in Matthews Southern Comfort splitting with MCA - with the resultant cancellation of a US tour set to begin that November, the month of "Woodstock's" US single release[15] - and in December 1970 Matthews had abruptly quit. Matthews would attribute his departure to the demands incumbent on his band's success with "Woodstock:" (Ian Matthews quote:)"It created all this peripheral stuff that took up my time. What would've been time learning to be a songwriter, it became time spent doing interviews, photographs, tours and appearances;"[16] "It all came to a head after a dreadful soundcheck at Birmingham town hall. I left the building, walked down to the station, got on a train home and locked my door for a week."[17] Matthews' debut solo album If You Saw Thro' My Eyes was a Vertigo Records release of 1 May 1971[18] while his former co-members - as Southern Comfort - would have three Harvest Records album releases before disbanding in 1972.[19]

In the UK, "Woodstock" would be the final single release by Matthews Southern Comfort - who had had two precedent non-charting UK singles - and "Woodstock" would remain Matthews' sole UK charting single: although previously a member of Fairport Convention Matthews had not been featured on their one charting single: "Si tu dois partir," and Matthews would never rank in the UK charts as a solo artist. In other territories two further tracks were issued as singles from the third and final Matthews Southern Comfort album Later That Same Year - which outside the British Isles included "Woodstock" - : "Mare, Take Me Home" and "Tell Me Why" both of which just made the Billboard Hot 100 at respectively #96 and #98, while "Mare, Take Me Home" peaked at #86 in Canada (Matthews Southern Comfort had a total of four US single releases, having had one non-charting US single: "Colorado Springs Eternal", in April 1970). Iain Matthews - as Ian Matthews - would as a solo act place three singles on the Billboard Hot 100 and also the Canadian charts, one of which: the November 1978 release "Shake It", would become a major hit, reaching a Billboard Hot 100 peak of #13 in April 1979, also reaching #6 in Canada.

Despite his issues with "Woodstock's" success in 1970, Iain Matthews would state in 2017: "Any kind of success in this business takes me by surprise. 'Woodstock' was the first and most exciting. It's still opening new doors to this day."[20]

Preceded by
"Band of Gold" by Freda Payne
UK number one single
31 October 1970 for three weeks
Succeeded by
"Voodoo Child" by Jimi Hendrix

Others

  • The Assembled Multitude's 1970 instrumental version reached #79 in the US.
  • Led Zeppelin incorporated Woodstock's lyrics and structure into live renditions of "Dazed and Confused" between 1973 and 1975.[21]
  • In 1994 Toto co-founder and long time vocalist Bobby Kimball included a rock version of the song as opener on his solo album Rise Up.[22] Kimball's version is closer to the arrangement of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young than to Mitchell's original.
  • In 1995 Tuck & Patti included their own version of "Woodstock" (with Patti adding scat-singing and percussive vocals in between the verses) in their album "Learning How to Fly."
  • In 1997 James Taylor performed "Woodstock" live at the 12th annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in tribute to Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
  • The 2000 album release Time After Time by Eva Cassidy featured her live rendition of "Woodstock" performed at the Maryland Inn in Annapolis in the winter of 1995. Cassidy was a fan of the song due to the Matthews Southern Comfort version.[23]
  • A version of "Woodstock" was released on the 2004 album Grace of the Sun by Richie Havens.
  • On her 2008 album A Long and Winding Road, Maureen McGovern sings the first verse and chorus of "Woodstock" as lead-in to her rendition of "Imagine."
  • America remade "Woodstock" for their 2012 release Back Pages, a cover album that, according to group member Gerry Beckley, comprises "killer songs that are great examples that come from our best songwriters."[24] Beckley's co-member Dewey Bunnell states: "Joni Mitchell's 'Woodstock' is an anthem for me in the truest sense...a call to action....and I've always been a child of the 60's at heart."[25]
  • A line from the chorus, "We are billion year old carbon," was used by Corey Mesler as the title of a novel about the 1960s.[26]
  • In an episode of the television drama The West Wing titled "The Warfare of Genghis Khan," a NASA administrator shows the Orion Nebula to Josh Lyman through a telescope and describes it to him, explaining, "Everything, every atom in our bodies, comes from exploding stars." He concludes, "I guess Joni Mitchell was right: 'We are stardust.'"[27]
  • In 2013, a New York Times blog praised and shared a video of Heather Maloney and Darlingside covering "Woodstock."[28]
  • At the 2018 Hay Festival of Literature and Arts, author Salman Rushdie said that he had seen Donald Trump singing along to "Woodstock" at a Crosby, Stills and Nash concert, and that Trump knew all the words.[29]

References

  1. Kevin J.H. Dettmar (11 January 2013). Is Rock Dead?. Routledge. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-136-77403-4.
  2. William Ruhlmann, "Joni Mitchell: From Blue to Indigo", Goldmine (1995) republished in Stacey Luftig, ed., The Joni Mitchell Companion: Four Decades of Commentary New York: Schirmer Books, pp. 37–38. Also available online at the Joni Mitchell Library
  3. "American Masters . Joni Mitchell . Filmmaker Interview - PBS". www.pbs.org.
  4. 1 2 "Woodstock – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young | AllMusic". allmusic.com. 2014. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  5. "Joni Mitchell's website – Woodstock song lyrics".
  6. Ruhlmann, in Luftig, ed., p. 37; Phil Sutcliffe, "Joni Mitchell (interview)", Q, May 1988, republished in Lustig, ed., pp. 141–142.
  7. Zimmer, Dave (2000). Crosby Stills & Nash: the biography. Boston: DaCapo Press. p. 111. ISBN 9780306816154.
  8. "Image : RPM Weekly". 17 July 2013.
  9. 1 2 3 Ragogna, Mike (29 August 2014). "Solo Concerts, Stealin' Home and Similar Skin: Chats with Bruce Hornsby, Iain Matthews and Umphrey's McGee...Plus!".
  10. 1 2 3 Unterberger, Richie (2015). Jingle Jangle Morning: Folk-rock in the 1960s. self published. ISBN 9780991589210.
  11. 1 2 "Conjuring up a hit from rock history". Plymouth Herald. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  12. "flavour of new zealand - search listener". www.flavourofnz.co.nz.
  13. Record World Vol 25 #1233 (23 January 1971) p. 47
  14. Billboard Vol 83 #13 (27 March 1971) p. 53
  15. Billboard vol 82 #42 (17 October 1970) p. 61
  16. http://www.pauseandplay.com/iain-matthews-finds-his-southern-comfort/
  17. ". - Classic Music Vault - Music from the 60's and 70's - Iain Matthews". classicmusicvault.com.
  18. Record World Vol 25 #1247 (1 May 1971) p. 10
  19. "Southern Comfort (3)". Discogs.
  20. "On stage with Iain Matthews".
  21. Monk, Katherine. Joni: The Creative Odyssey of Joni Mitchell. New York: Greystone Books, 2012, p. 99.
  22. "Bobby Kimball". Bobby Kimball.
  23. Bakker, Johan (2011). Behind the Rainbow: the tragic life of Eva Cassidy. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-85712-748-8.
  24. "America Goes Under Cover With Album of Favorites". GoldMineMag.com. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  25. "Q & A with Gerry Beckley & Dewey Bunnell". VenturaHighway.com. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  26. Deusner, Steven (26 May 2006). "... With the Memphis Blues Again". PopMatters. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  27. "The Warfare of Genghis Khan". Retrieved 1 March 2014.
  28. Haller, Val (December 10, 2013). "Joni Mitchell's 'Woodstock,' by Heather Maloney and Darlingside". Booming Blog. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2013. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  29. Brown, Mark (May 29, 2018). "Salman Rushdie tells of Hollywood's phoniness and Trump's best box". Books. The Guardian.
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