Catching the high again and Ad-Rock UISK vIK SHINE, IE BOYE FESTIVAi »Woodstock, k y of blasting mu: k/ people made the 20,000 fan: on Aug. 19, it’ get through. ‘ ranging from Ik ag Pumpkins tof :l Quest, the mu ; iinetimes excruc; >, Lollapaloozav: ^stite to a girlMi tape — the cro; ty amusement distort voices, four more band: ment. maker, with vend? me to call it an | atl A fan goes “crowd surfing" during a Roguish Armament performance at Woodstock ‘94 in Saugerties, New York. The New York-based band helped open the three-day event. And it all started ? charge on their-:: umorously-titledo ction with the crc fs entertaining, ne found particuli' I. When the fanr well as Soundgard! t, singing "Blacklie y the rain/The hipj got the crowd goi aradise," recent® autstanding, thanks'. i join him in pit visted Sister's s "Eye of the Ti Eye of the Tiger" te fit, but it provii ing. Nick Cave iii* ess than impressivef Called Quest mad :ely alternative line, hife Dawg wowed: heck the Rhime,": the Houston Rock a history lesson if P-Funk All Stars, j Funkadelic groups Red Hot Chili Pepf point with his trunk ; owd moving with'k the Funk (Tearthek ' "Flash Light" seed mind, as Clinton'sk ; drug rap was easily! ines like "There's than selling it." to the stage with!'' But the band's sa vocal styles of Mite elligible screams, play their own ini realize it's been 4$ij d they've said. But! t" and "Sabotage." ner Smashing Rum:', /ith the band's hugf ; 's voice was just a scream. Renditii impressive, but Coif! 1 stage, the crowd M of the extreme heat ! terribly uncomfoit ?r, we peeled off the npassed our bodies i Richards looks, i nee is just that - an ow. One that will h palooza alum leek d day." By Mack Harrison Special to The Battalion S augerties, n.y. — The peo ple. The music. The mud. The drugs. Woodstock is dead. Long live Woodstock. No way, people said, that you could ever duplicate the original Woodstock. Not today. Different generation, different music. Wrohg. _ Through thg three days in the mud and drug-induced haze, con cert-goers at the festival Aug. 12-14 in Saugerties found the same expe rience as their spiritual ancestors did 25 years earlier at the original Woodstock in Bethel, N.Y. — a weekend-long party. The security Advance coverage and conven tional wisdom had suggested mas sive security measures at the site, but our group boarded the shuttle buses after an hour's wait, a cursory sweep of the metal detector wand and some perfunctory questions: "Do you have any contraband on you?" No. "Any guns or knives?" No. "Any drugs or alcohol?" No, of course not. The rules said no weapons, drugs or alcohol, no aerosol sprays, no open fires, no this, no that. In reality, however, security was lax enough that people brought in pretty much whatever they wanted. Once ticket holders stepped off the shuttle bus at the concert site, another brace of security guards wearing Woodstock "Peace Patrol" T-shirts casually searched the dis embarking passengers' belongings, looking for any contraband, drugs or alcohol hidden in bedrolls or tents. As we trekked down the path to ward the stage, we saw swarms of people scaling the fences around the woods. "Environmentally Sensitive Area," the signs mounted on the fences told the ecologically apa thetic crowd as hundreds of people broke through the barrier to camp in the wetlands under the trees. We continued down the path to ward the music. As we topped the rise, the sights, sounds, smells and spectacle of Woodstock '94 em braced us. 1 The scene We wandered into the field, adrift in a sea of tents. Far, far ! away, we could make out the north ! stage and the twin towers of speak- | ers flanking it. Overhead, heli- 1 copters carrying VIPs swooped to il ward the backstage area, a camera- I laden chopper swept over the I crowd and a blimp floated high 1 above in stately silence. To our left were the food booths, the port-a-potties, the south stage and the Eco-Fest area — where all the tree-hugger groups had their booths. To our right stretched more tents, food, restrooms and the Surre al Field — a computer geek haven of computer company pavilions and a couple of "virtual reality" attrac tions which were the equivalent of the Star Wars ride at Disneyland. The drugs Woodstock '94 seemed to rede fine the term "casual drug use." No one worried about cops. Marijuana was everywhere. You couldn't walk five feet without stumbling over someone smoking weed. In an odd parallel to the first concert, announcements from the stage warned the crowd about tainted drugs — not bad acid this time, but laced marijuana. One unconventional intoxicant came in gaseous form: Peddlers sold balloons filled with nitrous ox ide — laughing gas. People would buy the balloons and breathe the gas; it didn't make your voice high- pitched like helium, but it did pro vide a lift of its own. Entrepreneurs offered any man ner of intoxicant desired — and the crowd desired. Individuals carried handmade signs reading "need acid," "need 'shrooms," or "need doses." Possibly the best sign rest ed in the hands of a young man seated next to a main path: "Don't need anything," it read. "Just like to hold signs." And those substances — al though of dubious quality or au thenticity — were available. For a price. Single hits of acid sold for three to five dollars; one young entrepreneur sold hashish for $15 a gram. Concert-goers stand atop some of the 2,800 portable toilets at Woodstock ‘94 in efforts to get a better view of the stage. The swelling crowd strained the carefully laid plans of the festival’s organizers. tival. By Sunday all the local stores had sold out of beer, and those lucky individuals who had some stockpiled wouldn't part with it for any price. Souvenir booths sprouted like psychedelic mushrooms across the festival area. Vendors offered everything from tie-dyed shirts to jewelry to clothing made from hemp. Some individuals braided hair or sold jewelry on blankets spread on the ground. One woman with only a chair and a sign read palms by flashlight. The cost In fact, capitalism seemed to run ram- * - pant at this so-called ^ | HE BODY COUNT "revolutionary" event. mm, ■illMPl BattalK Photos jRAPHICS : BY AP Evidence of the ''cor porateness" so dread ed by detractors of Woodstock '94 was ail around. From the Pepsi logo slapped on the con cession stands and paper cups to the Phillips Elec tronics CD-I pavilion in the Surreal Field, spon sors abounded. Prices were not outra geous, however — they were usurious. The $135 tickets were just the start. Soft drinks went for two dollars and meals cost anywhere from six to eight dollars. Our group, unwilling to spend $10 on lunch, had brought in canned goods and granola bars, which last ed us through the weekend. Beer, of course, was banned from the festival, so its price v ent up accordingly. People jumped the fence, bought it at nearby conve nience stores and smuggled it back onto the site. Back there, budding brewmeisters sold two beers for five dollars; a 12-pack went for $20. But this was at the start of the fes- 1 /'T Estimated population at Woodstock ‘94: 350,000 Tickets sold: 200,000 Deaths: 2 People treated for first aid at the event: 5,000 People taken to area hospitals: 75 Arrests: 24 Marriages: 1 — Source: MTV News there actually was a sense of broth erhood among the people at Wood- stock '94. Everyone felt a kinship with everyone else at the festival, and people were happy to help each other out. In fact, the wide variety of indi viduals in attendance is what made the event unique. All age groups — from infants to senior citizens — were represented. Bikers, hippies, rednecks, Yankees, parents, chil dren, students, professionals — all contributed to the synergistic gestalt that defined the event like some Aquarian melting pot. The parking The situation at Woodstock made parking at Texas A&M seem like some kind of nirvana. Man, what a mess. When we arrived at the site we followed the directions on the back of our parking pass. Unfortunately, our assigned lot had filled up and the parking powers- that-be had taken the sign down. We drove around for an hour until we asked a worker where to park. The lot we pulled in was already over capacity, and the ground soft as we left our vehicle. Little did we know we'd have to spend the Sunday night after the concert in the car. The round was so muddy after alF the rain that we couldn't leave until a tow truck winched us out of the mud the next morning — for $50. Apart from these inclines, things remained dry — until the rains came down. We heard the thunder and saw the lightning as we hud dled in our tents Friday night. The next day we looked out at the tents, floating like pond scum on a sea of mud. Rain and thousands of footsteps rendered all bare ground nearly impassible. The only grassy areas remaining were hidden under tents. The mud was so deep and thick it sucked people's shoes off their feet. As hikers walked up or down the treacherous slopes, many lost their footing. At several inclines, people hurled themselves down the muddy slopes, skidding 50 yards or more and transforming into the infamous Mud People. The nudity Some people — male and fe male — who got caught in the rain and mud decided to shed their clothing, without much reaction from their neighbors. Although most of the nudists were men dis robing to take a shower at the wa ter fountains, the atmosphere con vinced many women to go topless. In addition, this reporter will al ways remember the sight of one man and two women walking past the campsite wearing nothing but backpacks. The music Sorry. Don't remember much about this one. too The people At night, after the music ended, we returned to our tents along with 300,000 of our closest friends and neighbors. As cheesy as it sounds, The mud It just wouldn't be Woodstock without the mud, would it? The first day, the mud was a result of runoff from the water fountains, which the concert planners had thoughtfully placed at the tops of the hills. The overflow ran straight down the dirt paths leading up to the faucets, immediately turning them into Slip'n'Slides. Did Woodstock '94 have the same cultural significance as the original concert? Not yet. It won't achieve that importance until the people who attended are able to see the movie and hear all the media hype. Then they'll realize what a defining moment it really was — a realization they weren't able to make at the festival itself, because they were too busy having fun in a sea of mud.