Drugs, parties and other reminisces of Woodstock festival
October 8th, 2009 - 11:31 am ICT by IANS
Panaji, Oct 8 (IANS) While drugs, hippies, parties and all-pervasive bohemia may be a Goa politician’s nightmare, for rock singer and musician Uday Benegal they are probably the perfect setting for a Woodstock music festival.
Benegal, who is here to attend the premiere of the Ang Lee film “Taking Woodstock” Wednesday, hastened to add that he was not advocating the use of drugs. “Goa’s laid back attitude too is very conducive to a Woodstock-like event here,” the lead singer of erstwhile band Indus Creed said.
“Only the drugs used then were more gentler. Not the kind found around today. You can’t deny it. I am sure drugs are happening in Goa now too,” Benegal said, recalling the legendary music festival in the US in 1969.
Benegal, who is working on a film “which has a lot to do with music”, said that a film on Woodstock, which he saw when he was a kid changed his life forever.
“I watched it when I was 12. My life was completely transformed then,” he added.
Head of the Mumbai-based Fountainhead events Brian Tellis, who attended the 30th anniversary of the Woodstock festival in upstate New York in 1999, said that the three day musical camp-out had to be seen to be believed.
“It was opened by James Brown and we had 60 to 70 bands playing. There was AC/DC, Sheryl Crow, Alanis Morisette. I can just reel out names. The main event was from 12 noon to midnight, but there were other side shows after that too. It was a 24/7 party,” he said.
Tellis, who is also an RJ, is in the process of organising a similar music camp-out ‘Open Sky festival’ on the lines of the legendary Woodstock festival. But he said that laws in India were a deterrent.
“Law prohibits such shows from going on throughout the night. The ‘Open Sky festival’ will be more controlled the first time round. We are working on the modalities. The show should be on in about six months,” he said.
Tellis added that while the Woodstock festival in New York 1969 was birthed in times of the Cold war and the US invasion of Vietnam, its relevance reached beyond geographical boundaries now. “Considering the times we live in, in India, Woodstock is relevant even today,” he said.
- Ang Lee's Taking Woodstock premieres in Goa - Oct 09, 2009
- India premiere of Ang Lee's 'Taking Woodstock' in Goa - Oct 08, 2009
- Carlos Santana To Play Again At Woodstock Site - Jul 19, 2010
- Carlos Santana returns to Woodstock festival after four decades - Jul 20, 2010
- Mario Miranda was a quintessential Goan: Shyam Benegal - Dec 11, 2011
- Woodstock Fair Enjoyed By People On The Labor Day Weekend - Sep 06, 2010
- I may contribute to Akshay's film again: Pakistani rapper Bohemia - Dec 27, 2010
- Compassionate man with wicked humour, say Mario's friends, fans - Dec 11, 2011
- Gulzar to get lifetime award at Mumbai film fest - Sep 20, 2011
- Woodstock Fair Gets Going With A Rainy Day - Sep 04, 2010
- Freida Pinto coming to Toronto filmfest with 'Trishna' - Jul 27, 2011
- Lollapalooza 2011 lineup announced - Aug 05, 2011
- American rapper lashes out at Bally Sagoo - Nov 28, 2010
- Jane Fonda turns hippie grandmother in new film - Jul 27, 2010
- Alanis Morisette's Secret Marriage To Souleye - Jun 08, 2010
Tags: 30th anniversary, ang lee, ang lee film, bohemia, brian tellis, fountainhead, indus creed, james brown, legendary music, legendary woodstock festival, main event, modalities, music camp, new york 19, open sky, rock singer, sheryl crow, sky festival, uday, woodstock music festival