The Sunday Post (Dundee)

WOODSTOCK 50 YEARS ON ‘ Fest’s only Scots on summer of 69

Singer recalls three days of peace and music that shook the world:

- By Billy Sloan mail@sundaypost.com – INCREDIBLE STRING BAND SINGER MIKE HERON

It was billed as three days of peace, love and music.

Mike Heron remembers Woodstock slightly differentl­y: “It was more like three days of mud, marijuana... and granola.”

Now 76, the singer of The Incredible String Band – the only Scots on the bill – shared his memories of the iconic music festival before the forthcomin­g 50th anniversar­y this month.

Woodstock, staged in a pig farm at Bethel in upstate New York, starred Jimi Hendrix, Crosby, Stills And Nash, Joe Cocker and The Who and became the high water mark of the 1960s hippy countercul­ture.

The three days and nights of music featured high in Rolling Stone magazine’s 50 moments that changed rock history and a concert film won an Academy Award.

It might be iconic now but, back then, Mike and his bandmates weren’t so sure.

The Incredible String Band, a psychadeli­c- folk group formed in Edinburgh three years previously – were paid a fee of $ 4,500 and performed to a 400,000-strong audience so stoned they barely noticed them.

“You couldn’t get to the site, it was impossible. The organisers underestim­ated the number of people who would travel to the festival,” recalled Mike. “Traffic on the New York State Thruway was at a complete standstill.

“So we were flown in on a military helicopter, with no doors, exactly like the ones in the movie, Apocalypse Now.

“We travelled with Indian sitar player Ravi Shankar and when the pilot swooped down over the site, I thought we were all going to fall out of the open side.

“Ravi saw this huge sea of colour below and said: ‘ What kind of crops is that farmer growing?’ The pilot replied: ‘ That’s not crops, it’s humans’. It was incredible.”

When the String Band – Mike, Robin Williamson, Christina “Licorice” Mckechnie and Rose Simpson – arrived at Woodstock the sun was shining and they were given champagne and strawberri­es. But the idyll did not last for long.

Mike said: “It was the very early days of outdoor music events. People always ask me: ‘ What was it like backstage?’

“But there was no backstage, no facilities whatsoever, apart from a few marquee tents. If you wanted to sleep, you lay on the floor.

“Today, every music festival has food concession­s selling burgers, pizza or Japanese noodles. Once the champagne and strawberri­es ran out, that was it. There was no food at all.”

But Wavy Gravy, a hippie who led the festival’s Please Force – a team who catered for the whims of the 32 acts appearing – came to the rescue.

“Wavy went around the tents with a notepad taking everybody’s breakfast order,” said Mike.

“People were choosing eggs- overeasy, bacon, sausages, hash browns and toast.

“What we didn’t realise was that he’d bought a job lot of granola... oats and nuts. So that’s all we had to eat. But we were glad to get it because we were starving. If you didn’t eat granola, you went hungry.”

Prior to the event, the String Band had enjoyed considerab­le success on both sides of the Atlantic with the hit albums, The 5000 Spirits Or The Layers Of The Onion (1967) and The Hangman’s Beautiful Daughter (1968).

The group sold out gigs at The Royal Festival Hall and Royal Albert Hall in London. They were

championed by DJ John Peel, and cited as an early influence by David Bowie. They also appeared at the prestigiou­s Carnegie Hall in New York, and in 1967 took part in the Newport Folk Festival alongside Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchell, Tom Paxton and Joan Baez.

At Woodstock, the String Band were meant to play on the opening day, which had a more acoustic lineup. But when they were due to go on stage there was a heavy downpour

and they refused to perform.

“The roof of the stage had a pole with a tarpaulin pulled over it covering just a tiny area, so there was no shelter from the rain,” revealed Mike. “We had a full electric set up, so thought it too dangerous to play in such wet conditions.

“We feared we’d all be electrocut­ed when we touched our instrument­s.”

Their place was taken by singer Melanie, and their appearance was reschedule­d for the following day.

But that meant the group faced the problem of playing on a hard rock bill featuring The Who, Santana, The Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin and Sly And The Family Stone.

They were given a slot between blues acts, The Keef Hartley Band and Canned Heat.

When they walked on stage, they were faced with a sea of bodies … 400,000 hippies who were indulging in free love, taking mind-altering drugs or dancing naked in the mud.

“It was a tough gig to play. There was mud everywhere and people were trying to survive on tins of cold beans,” recalled Mike. “The last thing they wanted was a group playing delicate, string- based Scottish folk music.” A new 38 CD box set called Woodstock 50: Back To The Garden is being released to commemorat­e the anniversar­y.

Mike said: “A few years ago, I saw footage of our set and it was pretty good. Maybe if we’d gone on the previous day as planned, we would have been included in the concert movie and subsequent­ly enjoyed a whole different level of fame. But it was not to be.”

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 ??  ?? Mike, inset, and, second left, on stage at Woodstock with String Band members Rose, Christina and Robin
Mike, inset, and, second left, on stage at Woodstock with String Band members Rose, Christina and Robin
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 ??  ?? Famous guitar and dove on Woodstock poster
Famous guitar and dove on Woodstock poster
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