PSA 9
ADVANCE MAIL ORDER TICKET
THIS IS A RARE ADVANCE MAIL ORDERSALE $18.00 TICKET
NOT THE COMMON $24.00 GATE TICKET
1969 WOODSTOCK MUSIC & ART FAIR FESTIVAL
3 DAY UNUSED TICKETS
AUGUST 15 - 17 1969
AT Max Yasgur's 600 acre dairy farm
Bethel, New York
PSA Graded and certified ( MINT 9 )
This ticket is in Excellent Condition. It has been graded and certified by PSA, and it preserved in it’s thick hard case. It is rare to find a mint 9 in perfect condition. And also certified by PSA
Woodstock Music and Art Fair, one of the most profound symbols of the 1960s counterculture and the antiwar movement.
The
Woodstock Music and Art Festival was a rock festival held at Max
Yasgur's 600 acre (2.4 km²) dairy farm in Bethel, New York from August
15-18, 1969. It is arguably but very widely viewed as the most famous
rock festival ever held. For many, it exemplified the counterculture of
the 1960s and the "hippie era". Many of the best-known musicians of the
times appeared during the rainy weekend, captured in a successful 1970
movie, Woodstock. Joni Mitchell's song "Woodstock", which memorialized
the event, became a major hit.
The festival
The
festival bears the name "Woodstock," because it was originally
scheduled to take place in the town of Woodstock, in Ulster County, yet
the town lacked an appropriate venue for such a large event. A site was
found in the town of Wallkill. When local opposition arose, the event
was almost cancelled, but Sam Yasgur persuaded his father Max to allow
the concert to be held on the family's alfalfa field, located in
Sullivan County, about 40 miles southwest of Woodstock. Although the
show had been planned for a maximum of 200,000 attendees, over 500,000
eventually attended, most of whom did not pay admission. The highways
leading to the concert were jammed with traffic. People abandoned their
cars and walked for miles to the concert area. The weekend was rainy,
facilities were overcrowded, and attendees shared food, alcoholic
beverages, and drugs. Local residents of this modest tourist-oriented
area gave blankets and food to some concertgoers. Overall, attendees
were remarkably well-behaved. The festival did not initially make money
for the promoters, although, thanks to record sales and proceeds from
the highly regarded film of the event, it did eventually become
profitable. Two people died at Woodstock: one from a heroin overdose and
one from being run over by a tractor while sleeping in a nearby
hayfield. Two unconfirmed births reportedly occurred at Woodstock. Among
the stars of Woodstock were The Who and Jimi Hendrix. Due to arguments
with the promoters about their pay, The Who didn't take stage until
about 4:00 in the morning. One highlight of The Who's performance was
"See Me, Feel Me", when the sun rose just as lead singer Roger Daltrey
began to sing the chorus. At one point during The Who's set, political
activist Abbie Hoffman interrupted the show and attempted to rally the
crowd with yippie slogans, but was knocked off the stage by the swinging
guitar of the band's leader, Pete Townshend, to the delight of the
audience. At the conclusion of The Who's set, Townshend smashed his
guitar and threw it into the crowd. This moment helped establish The Who
as superstars and boosted their album Tommy to sell multi-platinum.
Jimi Hendrix had a big impact with his performance, including a
distorted version of "The Star Spangled Banner". The song was somewhat
controversial, as the Vietnam War was underway and the sound effects
that Hendrix generated with his guitar paralleled the sounds of the
violence of the conflict. These two performances are held by fans as
some of the greatest in rock history, though both The Who and Hendrix
regarded their performances as sub-par. Woodstock's promoters were
Michael Lang, Artie Kornfeld, John Roberts and Joel Rosenman. Roberts
was the financer, backed by a trust fund bankroll; his friend Rosenman, a
graduate of Yale Law, was an amateur guitarist. Their associates were
Kornfeld, a vice-president at Capitol Records, and Michael Lang. An
unlikely businessman, Lang was a light-hearted hippie who had owned a
head shop and hoped to build a recording studio in the Woodstock area to
serve artists such as Bob Dylan and Janis Joplin, who had homes nearby.
When Lang and Kornfeld presented the idea to Rosenman and Roberts,
Rosenman hatched the idea of a rock concert with the same performing
artists. After toying with an Age of Aquarius theme, they settled on the
slogan "Three Days of Peace and Music", partly as a way to placate
suspicious local officials and partly to appeal to anti-war sentiment.
They hired commercial artist Arnold Skolnick to design the artwork,
which incorporated a catbird design. Lang would go on to produce
successor concerts in 1994 and 1999, but he did not participate in the
Woodstock-named concerts of 1979 and 1989. In 1997, the site of the
concert and 1,400 surrounding acres were purchased by Alan Gerry for
future development as Performing Arts Center under the Gerry Foundation.
In 2000, the Gerry Foundation announced that the original 38 acres of
the Woodstock site were to be preserved. Peace
VIETNAM Anti War