Woodstock
School of Rock to celebrate 40th anniversary with 40 coast-to-coast events
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PrintForty years after music filled the air at Woodstock, a new generation of musicians is stepping up to pay tribute. In honor of the landmark 40th anniversary of the most famous event in rock history, kids from The Paul Green School of Rock Music are taking the stage at 40 Woodstock tributes in festivals from New York City to Miami and Chicago to San Diego — all during the anniversary weekend.
Officially sanctioned by Woodstock Ventures’ Michael Lang, Joel Rosenman, and Jennifer Roberts, the 40 concert events will feature local kids from School of Rock branches around the country. The School of Rock kids will also be featured in the upcoming two-hour documentary “Woodstock: Now & Then,” set for broadcast in August on VH1 and The History Channel.
“It’s really about bringing Woodstock to the next generation,” said Woodstock founder Michael Lang. “Roots are important, musical and cultural, and 40 years after the festival, we’re thrilled to have kids from the Paul Green School of Rock join us as the youngest part of the Anniversary celebration.”
School of Rock founder Paul Green expressed his excitement as well.
“At the School of Rock, we believe that music and its enjoyment should not be limited by when it was created,” he said. “We are truly honored to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Woodstock, a monumental musical and cultural event.”
The Paul Green School of Rock, South Hackensack will perform its Woodstock program at Mexicalli Live in Teaneck on Saturday. For information, visit www.schoolofrock.com/bergencounty/concerts_school.php.
More on: Woodstock
Confirmed Jewish Musicians at Woodstock
DAY ONE
Sweetwater (band)
Jewish member: ALAN MALAROWITZ (1950-1981)
From Sweetwater Official Web Site:
Alan was our original drummer. Quite young, when we formed (17), he had good feel and instinct for his instrument.. He became a touring and studio drummer in his later career, but died suddenly in a car accident one night between L.A. and Las Vegas.
Musician says Woodstock changed music — not the world
The music world has changed a lot since Woodstock, said guitarist Leslie West, frontman for the blues/rock group Mountain and veteran of the landmark event.
“I can’t say exactly how,” he said, “but something happened to music. It’s like, you know it when you see it.”
For example, said the Englewood resident, whose band was new when it was booked to play at Woodstock — in fact, he said, it was only their fourth performance — where once rock was only on AM radio, “now there was FM, playing 20-minute tracks. It wasn’t just blasting voices.”
The Jewish connection
This week marks the 40th anniversary of the historic Woodstock Music Festival, which attracted perhaps as many as a half-million, mostly young, concertgoers. The peaceful behavior of festival-goers gave, and still gives, Woodstock the aura of being the tangible affirmation of the “peace and love” ethos of the ’60s hippie “counterculture.” The “good vibes” were preserved for posterity by the best concert film of the ’60s.
As I recall from Hebrew school, the Torah likes the number 40 — 40 years in the desert and so on. So, I guess it is appropriate, on this anniversary, to explore Woodstock’s many Jewish connections.
Let’s put on a show
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