Woodstock One simply did not go to Woodstock. In August 1969, the Woodstock Music Festival was the biggest anti-cultural event ever, with about 500,000 people participating, and the top class actions in the country were seen. Twenty years later, Woodstock means "3 days of fun and music", symbolizing the era of community loss, prosperity, and strength. The Woodstock Festival unifies the young generation, people of all ages, race, gender, defines generation and makes the era one of the most important music events.
After Woodstock in 1969, the name "Woodstock" became a very useful brand name. The concert was originally designed to earn money. After the concert, Woodstock Ventures finally entered the basement, but eventually it came to be a company known for its recovery today. Recent installments were seen as disaster due to corporatization, but the impact of the first incident is still so deep that something related to the Woodstock brand has attracted a lot of attention. Woodstock has been a household name since 1969 and is integrated into the American mainstream living.
Woodstock is one of the greatest rock festivals ever and is also a cultural touchstone in the late 1960s, cited in various ways in popular culture. The phrase "Woodstock Generation" became part of the general vocabulary. After the last chord rang, festival mourning and imitation started almost. The cartoonist Charles Schulz named the character of the frequently appearing peanut bird - it started in 1966, but it is not named yet - Woodstock shows respect for the festival. In April 1970, "Crazy" magazine published a poem by Frank Jacobs and was published by Sergio Arregones entitled "I remember, remember wonderful Woodstock music". An example of the exposition imitates the traffic jam and the challenge of actually listening to music. Keith Robertson's 1970 Children's Book Henry Reid's big show has a title role to try to imitate the success of the festival by organizing his own concert at his uncle's farm.
b. The Woodstock Music & Festival was held from 15th to 17th August 1969 at North Bethel in New York. As it should be Woodstock Town in Ulster County, the festival is called "Woodstock"; however, since they think that there are more than a million people, it will provide venues for such big events A stranger comes. There are as many as 200,000 fans in this program, but over 500,000 fans have appeared, but most of them are not charged. The road to the concert was crowded due to traffic jams. People walked miles before leaving their cars and reaching the concert area. It rains on weekends, overcrowding, fans share food, alcohol and medicine