I’ve been deliberately avoiding this thread since my last post. A few days after responding to the first few comments from others that followed, it occurred to me that I should have pointed out to @zlone that I had NOT in actual fact "trashed a lot of great music and musicians." (not in the original post, that is). Go ahead if you wish and reread it. It was Ahmet Ertegun who characterized the Disraeli Gears album as "psychedelic horsesh*t", not I. I loved both Cream albums at the time of their release, playing a few songs from those albums in my high school garage band. Same with the first two Hendrix albums.
The impetus for this thread was coming upon the video I posted, which was made fairly recently. I find it funny that Dylan is so closely associated with Woodstock, yet wanted no part of the Woodstock Festival (he turned down the offer to perform at it). That’s why I entitled the thread "Woodstock 1969, or 1967?" For Dylan, Woodstock was all about 1967 (making music in the basement of Big Pink, and writing all of the John Wesley Harding album songs), while for the rest of the world (and most Rock music fans) it was (and is) the 1969 Festival, which wasn’t really held in Woodstock.
My motive for starting this thread was to bring the video to the attention of people who like the music that everyone is now calling Americana, but who are perhaps unaware of the role the recordings Dylan and The Hawks made in the basement of the pink house in West Saugerties in 1967 played in the creation of the Americana style of music.
While many comments made since my last post here are not without merit, I feel compelled to bring the discussion back on track with this quote from Clapton regarding Music From Big Pink:
"I listened to this album, and I thought this is it. This is where music has supposed to have gone for a long time, and it hasn’t really got there. And now it’s finally.....someone has finally gone and done it."
"It had all kinds of effects. I mean it stimulated me, it moved me, and it upset me and made me very discontent, all at the same time. And I think it had a similar effect on a lot of people."
"It had a similar effect on a lot of people." That it did, and continues to (look at all the young bands involved in projects related to The Band). I don’t cite Clapton’s story insisting (or even suggesting) everyone should share his (and my) opinion of MFBP or The Band, but rather to chronicle the "Big Bang" effect the album, The Band, and the Basement Tapes had on a large group of music makers whom many people love, but aren’t aware of the role The Band played in the musical direction those music makers chose to take. Richard Thompson, for instance.
I love lots of current and past musical artists just as much as I love The Band (Rodney Crowell, Buddy & Julie Miller, Iris DeMent, Lucinda Williams, Emmylou Harris, NRBQ, John Hiatt, Los Lobos, Dave Edmunds, and plenty of others. Plus I love AC/DC, The Ramones, and Weezer, so I'm no Americana purist/snob
), but they didn’t play the role The Band did in greatly influencing the direction music took. Well, not in the general field of Rock music---Led Zeppelin were much more influential---but in the music I at least care most about. As proof, look at the music Robert Plant has ended up making. Does it owe more to Led Zeppelin, or to The Band? I rest my case.![smiley smiley](https://d3hahgp9ufg094.cloudfront.net/plugins/smiley/images/regular_smile.png)