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  1. Woodstock – The Lost Performances ist ein im Jahr 1990 veröffentlichter Dokumentarfilm über das Woodstock-Festival. Er besteht aus Filmmaterial, das für den Vorgängerfilm Woodstock aus dem Jahr 1970 noch nicht verwendet worden ist.

    Nummer
    Interpret
    Titel
    1.
    The Weight
    2.
    Let’s Go Get stoned
    3.
    Going Up The Country
    4.
    Drifting Blues
  2. Woodstock: The Lost Performances: Directed by Michael Wadleigh. With Joan Baez, Paul Butterfield, Joe Cocker, David Crosby. A video collection of highlights from the 120 miles of footage used to make the original 1970 film.

    • (83)
    • Documentary, Music
    • Michael Wadleigh
    • 68
  3. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1994 CD release of "Woodstock - The Lost Performances" on Discogs.

    • (1)
    • ‘Freedom’ by Richie Havens
    • ‘Soul Sacrifice’ by Santana
    • ‘My Generation’ by The Who
    • ‘White Rabbit’ by Jefferson Airplane
    • ‘With A Little Help from My Friends’ by Joe Cocker
    • ‘I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag’ by Country Joe and The Fish
    • ‘The Weight’ by The Band
    • ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ by Jimi Hendrix

    Relatively unknown folk rocker Richie Havens wasn’t supposed to be the first act to play Woodstock, but when four other groups became snarled in the festival’s legendary traffic, the festival promoters convinced Havens and his band to take the stage hours after the concert was scheduled to begin on Friday afternoon. Havens ended up performing an ex...

    Guitar genius Carlos Santana and his band were another group of newcomers who had recently recorded their first album before taking the Woodstock stage on Saturday afternoon. Their electric, Latin-infused Woodstock performance, driven by 20-year-old drummer Michael Shrieve, put them on the rock n’ roll map. “I don’t remember if I had heard of Santa...

    The Who, one of the biggest acts of the 1960s British Invasion, took the Woodstock stage at 5 a.m. early Sunday morning after a funk-rock set by Sly and the Family Stone. Just a month earlier, The Who released Tommy, an ambitious, double album-length rock opera. “I heard this thing and my mind was completely blown,” says Nancy Eisenstein, who atten...

    Jefferson Airplane, a popular San Francisco act fronted by the inimitable Grace Slick, was next to take the stage around 8 a.m. on Sunday. “I was a longtime time fan of Jefferson Airplane,” says Porter. “What a great way to wake up, to Grace Slick saying ‘Good morning, Woodstock!’” Slick led the band through a raw and rocking 100-minute set that in...

    The soulful British rocker Joe Cocker released his debut album, named for his cover of the famous Beatles song, just four months before Woodstock. Paul McCartney remembers hearing it for the first time at a Saville Row studio in London. “It was just mind-blowing,” said McCartney. “Joe totally turned the song into a soul anthem, and I was forever gr...

    The rabble-rousing Berkeley musician Country Joe McDonald brought the crowd back to life after the soaking with a rousing cheer known as the “Fish” cheer, but featuring another four-letter word. He then kicked into his anti-war folk anthemwith its famous chorus: “And it's one, two, three, what are we fighting for? Don't ask me I don't give a damn. ...

    Not everybody at Woodstock came for the music. Toronto native Linda Goldman was there to experience the scene—camping with hippie families from the Hog Farm, swimming in the pond—and to catch the occasional performance. A group she really didn’t want to miss, though, was The Band, which had started out as a rockabilly group in Canada. “I remember s...

    Arguably the most iconic moment of the entire Woodstock festival was when psychedelic guitar rocker Jimi Hendrix’s played his legendary rendition of the United States National Anthem. Hendrix's performance was one of the last songs on stage at Woodstock. The exhausted Monday-morning crowd had dwindled to 30,000 when Hendrix and his backing band too...

    • Dave Roos
    • 1 Min.
  4. The Lost Performances is a compilation from unused Woodstock movie material. The movie was distributed as a VHS by Warner Home Video. The running order is not chronological.

    #
    Title
    Artist
    1.
    "The Weight"
    2.
    "Let's Go Get Stoned"
    3.
    "Going Up the Country"
    4.
    "Drifting Blues"
  5. Woodstock: The Lost Performances [Video] by Various Artists released in 1991. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  6. 14. Feb. 1992 · The Lost Performances is a collection of performances that didn’t make it into Woodstock, the movie, and four that did appear on Woodstock, the two albums: excruciating numbers by Canned...