Uncle Mort

Uncle Mort

“Every grown up I’d talked to was  angry at me for being against the war. I wanted to get with my own kind of people for a little while before going back to college and enjoy some great music.” – UNCLE MORT Scarlet Disko: How old were you during Woodstock? Uncle Mort (Jan Senten): I was 19. I had just finished my first year of college at Amherst Collge of Massachusetts which is a small elite school. S: What where you doing at the time? M: I spent the 60’s growing up abroad, my father was an overseas manager for an allied chemical corporation. In 1961 we were relocated from suburban Connecticut to Mexico City. The Beatles had recently arrived to NYC and I was now on the outside of the American culture that I longed for as a 10 year old boy. I latched on to music at a pretty early age as a need for my emotions and connection with the states. In 1968, I graduated and started collge right after the Chicago riots. I was angry and confused at the time, like many, as the American promise was being shattered by war and the assumptions I had were being tossed sideways since I’d been out of the states. S: Where your parents/family aware of you going to Woodstock? If so, did they allow it? M: The following spring, my parents had relocated to New Jersey from Mexico City. I ended up spending the summer with my grandparents in Rhode Island while they were getting situated. I went to the Newport Jazz & Blues Festival and I saw Johnny Winter, BB King, and Led Zeppelin. That was one of my first tastes of live rock & roll. When I heard about the Woodstock festival I figured I could go since I’d be back in New Jersey by that time and could afford to pay for two days. My parents didn’t have any particular objections at the...

Read More

PeaceJam

PeaceJam

Woostock supports PeaceJam, learn more about the work of two special people to connect kids with Nobel Peace Prize...

Read More

Re-released classic designed tees now available

Re-released classic designed tees now available

Balancing on one leg but completely at ease, the Classic Woodstock Dove and festival year symbolically branded into a cross section of White Cedar. Printed a loose fitting, soft, pre-shrunk, 100% cotton body. A unisex shirt with an artistic statement.  Get one HERE....

Read More

Woodstock General Store

Woodstock General Store

We’re happy to announce The Woodstock General Store is open and is the home of officially licensed Woodstock merchandise. The General Store features a curated selection of the highest quality apparel, accessory, specialty and lifestyle products.  Each item features thoughtfully designed artwork and products that bring the Woodstock experience to every generation. The General Store accepts all common payment methods and is accessible on your phone and tablets and ships...

Read More

At DPAC: Crosby, Stills and Nash Still Love Playing Together

At DPAC: Crosby, Stills and Nash Still Love Playing Together

If rock had a yearbook during the early ’80s, David Crosby could have appeared with the designation, ‘Most Likely to Need CPR.’ The once drug-addled singer-songwriter with the bulging belly made the late Jerry Garcia and Keith Richards look healthy by comparison. “I had a lot of issues,” Crosby says. “I could have died. It’s amazing I’m still here, considering all that’s been wrong with me.” Crosby, 74, has lived through hepatitis C and diabetes. He has had a liver transplant, not to mention well-known issues with drugs and alcohol. “I fell into traps that so many of my friends fell into and they didn’t make it out but somehow I’m still here,” Crosby says. “It’s an amazing thing.” So is the output by his longtime band, Crosby, Stills and Nash, which will perform to a sold-out crowd Monday at the Durham Performing Arts Center. The prolific trio, which formed in 1968, has crafted thoughtful, political rock with deep vocal harmonies for generations. “We’ve done this for so long, since we love working with each other,” Crosby says. “It’s been very satisfying.” The gentle “Our House,” the gorgeous tribute to Judy Collins, “Suite: Judy Blue Eyes” and the jaunty “Marrakesh Express” are C, S& N classics and part of the pop-rock lexicon. “I think we’ve written and recorded some terrific songs that stand the test of time,” Crosby says. Part of what makes the band – and their tunes – so special is the distinct characters: Graham Nash is the charming Brit; Stephen Stills is the witty, gifted multi-instrumentalist; and the quirky Crosby is one of the most beloved characters in rock. “There’s nobody like David,” former Byrds band mate Roger McGuinn says. “It was great being in a band with him. We were so young, but we accomplished a great deal and he stood out.” Music was everything for Crosby during his early years. Crosby became a father when he was 21, but his son was given up for adoption. “It was the right thing to do,” Crosby says. “At that point in my life, I couldn’t have taken care of a box of tissues, let alone a child.” Contributing to the theory that Crosby has led a charmed life is the fact that that the son, Jeff Raymond, reunited with Crosby during the 1990s. “It was such a surprise and such a wonderful thing to meet him,”...

Read More