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Hit Parade: We Are Stardust, We Are Gold-Certified

Slate Culture Feed

Slate Podcasts

Arts, Music, Tv & Film

4.2 • 2K Ratings

🗓️ 30 August 2019

⏱️ 76 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Are you tired of hearing how awe-inspiring the Woodstock Music and Art Fair was 50 years ago for 400,000 lucky hippies in Bethel, New York? Imagine how the people of 1969 felt—specifically the millions who couldn’t go. Yet, in the age before YouTube and social media, the rest of America did catch Woodstock fever—weeks, months, even a year or more later—and they made stars out of many of the performers. By 1970, not only was the Woodstock movie dominating the box office; the soundtrack album and a constellation of Woodstock stars were crushing the Billboard charts. This month’s Hit Parade offers a new take on Woodstock: To understand its legacy, you have to look at the charts long after August 1969. Chris Molanphy counts down 10 acts—some of them music legends, some of them short-lived hitmakers—who were materially boosted by the festival: from a guy hanging out backstage who got shoved onstage by desperate show organizers; to the band who loathed the whole experience yet saw their albums reach new chart heights; to the young man who arrived with no discography but kicked off one of the longest hitmaking careers in rock history. Podcast production by Chau Tu. Slate Plus members get bonus segments and ad-free podcast feeds. Sign up now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

You escaped the war?

0:01.2

A hand the whip.

0:02.0

A Paramount Plus new original series,

0:04.6

Starring David Yello, Donald Sutherland, and Dennis Quaid.

0:08.5

I took an oath to take care of one.

0:10.5

Stream Lorman Bass Reeves on Paramount Plus, and joined by the 27th of November to get 50% off the first three months at just 349 per month.

0:19.0

I'm Bass Reeves and I'm the Lord this lamb.

0:22.0

After the first three months, auto renews at the then standard price of a monthly plan until

0:25.2

cancelled.

0:26.2

Currently 699 per month, new and eligible former subscribers only, 18 plus, Tees and sees apply. Welcome to Hit Parade, a podcast of Pop Chart History from Slate magazine, about the hits from coast to coast.

0:47.0

I'm Chris Malanthi, chart analyst, pop critic, and writer of Slate's Why is this song Number One series.

0:54.0

On today's show,

1:01.0

on today's show, it's August 2019, and if you've been following music news for the last few weeks, you probably know it's the 50th anniversary of the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, which took place not in Woodstock, New York, but in nearby Bethel in August 1969.

1:22.0

You maybe also heard this year that attempts to mount a Woodstock 50

1:26.7

commemorative concert ultimately failed. Here at Hit Parade we've been thinking

1:31.9

about the legacy of Woodstock too.

1:34.4

But of course, we have a particular, quirky, pop charty prism through which we view music history. One, two, three.

1:43.0

What are we fighting for?

1:45.0

Woodstock was a cultural watershed, to be sure.

1:50.0

A miraculous be-in that should never have come off, but somehow not only happened peacefully.

1:56.5

We must be in heaven, man!

1:59.5

But also produced a festival concert for the ages.

...

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