Jay-Z, John Fogerty drop out of embattled Woodstock 50 fest
Jay-Z will no longer perform at the 50th celebration event of Woodstock (Stephen Lovekin)
New York (AFP) – Rap mogul Jay-Z has pulled out of an August bash commemorating Woodstock’s 50th anniversary, a source said Friday, the latest blow to hit organizers after months of setbacks.
Speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity a source close to the matter said Jay-Z, arguably the top act, would no longer bring down the curtain on the festival that reportedly will now be held in Maryland on a smaller scale, instead of upstate New York where the 1969 blow-out took place.
Rocker John Fogerty — who played the original weekend of peace, love and music with his band Creedence Clearwater Revival — said he would be returning there to mark the anniversary but would not perform at the Maryland commemoration.
This is despite his having appeared alongside promoter Michael Lang in March to announce the Woodstock 50 line-up, where he was featured.
“John Fogerty knows where he will be for the anniversary weekend of Woodstock. At only one site… At the original one — the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts,” the artist’s team said in a statement obtained by AFP.
The August 16-18 Bethel Woods celebration — marking the original festival that saw hundreds of thousands descend on a dairy farm to see Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and other icons in the pouring rain — will feature sets from Ringo Starr, Santana and Fogerty.
Just weeks after Lang — who was behind the original weekend — unveiled the Woodstock 50 line-up, the festival’s lead financier announced its cancellation, citing production difficulties.
Festival organizers insisted the show would go on, but hit hurdle after hurdle, including the withdrawal of the planned venue at Watkins Glen, New York. The artists’ contracts were linked to that original venue.
Other towns in upstate New York denied permit applications for the event, until Thursday when The New York Times and Bloomberg reported that the fest, also slated for August 16-18, would be held at the Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland.
Organizers have not responded to AFP requests for comment regarding the new location, which has a capacity of just 19,000, a far cry from the 100,000 people Woodstock 50 had once anticipated to descend over the three-day weekend.
Disclaimer: Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Source: AFP.