Threading his way back and forth from the stage, through a sea of happy audience members, Jason Lauré photographed the communal life that was an essential part of the phenomenon that was Woodstock. Never intrusive, yet working close-up, he managed to capture these innocent moments in the pond and in the woods with the same compassion and intimacy he brought to his coverage of all the crucial events of the era. After Woodstock, he photographed such legends as Jimi Hendrix, Tina Turner, and Jim Morrison of the Doors.
Woodstock 1969 gives the reader an appreciation of the lasting impact of the festival, showing the way it changed the lives of all who experienced it. It served as the high point of the counterculture that started in earnest in the Summer of Love, and also as a leading influence in the decades that followed. The book concludes with a look at Woodstock's lasting legacy, from Greenwich Village and the rock scene of the Fillmore East to the establishment of Earth Day and the burgeoning environmental movement.
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"Lauré and Blauer paint an evocative image of the 1960s in all its creative, dynamic, and messy glory. From Greenwich Village to the Haight Max Yasgur's farm to Bill Graham's Fillmore East, they capture the cultural churn of a time and place when the world was begin transformed, minds were being expanded, and history was being made." ?Andrew Berman , Executive Director, Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation
"These pictures and words beautifully capture and evoke the most poignant moments of what Hunter S. Thompson called 'America's High-Water Mark.' Lauré traversed America in the mid and late 1960s as the epitome of the swash-buckling photojournalist, capturing the most seminal moments of the counterculture and the music that defined it. He and Blauer offer us a very special gift, a visual and poetic permanent record of the music, people, and events that defined an era." ? Gabrial Brodbar , Executive Director of the NYU Social Entrepreneurship Program and Founder of Catskill Carriage
"Jason Lauré and Ettagale Blauer, have, with dramatic clarity, put together the complete visual experience of the most important event of the Sixties, Woodstock. This concise, thoughtful collection of photos and prose allows us to see and feel how this organic movement grew. Via these intimate images, the essence of this indomitable movement is captured and crystalized like never before. Their images and first-hand accounts have taken us back in riveting detail and allowed the reader to experience this incredible psychedelic movement as true participants. No drugs needed!" ?Frank Meo , Curator, thephotocloser.com