Category Archives: Woodstock Music and Art Fair

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Remembering and appreciating
February 7, 1949 – July 23, 1990

Bert Sommer and his music were more part of the 60s than is at first obvious. He wrote songs for the Vagrants who later morphed into Mountain.

Bert Sommer became a part of the pop successful Left Banke and sang lead on their “And Suddenly.”

He had a part in the west coast production of Hair. In fact his hair graced the Playbill cover.

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Artie Kornfeld

Artie Kornfeld, a Capital Records executive, and later one of the four organizers of the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, noticed Sommer’s songwriting and produced his first album, The Road To Travel for Capital.

And the connection with Kornfeld obviously helped get him an invitation to Woodstock.

Unfortunately, Bert Sommer never received one of that famous festival’s golden eggs, as Santana had for example.

Why he didn’t ride Woodstock’s coattails is likely due what label he recorded for and what label produced the Woodstock album. His was Capital. Its was Warner Brothers. And Bert Sommer did not make it onto the three-disc Woodstock album.

Neither did he appear in the movie.

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Woodstock

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CA-NPCq_Jd8

According to the Bertsommer.com siteArtie [Kornfeld] said “When Bert came up to perform at Woodstock, it was special because he was dear to me. I was a little nervous because I wanted him to do well. I was proud watching Bert. I got busy and went backstage and hung out to be closer to Bert and his band, which included Ira Stone (electric guitar), Charlie Bilello (bass), Ira’s wife Max…. When Bert finished his performance of Paul Simon’s “America” it was simply electrifying. Paul Simon later said that Bert’s rendition on record that I produced, was better than Simon & Garfunkel’s. I’ve been told that this performance was the only standing ovation at Woodstock. Shame on the powers that kept Bert out of the movie.

From the same site: Mr. Sommer settled in ­Albany, N.Y., where he played in local bands, his voice still strong, according to Mr. Kahn. Health failing, he died in June 1990, 12 days after a final performance in Troy, N.Y., about a two-and-a-half-hour drive north of Bethel. A year earlier, a ­special edition of Life magazine commemorating the 20th ­anniversary of the festival ­included a cropped photo of Mr. Stone and his wife Maxine. As if deemed irrelevant, Mr. Sommer was cut out of the picture.

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Ira Stone

In 2009, Ira Stone 2009 he gave an interview about his time there with Bert.

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Jesse Bert Sommers

In 2020, Something Else!  published an interview between Steve Elliott and Sommer’s son, Jesse Bert Sommers.

Elliott preceded the interview with this:

In the space of 10 years between 1967-77, singer-songwriter Bert Sommer released four studio albums, collaborated with the Left Banke and the Vagrants with Mountain’s Leslie West, performed in the first stage musical of Hair, appeared at Woodstock, and was part of Kaptain Kool and the Kongs on TV’s The Krofft Supershow for one season.

Sommer also continued to write, record, and perform music until his untimely death in 1990 at the age of 41. He was a phenomenally talented charismatic singer and songwriter, and was gone way too soon. I had the rare pleasure of talking with his son Jesse Bert Sommer for a Something Else! Sitdown focusing on father’s music and career.

By 2020 Rhino Records had included Bert Sommer’s complete Woodstock performance in its anniversary release. Asked about the release, Jessie Bert said, “It is a bittersweet accomplishment. To finally have the music and recognition be accessible to both new and old generations is great. My father not being around to enjoy it is not. In addition, the level of fame some rose to because of Woodstock and their inclusion in the film would have been a game changer for my father, and all his opportunities, fame, finances, offspring and his mark on music history. Who knows how far he may have reached if these songs had been included and enjoyed for the last half century? Nonetheless, I am glad it has been included by Rhino finally, and for all the efforts put forth by Andy Zax in the genesis of the true complete box set.”

Here is an observation by Zax about that performance:

Woodstock festival Bert Sommer

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield

Trumpet/flugelhorn
Blood Sweat and Tears
February 5, 1943
Happy birthday
Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield
Early Press Photo From Left To Right: Steve Katz, Dick Halligan, David Clayton-Thomas, Fred Lipsius, Bobby Colomby Jerry Hyman, Chuck Winfield, Jim Fielder, & Lew Soloff. (photo from: http://www.rdrop.com/users/rickert/bst-pg2.html)

 

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield

Dear Chuck Winfield,

You were born on February 5, 1943 in Monessen, PA.

You played trumpet and flugelhorn for Blood, Sweat and Tears and were with them at the Woodstock Music and Art Fair.

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield

Jazz professor

You taught music at the University of Maine, Augusta and may live in Maine. Your students liked you. One said in 2005:

Chuck is the****!!! Plus he likes my guitar playing, which helps…This guy has played on hit records, played at (the real)Woodstock, a master of trumpet….and STILL has enough time to be one of the nicest men you’ll meet…(wife is cute too)…A+ from me!

Another Said

Another said of the course you taught:

It was pretty decent. Great man. I found the class pretty boring, though I’m not really into music. Don’t ever ask him about his past as one of the members of Blood Sweat and Tears (it seemed as if he got upset at a student for asking about it).

And a third said:

Chuck is smart and has a great sense of humor, makes the class more interesting than it already is!!!

And in 2008 in response to a post on a trumpet board asking about your whereabouts, someone posted:

Being from Maine as a kid I hung a bit with Chuck. He really likes living in Maine and relaxing in the area. I’m not sure how much performing he’s doing but I do see him occasionally (every few years). That reminds me I need to drop him … a note.

But even with the infinite internet, I cannot find anything else about your current status.

Does anyone know?

Here is a picture of Blood Sweat and Tears horn section. You are the second from the right.

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield
The Blood, Sweat and Tears horn section: Fred Lipsius, Dave Bargeron, Chuck Winfield and Lew Soloff

 

Reference >>> zoominfo dot com

Blood Sweat Tears Chuck Winfield

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

or as we all knew simply her as…

Melanie

Kept a candle lit
February  3, 1947 – January 23, 2014

Melanie Safka was born and raised in the Astoria neighborhood of Queens, New York City.

She loved performing music from childhood and eventually, as so many others had, found herself in Greenwich Village and its folk scene.

She signed with Buddah Records and in 1968 released her first album, “Born to Be.” From it, she had the hit single Bobo’s Party. It was #1 on French charts.

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

Her name (just Melanie, of course) came to prominence after her Woodstock Music and Art Fair’s performance. The event inspired her to write  “Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)” because of the many lighter, matches, and candles the crowd there used during her nighttime set.

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka
“(When I heard about Woodstock) I very naively, I said “Wow. That sounds nice: three days of peace, love and music.” What I pictured was families laid out on their blankets, and it being in a big pasture, and being very laid back. Maybe some arts and crafts and maybe some pottery, and I could get some beads and stuff. That’s how I pictured it.” (from http://popcultureaddict.com/interviews/melanie/)
Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

Melanie performing “Birthday of the Sun” at Woodstock. This video was taken from a laser disk of “Woodstock: The Lost Performances”, which is now out of publication. In the closing credits, Melanie is listed as “Melanie Schekeryk” (her married name).

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

Even though Woodstock brought her a measure of fame, Melanie never became famous outside her large circle of loving fans. In 1976 she played at the Bottom Line in New York and New York Times music critic headline said: Melanie Is a Complete Delight at Bottom Line. The lead sentence stated that:  Melanie is now 29 years old, and she’s been around since before Woodstock. She has her fans, but she is hardly a big star; for most rock enthusiasts. (NYT article)

Melanie Ann Safka

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka

 She released dozens of albums and compilations and singles.

Her site talks about her performances this way: “An Evening with Melanie [was] an unforgettable night of songs and stories from the incredible career of the artist who became known as “The Female Bob Dylan”.  Accompanied by her son Beau-Jarred, a talented multi-instrumentalist and vocalist in his own right, the show [was] a musical journey from that momentous day in the summer of 1969, to the present.

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka
Melanie and her son Beau-Jarred

Kept the Dream Flowing

In July 2023, Keep the Dream Flowing, the anything-Woostock-related podcast, issued it’s interview with Melanie.

The conversation includes…

  • how she had run away to California before finishing high school
  • how just before Woodstock, she was in England with her husband working on a soundtrack
  • how her Mom picked her up at the airport
  • how she didn’t have any official credentials at Woodstock
  • that she thought she’d go on after Richie Havens
  • that she had an out-of-body experience as she got on stage at Woodstock
  • a year later at the cancelled Powder Ridge festival, she was the only performer to show up and still perform.

And much more.

Click on this link for it.

Just before her death she had been in the studio working on a new record of cover songs, “Second Hand Smoke,” for the Cleopatra label; it would have been her 32nd album.

Melanie
Melanie with Woodstock soundman Bill Hanley.

Reference >>> WoodsTALK

Reference>>>Variety magazine obituary

Singer Songwriter Melanie Ann Safka