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THE ROAMIN’ TATTLER !~*~ A Guide to the Happening Local Events and the Eventful Local Happenings ~*~! ________________________
Joel Peterson Editor-in-Chief
—————————————- ———————————————
A Villa Roma Publication Always Free
Continued on page 3
The Museum at Bethel Woods April 30 - September 3,
7 days a week 10 am - 7 pm. The Max exhibit is in-
cluded with general museum admission ($15 adults,
$13 seniors, $11 youth 8 - 17, $6 Children 3-7, chil-
dren under 3 free). Special exhibition only: $5
Peter Max: Early Paintings
Remember:
When they ask
you where you heard it,
tell ‘em “I read it in
The Tattler!”
THE LONG ROAD BACK TO THE GARDEN: THE FORGOTTEN ROCK’N’ROLL HISTORY OF SULLIVAN COUNTY
Issue 4
Special Double Summer Issue August 2018
1
Mention the name Woodstock, and people the world over will wax rhapsodic about three blissful days of peace, love
and music. Visions of half a million souls in communion, frolicking in muddy but bucolic pastures and turning on to endless
electric guitar solos will swim through their minds. For one long weekend in August of 1969, Sullivan County New York was at
the center of the burgeoning rock music scene. In an era of festivals, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, billed as an Aquarian
Exposition, and held in White Lake New York, would stand above all the others. It would become synonymous with such gath-
erings. There were even rumors at the time that Jimi Hendrix was living in the town of Liberty NY (he wasn’t - he’d rented a
house in Boiceville in nearby Ulster county to rehearse for the festival with his new band Gypsy Sun and Rainbows). Surely
Sullivan County was well on it’s way to becoming a musical Mecca for the rock and roll faithful. And then...silence...for years
and years.
So shaken were local townsfolk by the event, which saw every shelf in the county stripped of food, drink, and various
sundries, that a strong negative backlash in most municipalities was the ubiquitous sentiment on a near countywide level. Many
considered it such an unmitigated disaster that they were in no hurry to see repeated. There would be occasional area concerts,
most notably a stellar performance by the original Allman Brothers Band in April of 1970 at Sullivan County Community Col-
lege, a venue that would become more accustomed to hosting acoustic singer/songwriters like Harry Chapin and David Brom-
berg in later years. In the early 70’s, then SCCC student Gene Simmons, and his future KISS bandmate Paul Stanley, would play
one of their earliest dates together at the Rivoli Theatre in South Fallsburg, under the moniker Wicked Lester. Around the same
time, the Monticello Raceway presented “Rock-n-Racing” nights, featuring groups like Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons and
the Ike and Tina Turner Revue. The area hotels would occasionally book acts like the Monkees, Ringo Starr, and Little Richard.
The notion of holding a festival to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Woodstock was in the air in 1979. Two separate
festivals were announced, each to be held in Sullivan County. The first, “The Second Gathering,” was publicized with little men-
tion of acts, but promising a 72 hour concert, a film, a soundtrack on CBS records, two books, magazine specials, and memora-
bilia galore. A quarter of a million dollars was spent trying to secure a site. Unfortunately the idea of a festival still left a sour
taste in the mouths of town board members and county legislators. Inevitably, the plans fell through. At the same time, a second
summer festival dubbed “The Hamlet of Hurleyville” was announced. This one again secured film and album rights through
major production companies. Big name acts of the day were slated to play the three day show. A $37.50 ticket would buy a
weekend of Rod Stewart, Joni Mitchell, the Beach Boys, Bob Seger, REO Speedwagon, Cheap Trick, Hall and Oates, Foghat
and The Village People. Once again, despite the best laid plans, with soft ticket sales and logistical problems, the weekend con-
cert was cancelled. Ultimately, a “Woodstock ‘79” show, featuring a handful of veterans from the original festival, was held in
New York City’s Madison Square Garden.
Two outdoor concert facilities were opened in Sullivan County in the ensuing years. Music Mountain began holding
concerts in South Fallsburg in the early eighties. The shows at that venue would feature, among others, Woodstock alumni
Santana & Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Jerry Garcia with their respective solo bands. The Garcia Band would take
the opening slot that day. Jerry would take advantage of his rare visit to the western Catskills by spending the early evening
touring and exploring the grand ballrooms of the various old hotels of the “Borscht Belt.” Unfortunately, after two summer sea-
sons (1981 & 1982), Music Mountain was closed for good.
Ten years later, during the summer of 1990, famed concert promoter Bill Graham and his son David partnered with a
self styled hippie dude ranch located in Parksville New York. Graham had been involved in the production of the 1969 Wood-
stock festival. He brought then new band Santana, whom he managed, with him from San Francisco for the festival, where they
electrified the audience with their blistering performance. For two years, Arrowhead Ranch hosted concerts with quality acts like
Ziggy Marley & The Melody Makers, The Band (featuring Billy Preston), and future superstar group Phish. The venue would
become known as the birthplace of the jam band scene. Members of Blues Traveler, Spin Doctors, Widespread Panic and others
would first meet while playing the ranch, where they conceived the idea of joining together for the perennial travelling
H.O.R.D.E. festival in the 1990’s. Bill Graham, who had his first jobs in the Catskills busing tables in the dining rooms at
Grossinger’s and the Concord hotel, tragically perished in a helicopter crash in October of 1991,effectively ending the summer
concerts in Parksville (note: Arrowhead Ranch has recently reopened, and will be hosting concerts again in 2019).
Some smaller venues in Sullivan County continued to provide an outlet for live music: The Pursuit of Happiness in
Liberty NY presented acts with a 1960’s vibe, a latter day version of the Mamas and Papas among them. Callicoon’s Western
Hotel had the occasional show in their historic ballroom, Harmonie Hall. Original Woodstock performer Richie Havens played
Harmonie Hall, as did The Band’s Rick Danko. In the meantime, the original 1969 concert site continued to languish, despite
people continuing to show up every August anniversary weekend. In 1989, a crowd 20,000 strong appeared during a lunar
eclipse. A stage was quickly erected. Acts both amateur and professional (Savoy Brown) showed up and played for free. Jimi
Hendrix’ father Al, and Wavy Gravy acted as masters of ceremony. Even scare tactics by local property owners such as trenches
around the field and mountains of chicken manure on Hurd Road couldn’t keep the nostalgic sightseers away.
Events Calendar
LOCAL
139th Annual
www.grahamsvillefair.com Aug. 17th - 19th
Fair Food!
GRAHAMSVILLE LITTLE WORLD’S FAIR
Rides!
Carnival Midway!
Livestock Exhibits!
Live Music & Entertainment!
Games!
Vendors!
Demonstrations!
Tug of
War!
Tractors!
5th ANNUAL BAGEL FESTIVAL
Sunday, August 12, Broadway
Monticello, New York
“The BAGEL CAPITAL” 9:00 AM until 4:00 PM - FREE!
Vendors! Crafts! Food! Car Show! ...and BAGELS! Bagel Triathalon! Forestburgh Playhouse! Live Music from Nashville and Shades! FUN For the whole family!
MOZART
THE MAGIC FLUTE (Performed in English)
August 18th, 19th, 25th & 26th
Tusten Theater, Narrowsburg NY More Information: www.delawarevalleyopera.com
Delaware Valley Opera Presents
The Callicoon Theater Presents Disney’s
Christopher Robin
Friday August 3 - Thursday August 16 Fri. 7:30, Sat. & Sun. 2 & 7:30, Mon., Wed., Thurs. 7:30. Closed Tuesday
Adults: $10 Mondays & Matinees Adults: $8 Children $7
Rated PG
2
CURVEBALL WARM-UP Aug. 16 6:00 pm Arrowhead Ranch
EILEN JEWELL & HER BAND
Western Hotel, Callicoon NY Sunday August 19, 4:00 - 10:00 pm
Just back from a successful tour of Australia and New Zealand!
Community Concert Calendar
Special Guest CLIFF WESTFALL
ONE NIGHT
ONLY!
461 Cooley Rd. Parksville NY
A Pre-game warm up festival before Phish’s three day CURVEBALL festival:
~ Watkins Glen NY, Aug 17 - 19 ~
Featuring Creamery
Station
The
Walk ~A~ Bout MiZ
With Refreshments from the Catskill Brewery!
In 1994, yet another festival was announced, and plans were made to hold it on the original festival site. This one
would feature Richie Havens, Judy Collins, Iron Butterfly, Sha Na Na, and a rather poorly received lineup of Fleetwood Mac
featuring Dave Mason and Bekka Bramlett. Ticket sales were slow, despite promoter Sid Bernstein’s efforts. The concert was
cancelled, and a Woodstock ’94 concert featuring the biggest names in the music business drew over half a million people to
Winston Farm in the town of Saugerties in neighboring Ulster County, as yet another opportunity for Sullivan County was lost.
Still, Leslie West and Mountain arrived on the original Woodstock site, and played for free to the large crowd that showed up.
For years the legacy of the Woodstock Nation kept it’s hold on the western Catskills, thanks to Roy Howard and Jeryl Abram-
son. The couple owned the original Yasgur farm house and property, that had once belonged to Max Yasgur, the farmer whose
alfalfa field provided the original 1969 concert site. Every August for years, they hosted hundreds, sometimes thousands, of
campers who partied and rocked out to all manner of bands. Local acts often played as did well known performers like Melanie,
Country Joe McDonald and evergreen jam band favorites Max Creek.
Finally, in 1998, Cablevision billionaire Alan Gerry, at the urging of his daughter, purchased the original Woodstock
site and surrounding properties with the idea of preserving the image, ideals, music and, of course, the land to which the Wood-
stock Nation had given birth nearly thirty years earlier. A three day festival was immediately announced. This time the show,
“A Day in the Garden,” went off without a hitch. Donovan, Ten Years After, Stevie Nicks, Lou Reed, Joni Mitchell, Pete
Townshend, and many more acts contributed to a very special event indeed on the original field. The Following year, original
Woodstock performers David Crosby, Johnny Winter, Rick Danko, and others performed on the same spot for the 30th anniver-
sary of the 1969 event. Both years the shows drew large, peaceful crowds.
Fast forward ten years: the non profit Gerry Foundation has constructed the beautiful Bethel Woods Performing Arts
Center, at 200 Hurd Road, just near the original Woodstock Festival field. The field is kept pristine and immaculate, and a
monument to the original 1969 concert stands there today. There is an interactive museum that focuses on the decade of the
1960’s as well as an intimate indoor performance space. The first show in 2006 at the new state of the art amphitheater
(capacity 15,000) featured the New York Philharmonic. They encored, appropriately enough, with an orchestral reading of Jimi
Hendrix’ Purple Haze. In August 2009, the Bethel Woods Music Festival celebrated the 40th anniversary of Woodstock. Un-
fortunately, some original 1969 performers who played that 2009 show, namely Jefferson Airplane’s Paul Kantner, The Band’s
Levon Helm, and Richie Havens, who played the day before the BWMF, are no longer with us.
REEL HARMONY FESTIVAL SAturday aUGUST 18TH, roscoe brewing company
All original performances by singers and songwriters all day long!
Musical instruments, paintings, crafts, foods & beverages for sale!
12:00 Pm ~ 8:00 pm 45 rockland rd., roscoe, ny
Long Road Back continued from page 1
continued on page 4
3
www.grahamsvillefair.com Aug. 17th - 19th Now, forty nine years after the original concert that put Sullivan County on the
rock and roll roadmap, the fiftieth anniversary of the event looms on the horizon. Bethel
Woods and the surrounding fields have been added to the National Register of Historic
Places. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has announced state funding to the tune of
$690,000 to improve infrastructure, as the county readies itself for what is planned as a
three day festival (and a year long celebration). Presumably, the anniversary weekend con-
certs will be held on the original lawn, although specifics of the event have yet to be an-
nounced, including availability of camping, and a roster of performers.
Whatever the lineup, it’s nearly certain it will be a mix of acts from different eras,
as only a precious few from the original Woodstock Festival are still performing today. A
handful such as Arlo Guthrie, Melanie, Joan Baez and Country Joe may pepper the bill
with their presence. Groups like Canned Heat, Mountain and Sha Na Na are still perform-
ing under their original names. An educated guess would point to four enormously popular
bands still capable of performing today. Any one of them would be more than able to an-
chor the prime-time slots during the August anniversary weekend next year.
The first is Santana. They have played Bethel Woods twice to rapturous reviews and sold
out crowds. They have recently reformed the original Santana Band featuring their classic
era lineup of the late 60’s and early 70’s to great commercial and critical acclaim. The sec-
ond possible headliners are The Who. Even as a duo (guitarist/songwriter Pete Townshend
& vocalist Roger Daltrey featuring a strong backing band), they still unleash enormous
power in concert, and retain a rabid popularity among their fan base. Another possibility
are Dead & Company, featuring former members of the Grateful Dead and the Allman
Brothers Band along with guitarist/vocalist John Mayer. The band is currently playing at
peak form, and are selling out stadiums and arenas across the country (bassist Phil Lesh and
his band are also a strong possibility to represent the Grateful Dead, and could easily be a
huge draw on any given night). The fourth, and perhaps most intriguing alternative, is a
reformation of super group Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Despite infighting - Graham
Nash and Neil Young in particular have issues, to say the least, with David Crosby - and
familiarity having bred contempt, the members have stated that the current state of the
political landscape in America could lead to them burying the hatchet and heading back out
on the road, or at least reforming for some one-off shows. Anyone who has followed their
particular musical soap opera in the past will understand that this is not outside the realm of
possibility, as members breaking up and reforming in any and all various configurations
seems at times to add fuel to the fire of their collective creative muse.
One thing is certain: There’s something happening here. What it is ain’t exactly
clear...yet...but it will be, and soon. Next year expect every hotel room in the county to be
booked. Expect heavy traffic. Expect the shelves of every store in the county to be cleared
of all their goods. Maybe even expect the traditional summer rain storm...and of course
expect the residents of Sullivan County to expect you, with open arms...and to welcome
you home with pride in their musical history, and satisfaction in their legacy of their having
hosted the festival of festivals in their very own back yard fifty long years ago.
~ The Editor
Visitors to Sullivan County have
always had a robust relationship
with the Delaware River. They
enjoy all of the activities that the
river affords the outdoor lifestyle
of those who love her.
The road less travelled, however,
leads those with a taste for explora-
tion to the upper western corner of
Sullivan County and to the wild
frontiers of Fremont Township.
There, their wanderlust will be
satisfied with the unspoiled beauty
that is the 497 acres of woodland
of Crystal Lake Wild Forest. At the
heart of this state protected park is
the 32 acre lake that is pure, clean,
and crystal clear: perfect for swim-
ming, canoeing and fishing. Nearly
one and a half miles of the lake’s
shoreline is incorporated into a
well marked hiking trail.
The surrounding area is loaded
with blueberry bushes, wild leeks
and Jack-in-the-pulpits. The
sprawling, wooded habitat is also
home to all manner of animals.
Each Spring the hundreds of enor-
mous bullfrog tadpoles that swim
in the shallows are a sight to be-
hold!
Crystal Lake Parking Lot: From
Route 97, take County Road 94
(becomes 93) to County Road 96
(Tennanah Lake Road) to Crystal
Lake Road, the entrance to the
property, lake and parking area.
(41.869924°N, 75.019553°W)
EXPLORE CRYSTAL LAKE
Long Road Back continued from page 3
Annual Jeffersonville
Fire House
Book Sale Thurs, Fri, Sat,
Aug. 9th, 10th, 11th
Library
Rocks! Jeffersonville Library:
August 8th
Lets Have a Parade!
10:30am - 11:30am
Storycup Theater
1:00pm - 2:00pm
Jeffersonville
Branch Library - WSPL
August 25th
Summer Storytime Series
10:30am - 11:30am
4
DO YOU LOVE ANIMALS? Stop by the Villa Roma farm’s stables (on the hill above the
Monaco Speedway go kart track) and visit our petting zoo! Ethel and
Lucy, the two gregarious goats will greet you, as will a friendly donkey,
and an adorable miniature horse.
Say hello to Hadley the Horsemeister while you’re there, and
book a ride on Levi, Sundance or one of the other beautiful horses ($45
for a fifty minute guided trail ride for those over ten years of age, $10
ten minute pony rides for ages 5-10). Easier yet, stop by or call the Villa
Roma’s Service Desk (x7071), and let one of the courteous concierges
set up rides for you, your family, or group. Five horses are available on
most days, with multiple riding times from which to choose. Rides can
be booked at any time, day or night for the following day, and during
the morning for the same day.
Recommended