Celebration at Big Sur

Celebration at Big Sur (also known simply as Celebration) is a film of the 1969 Big Sur Folk Festival in Big Sur, California, featuring Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell and others.

Celebration at Big Sur
Directed byBaird Bryant
Johanna Demetrakas
Produced byTed Mann
Carl Gottlieb
CinematographyBaird Bryant
Johanna Demetrakas
Gary Weis
Peter Smokler
Joan Churchill[1]
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • 1971 (1971)
Running time
82 minutes[2]
LanguageEnglish

Released in 1971, the film was directed by Baird Bryant and Johanna Demetrakas. A young Gary Weis was among the cinematographers; other members of the camera and sound crew also went on to become famous in their fields, including Peter Smokler, Peter Pilafian, and Joan Churchill. The film was released in 2011 as a Region 1 DVD.

The festival, one in an annual series of concerts held on the grounds of the Esalen Institute in Big Sur from 1964 to 1971, was held on the weekend of September 13–14, 1969,[3] only one month after the famous and considerably larger Woodstock Music & Art Fair, which is referred to repeatedly. Celebration at Big Sur did not receive the same critical acclaim as the 1970 Woodstock film.[4]

Performances edit

About 10–15,000 people camped out for three miles up and down Highway One for the two-day festival. The event audience was so well-mannered that those without the $4.00 admission price listened from the highway, even though there was no gate.[5] The artists performed on a low stage behind a pool, backed by the Pacific Ocean. Musical performances dominate the film, with footage of surrounding occurrences interspersed into the music sequences.

Joan Baez edit

Baez was a Big Sur-festival regular whose folk music workshop at Esalen in 1965 helped attract pop/rock acts later to the festival.[6][clarification needed] She is featured prominently throughout the film. Celebration begins with Baez opening the festival with Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" and closes with her leading a large crowd in singing "Oh Happy Day" in the event's finale. She also sings two of her own compositions, "A Song for David" and "Sweet Sir Galahad", during the course of the film.

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young edit

The film includes early footage of Neil Young,[7] who had recently appeared at Woodstock with Crosby, Stills & Nash, but refused to be filmed. Here, fortified by session drummer Dallas Taylor and Motown bassist Greg Reeves, CSNY perform Young's "Sea of Madness" and "Down by the River". Perhaps the film's most famous scene is an altercation between Stephen Stills and a heckler.[8]

Joni Mitchell edit

Mitchell, who did not appear at the Woodstock Festival, performs the song "Woodstock" prior to any album release, first attempting to teach the audience to sing the melodically complicated refrain. Ironically, Mitchell would later develop a well-known distaste for festival gigs, but in this performance her enthusiasm is evident. Mitchell talks about having spotted whales off the coast, and is generally seen with then-boyfriend Graham Nash of CSNY. She also sings "Get Together" with members of Crosby, Stills & Nash in a seemingly impromptu jam.

Although Mitchell had made earlier televised appearances, this may be her earliest filmed performance.[9]

Others edit

In addition to CSNY, Baez and Mitchell, other performers featured in Celebration included John Sebastian, Dorothy Combs Morrison and The Combs Sisters, Mimi Fariña, Carol Ann Cisneros, Julie Payne, Chris Ethridge and The Struggle Mountain Resistance Band.[4]

While Ruthann Friedman, The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Incredible String Band performed at this event,[3][10] they do not appear in the film.

In the opening scene the filmmakers attempt to interview local patrol police, but fail to get permission.

Songs performed edit

  1. "I Shall Be Released" – Joan Baez
  2. "Mobile Line" – John Sebastian with Stephen Stills
    • offstage
  3. "Song for David" – Joan Baez
    • shown rehearsing offstage, with stage performance of same song cut in
  4. "All of God's Children Got Soul" – Dorothy Combs Morrison and the Combs Sisters
  5. "Sea of Madness" – CSNY
  6. "4 + 20" – Stephen Stills solo performance
    • Stephen Stills introduces this number discussing his interaction with a heckler in the previous scene
  7. "Get Together" – Joni Mitchell with Crosby, Stills & Nash and John Sebastian
  8. "Put a Little Love in Your Heart" – Dorothy Combs Morrison and the Combs Sisters
    • incomplete
    • non-musical footage of nude sauna, audience happenings
  9. "Swing Down Sweet Chariot" – various
    • offstage, incomplete
  10. "Rainbows All Over Yours Blues" – John Sebastian
  11. "Woodstock" – Joni Mitchell (playing piano)
    • non-musical footage of self-identified "freak" with Woodstock-themed bus
  12. "Red-Eye Express" – John Sebastian with Stephen Stills
  13. "Changes" – Mimi Fariña and Julie Payne with Stephen Stills
    • incomplete
  14. "Malagueña Salerosa" – Carol Ann Cisneros
  15. "Rise, Shine, and Give God the Glory" – The Struggle Mountain Resistance Band
    • incomplete
  16. "Down By the River" – CSNY
    • incomplete, over 7 minutes
    • folk musician improvising outside the festival
  17. "Sweet Sir Galahad" – Joan Baez
  18. "Oh Happy Day" – Dorothy Combs Morrison and the Combs Sisters with Joan Baez
    • opens with Joan Baez rehearsing same number with Dorothy Combs Morrison

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Celebration at Big Sur (1970)". Hollywood.com. Hollywood Media Corp. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  2. ^ "Overview for Celebration at Big Sur (1971)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved April 10, 2008.Turner Classic Movies lists this run time as 80, 82 or 85 minutes.
  3. ^ a b Hopkins, Jerry (October 18, 1969). "Big Sur". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on October 6, 2010. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  4. ^ a b Greenspun, Roger (April 10, 1971). "Celebration at Big Sur (1971)". The New York Times. Retrieved April 9, 2008. The movie making ... ranges from the obligatory coy to the needlessly reverent.
  5. ^ Hopkins, Jerry (October 18, 1969). "Big Sur". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  6. ^ "Chronology". The Joan Baez Web Pages. Joan C. Baez/Diamonds & Rust Productions. Archived from the original on 2016-08-17. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  7. ^ "Neil Young Biography (1945-)". Film Reference. NetIndustries. Retrieved April 10, 2008. This is the earliest listed film appearance by Young.
  8. ^ Unterberger, Richie. "Big Sur Folk Festival September '69". Allmusic. Macrovision Corporation. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  9. ^ Irvin, Les; et al. "Biography: 1968-1970 Emerging Popular Artist". JoniMitchell.com. Archived from the original on December 13, 2007. Retrieved April 10, 2008. N.B.: fan site.
  10. ^ Cooke, Douglas. "The Big Sur Folk Festival, 1964-1971". The Richard & Mimi Fariña Fan Site. Retrieved April 9, 2008.

External links edit