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Woodstock 94 is a two-disc set documenting the Woodstock 1994 festival. It was released during November 1994, nearly three months after the event took place. The album was released on A&M Records. The set features 27 performing artists, one song per artist.
Woodstock '94 was an American music festival held in 1994 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the original Woodstock festival of 1969. [1] [2] It was promoted as "2 More Days of Peace and Music". The poster used to promote the first concert was revised to feature two catbirds perched on the neck of an electric guitar, instead of the original ...
Nine Inch Nails is an American industrial rock band founded in 1988 by Trent Reznor in Cleveland, Ohio.The band's live performances contrast with its in-studio counterpart; although Reznor is in complete creative control of Nine Inch Nails in-studio, he typically assembles groups of backing musicians to interpret songs for live performances.
Nine Inch Nails concluded the tour on August 20 in Orlando. [7] Their slot on the bill was filled by Violent Femmes or Fishbone for the remainder of the tour. For the final show in Enumclaw, WA, along with NIN, Living Colour and Butthole Surfers did not play either. Both Violent Femmes and Fishbone performed instead.
Woodstock 1994 is a live album by the American rock band Green Day. [1] The album was released specially through Record Store Day on April 13, 2019, in honor of the 50th anniversary of Woodstock and the 25th anniversary of the now-famous set the band played at Woodstock '94. This was the first live Green Day album to feature the entire setlist.
The Sisters of Glory was an ad hoc group led by Mavis Staples that brought gospel to Woodstock '94. On a soggy Sunday in Saugerties, a Woodstock '94 gospel performance made for a happy day Skip to ...
On release, The Downward Spiral defied expectations: going on to sell 5 million copies, launching Nine Inch Nails onto the extended year-long Self-Destruct Tour, and hitting a peak in popular ...
But the attempt failed, and it’s not just Woodstock 94 that proves it (let alone the nü-metal Apocalypse Now of Woodstock 99). And then ’60s-redux failed (a bit like the ‘60s itself), we ...