This documentary captures performances, interviews, and conversations from the 1963-1966 Newport Folk Festivals.This documentary captures performances, interviews, and conversations from the 1963-1966 Newport Folk Festivals.This documentary captures performances, interviews, and conversations from the 1963-1966 Newport Folk Festivals.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Richard Farina
- Self
- (as Dick Farina)
The Freedom Singers
- Themselves
- (as Freedom Singers)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
9444
I had never seen this til I got a hold of this copy and love it... There are so many good artists here, who knew? The interviews are often hilarious and a few are pretty interesting. The bit with Joan Baez signing autographs and talking in a car shows that she was more than just another folk star, talking about "alternative" music and culture back in... 1964? The Odetta clip makes me want to dig up her records, the music is so compelling. Even Peter/Paul/Mary sound pretty damn good. I originally tracked this down just to see Dylan's electric performance, which turned out to be more electric than I expected - the guitarist churns out some pretty bitchen' licks - for 1965 this was hardcore! If you liked "Don't Look Back" you'd probably enjoy this. I hope this comes out on DVD with tons of extra footage sometime soon while I'm still alive! apple-o
Director Murray Lerner makes this black and white documentary of the Folk Music at Newport from 1963 to 1966, entwining interviews with the audiences that highlight the importance of the folk music and performances of artists like Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Peter,Paul and Mary, Donovan, Howlin' Wolf and Johnny Cash.
"Festival" is a testimony of magic moments of the 60's that will never happen again. Who could imagine in the present days an artist like Bob Dylan asking for a harmonica to the audience to play Mr.Tambourine Man; or Peter, Paul and Mary in trouble with the microphones; or Peter Yarrow changing the tune of his guitar while singing with Joan Baez; or the artists so close to the audience. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Festival"
"Festival" is a testimony of magic moments of the 60's that will never happen again. Who could imagine in the present days an artist like Bob Dylan asking for a harmonica to the audience to play Mr.Tambourine Man; or Peter, Paul and Mary in trouble with the microphones; or Peter Yarrow changing the tune of his guitar while singing with Joan Baez; or the artists so close to the audience. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "Festival"
Sometimes Stunning Encapsulation of the Newport Jazz Festivals of 1963-1966.
The Opening Scene is a Cultural Cornerstone.
It's a Fixed Camera with Hordes of Young and Old Folks Entering the Festival Grounds and is a "Snapshot" in Time that would be Imitated in the Pop-Culture Movements of "Monterey Pop" (1967) and then "Woodstock" (1969).
And Virtually Every Documentary Featuring a Music or Concert "Festival".
It is a Bona-Fide Classic.
Considering the Film and Audio Available at the Time, the Images and the Sound are Impressive.
Also Impressive is the way Murray Lerner Cross-Cuts between Performances and Patrons to Create a Unique and Unforgettable "You-Are-There" Experience.
You get to See a Young and Relatively "New" Bob Dylan and Joan Baez in a Fair Amount of Footage.
The Infamous Dylan "Plugging-In" to Electric sent Shock Waves through the Folk Movement as He Delivers a Searing Rendition of "Maggie's Farm".
If one was to Fault the Film...There is a Mysterious and Lengthy Amount of Peter, Paul, and Mary and Judy Collins Footage.
Some other Performers such as Johnny Cash, Barely Registers 3 minutes.
But Overall it is a Good Cross-Section of Acts that Stretch to Include Mike Bloomfield, Son House, Gospel Singers, Folk-Dancing and More.
A Must See Event that is Essential for Music Lovers and Pop-Culture Historians.
It's the One that Started it All and Did So in Fantastic Fashion.
The Opening Scene is a Cultural Cornerstone.
It's a Fixed Camera with Hordes of Young and Old Folks Entering the Festival Grounds and is a "Snapshot" in Time that would be Imitated in the Pop-Culture Movements of "Monterey Pop" (1967) and then "Woodstock" (1969).
And Virtually Every Documentary Featuring a Music or Concert "Festival".
It is a Bona-Fide Classic.
Considering the Film and Audio Available at the Time, the Images and the Sound are Impressive.
Also Impressive is the way Murray Lerner Cross-Cuts between Performances and Patrons to Create a Unique and Unforgettable "You-Are-There" Experience.
You get to See a Young and Relatively "New" Bob Dylan and Joan Baez in a Fair Amount of Footage.
The Infamous Dylan "Plugging-In" to Electric sent Shock Waves through the Folk Movement as He Delivers a Searing Rendition of "Maggie's Farm".
If one was to Fault the Film...There is a Mysterious and Lengthy Amount of Peter, Paul, and Mary and Judy Collins Footage.
Some other Performers such as Johnny Cash, Barely Registers 3 minutes.
But Overall it is a Good Cross-Section of Acts that Stretch to Include Mike Bloomfield, Son House, Gospel Singers, Folk-Dancing and More.
A Must See Event that is Essential for Music Lovers and Pop-Culture Historians.
It's the One that Started it All and Did So in Fantastic Fashion.
I saw this excellent film on television recently and was knocked out by a dance performance about halfway through. Four male-female pairs of dancers (The Blue Ridge Mountain Dancers) go through what I assume is traditional 19th-century (?) clog-dance figures to the music of a small acoustic band including Pete Seeger. The dancing is wonderfully rhythmic with lots of on-the-beat clog-stamping. It's wonderful to watch and listen to, and it looks great fun - the dancers and the musicians are consciously acting out some folk heritage, and pointing out the riches and the enjoyment to be found there ("Folks made their own entertainment then and I purely doubt that you and MTV can show me anything better!"). That's the Newport message, and these few minutes deliver it splendidly.
If you're a rabid fan of early to mid 1960's Folk Music, this is the documentary you have been waiting to see. Director Murry Lerner (who also directed an inspired documentary about the Isle Of Wight Festival of 1970) has crafted a well filmed document of four years of the Newport Folk Festival, between 1963 to 1966,including footage of Bob Dylan the first time he plugged in his brand new Stratocaster and played Maggie's Farm for an unsuspecting (and disturbed)audience. The film also makes good use of other Folk icons of the era (Joan Baez,Paul Butterfield,Son House,etc.). This black & white documentary was screened as an "art film", back in the day, and pretty much was forgotten by the end of the 60's, due to the popularity of psychedelic rock (which itself lead to progressive rock,etc.). Worth a watch if you're a fan of Dylan & the rest of the folk scene.
Did you know
- TriviaFirst of the theatrical documentaries on counter-culture music festivals, preceding Monterey Pop (1968) and Woodstock (1970).
- Crazy creditsThe end credits appear during the festival's grand finale where Pete Seeger leads an all-star performance of "Down by the Riverside".
- ConnectionsFeatured in American Masters: No Direction Home: Bob Dylan (2005)
- How long is Festival?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content