Rock Festival in wisconsin - 70s?

I have ticket stubs from many WI concerts and a few festivals 1971 thru 74, including Iola and the “Backwoods Bash” in Colby on 8/21/71, which featured Ted and the A.D’s. There certainly was a looser and more innocent vibe back then. Good times as a teenager.

I was there and the only band i remember were the grateful dead. It was in iola in june of 1970

My email is eunicepunice@aol.com i wanted to copy and paste the poster from that festival you are inquiring about , but i can’t seem to do it. Email me and i can email you the copy.

Among the groups performing at this summer concert (~45,000) were Mason Proffit, Buffy Sainte Marie, Crow, Brownsville Station, the Stooges, Melanie, Paul Butterfield, and Ted Nugent and the Amboy Dukes. Nugent and his group played just at dusk and were monsters!

Fun times … except for the hassles created by several armed biker types.

MacxQ

The Rock Festival in "70 ( Probably Late May) was definetly in Iola Wi. and there was a big hill that everybody sat on with the stage at the bottom , amphitheatre style, au natural. It was a really crazy festival, music genres ranged greatly but there was a lot of Blues - Rock Some Psychedelia ( or should I say Pscho). I honestly don’t think Buffy St. Marie was there but there were a lot of drugs and a lot of weird shit going on. Hippies , Stoned Cold Druggies, Bikers. Not a great mix. The sight was beautiful though and room for camping. Sorry I can’t help with a Band List

mason profitt… ides of march & many more

The 70s were a long time ago, man.

For that matter, so was the OP.
mmm

I love this thread. It must hold a zombification record for number of times revived by new posters who signed up to comment on it.

HAs anyone seen an original t shirt from the festival?

Yes, i was there ! Iola rock festival june 26, and 27 th 1970. The amboy dukes did play, and crow from minnesota known for their song “evil woman” , canned heat played also. I was doing a boogie with a bunch of people in front of the band to “going up the country”

ok, this is wrong, this was poynette rock festival, grateful dead played all day sunday

OP here!

How cool that this discussion is still going on. From the posts I can conclude that it was Iola in June.
How the heck did we survive our youth?

Wow, I live just outside Poynette and hear about that show from some of the long time residents although I wasn’t there. In 1970 I lived in a small village (population 94) in Indiana but on August 24 was visiting my grandparents in Madison and heard the Sterling Hall blast. It easy for me to remember, it was my 15th birthday. The next spring the family moved to a small village west of Madison.
That move was the best thing that could of happened for a 15 year old that was into music. The shows I was able to see in Madison in 71 to 74 where fantastic. It was the start of a very long list of shows I’ve been able to see over the years all over the country. One of the first was the James Gang as the headliner with Five Man Electrical Band and an opening act that no one had ever heard of before, the Eagles.
I was asked by a nephew a couple years ago who all I’ve seen over the years. For three days another show would work it’s way through the haze of the years and dead brain cells. Great memories from reading this thread.

Bumping this thread because there is a new article about the festival in Iola and apparently there is some video of it up on youtube.
http://www.thecitypages.com/news-opinion/wisconsin’s-woodstock/?fbclid=IwAR2-YPhje_OlDbUmnNARjXd0Z5HauhZ6bV_g0kNYinogoS2hl_Keu2wiTaA

The Wisconsin State Historical Society posted this today: Wisconsin Historical Society

8m ·

Sound Storm was Wisconsin’s first outdoor rock festival, and featured
Grateful Dead
, Crow, Illinois Speed Press, Rotary Connection, Baby Huey & the Babysitters, and many other acts. It took place April 24-26, 1970 on the hillside farm of Irene York, outside the village of Poynette in Columbia County.

Were you there?

The driving force behind Sound Storm was Pete Obranovich, better known at the time as Pete Bobo, and his friends Sandy Nelson and Bob Pulling. Using the name Golden Freak Enterprises, Pete raised capital, signed three dozen bands, licensed vending and concession rights, hired a stage crew and sound engineers, and promoted Sound Storm coast to coast. Madison attorneys John Hanson, Roger Schnitzler and Jack Van Metre triumphed over local governments who were determined to block the festival.

About 30,000 people attended Sound Storm, the majority sneaking in through the woods without paying. The Columbia County sheriff, seeing his officers exponentially outnumbered by hippies and bikers, decided to ignore misdemeanors such as nudity and drug use. Only a handful of injuries or arrests were reported.

Learn more: https://wihist.org/3enwf8r