Showing posts with label Various Artists - Northern California Folk-Rock Festival 1968. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Various Artists - Northern California Folk-Rock Festival 1968. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-19-1968, Part 2 - Country Joe and the Fish

This is the seventh and last album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features Country Joe and the Fish.

The first five of the albums I've posted from this festival took place on May 18, 1968. But this one, and the previous one, the Electric Flag set, took place on May 19th. That's why I'm calling this "Part 2" in the title, instead of "Part 7," because it's Part 2 of May 19th. 

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

Out of all the sets, this one has the most issues. The main reason is because it almost certainly is incomplete. According the schedule listed before the festival began, the bigger names of the musical acts were given 45 minutes to perform. That was true of Country Joe and the Fish. To be specific, they were to perform from 3:45 P.M. to 4:30, after the Electric Flag and before the Doors. All the other acts stuck to their time allotments, give or take five minutes. But this recording is only 24 minutes long. Furthermore, the last song here is cut off. 

My theory is whoever was taping this festival had to stop recording in the middle of this set. They could have run out of batteries or run out of tapes to record on. Such problems were common in those early days of bootleg taping, especially when the costs of tapes were much higher relatively speaking than they would be later. That would also explain why there's no recording of the Doors, even though they were one of the two headlining acts for the festival. 

In fact, a majority of the last song here, "Superbird," was missing. So I filled it out with another version taken from another bootleg that same year. And a chunk of "Masked Marauder" was missing too, causing me to make a similar fix. That's why those two songs have "[Edit]" in their titles. 

In conclusion, the recordings from this festival were borderline unlistenable to my ears, especially due to the high buzzing noise I previously mentioned a few times. But thanks to recent audio editing technology advances, and a lot of grunt work on my part, I hope this festival now can be enjoyed. It still has issues, and probably always will, because audio editing can only go so far. For instance, missing sets, banter, and parts of songs can't be restored. But, in my opinion, the more time passes, the more the music of the late 1960s is seen as historically important and special, so I thought it was worth it to make what music survives from this festival accessible once again.

This album is 24 minutes long. 

01 Rock and Soul Music (Country Joe & the Fish)
02 Love (Country Joe & the Fish)
03 Masked Marauder [Instrumental] [Edit] (Country Joe & the Fish)
04 Flying High (Country Joe & the Fish)
05 Superbird [Edit] (Country Joe & the Fish)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/u9xRtcGV

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/86uy6hqxylL3AOD/file

The cover photo of Country Joe McDonald is from this exact concert. The original was in black and white, but I colorized it with the help of the Kolorize program. It's strange to me that he was wearing a suit and tie, given he was a major countercultural "hippie" figure, but maybe he was trying to be ironic or something, I don't know.

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-19-1968, Part 1 - The Electric Flag

This is the sixth album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features the Electric Flag.

Up until now, all of the albums I've posted from this festival took place on May 18, 1968. But this one (and the last one I'll be posting) took place on May 19th. That's why I'm calling this "Part 1" in the title, instead of "Part 6," because it's Part 1 of May 19th.

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

In some previous write-ups I've done for this festival, I extensively quoted a review of this concert from the San Francisco Examiner. It didn't say much about the music, but the reviewer highlighted a few favorite performers. In addition to calling the Steve Miller Band "astonishing", it said "Mike Bloomfield and Buddy Miles in the Electric Flag, Jerry Garcia's guitar with the Grateful Dead, and the blues of Taj Mahal were also outstanding over the weekend." 

I couldn't find much written about this festival on the Internet. However, I found a now defunct website that had some commentary about this performance. It starts with an extensive quote by an unnamed person who attended the concert: 

"In the mid-afternoon onstage came the Electric Flag, a group I was aware of but had never heard. I didn't know what to expect as the bunch of them hemmed and hawed and fumbled around the stage for a bit, distractedly looking around and mumbling with each other. After a few minutes of this, [Nick Gravenites] came downstage and announced from a vocal mic, ‘Hey, Mike, if you can hear me, come on, man! It’s time to play. Drop the chick and get your ass up here ... now!’ Another minute went by [and] all of a sudden this lanky, frizzy-haired freak came running onstage, laughing and grabbing up his guitar. He then proceeded to burn his memory into my head forever."

Here's an archival link of the whole article: 

Electric Flag: An American Music Band 

This band was talented, but maybe too talented, because different creative members wanted to go in different directions. It turned out this was one of the band's last concerts. The band's stellar lead guitarist Mike Bloomfield quit the band about a week later. However, the band still had more concerts they had already booked. Bloomfield played a few more shows into early June before quitting for good. The rest of the band broke up not long after that.

As I've mentioned previously, I did extensive work trying to rescue these songs from poor sound quality. Two of the songs in this set had special problems, which is why they have "[Edit]" in their titles. In the original version, there was a short gap in the middle of "Hey Joe." I patched it up. And about the last minute of "Texas" was missing. So I filled that in with another version from a different bootleg.

 This album is 43 minutes long. 

01 Soul Searchin' [Instrumental] (Electric Flag)
02 Groovin' Is Easy (Electric Flag)
03 Hey Joe [Edit] (Electric Flag)
04 Sweet Home Chicago (Electric Flag)
05 Killin' Floor (Electric Flag)
06 Texas [Edit] (Electric Flag)
07 Another Country (Electric Flag)
08 Wine (Electric Flag)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Eqw8pS64

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/48IWSe0AjgAPFKL/file

The cover photo of Mike Bloomfield is from this exact concert. The original was in black and white, but I colorized it with the help of the Kolorize program.  

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-18-1968, Part 5 - Jefferson Airplane

This is the fifth album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features Jefferson Airplane.

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

Jefferson Airplane was the headlining act of the first day of the festival, and thus were given the most covered final set of the day. As you can see from the cover photo and text, the festival was scheduled to go each day from 11 A.M. to 6 P.M., and it seems the kept that schedule fairly well because it was still light outside at the time of this set. 

It makes sense that Jefferson Airplane was one of the headliners, along with the Doors being the headliners for the second day. Out of all the musical acts performing at the festival, those two had had the biggest commercial success at this point, by far. Jefferson Airplane had two Top Ten hits in the U.S. in 1967 with "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit." And the Doors went all the way to Number One with "Light My Fire" in 1967.

At this point in 1968, the band was already moving towards their fourth album, "Crown of Creation." It wouldn't be released until September. But they played two songs from it in this concert, "Greasy Heart" and "Star Track."

I mentioned previously that some of these recordings were bedeviled by a high buzzing noise. Unfortunately, this set suffers from that probably the most. I especially had a hard time with the song "Today." Since it's a quiet, acoustic song, the buzz is particularly noticeable. I tried my best to reduce that, but I couldn't completely get rid of it.   

This album is 46 minutes long. 

01 White Rabbit (Jefferson Airplane)
02 Plastic Fantastic Lover (Jefferson Airplane)
03 talk (Jefferson Airplane)
04 Watch Her Ride (Jefferson Airplane)
05 talk (Jefferson Airplane)
06 Today (Jefferson Airplane)
07 The Ballad of You and Me and Pooneil (Jefferson Airplane)
08 talk (Jefferson Airplane)
09 Greasy Heart (Jefferson Airplane)
10 Fat Angel (Jefferson Airplane)
11 Star Track (Jefferson Airplane)
12 Won't You Try - Saturday Afternoon (Jefferson Airplane)
13 Somebody to Love (Jefferson Airplane)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/qsCMiLYg

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/wEZI5zoxZcpJbE5/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. From right to left: Paul Kantner (he appears small and near the bottom of the image, on guitar), Marty Balin (holding the tambourine), Jorma Kaukonen (on lead guitar), and Grace Slick (holding maracas and wearing a pink top).

The original was in black and white. However, I was able to find some color images of the band at this concert. It's just that they had problems, so I preferred to use this one. But because I saw some color ones, I was able to get the colors correct. For instance, I was able to get the color of Slick's top correct, as well as other colors. 

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-18-1968, Part 4 - Big Brother & the Holding Company

This is the fourth album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features Big Brother and the Holding Company. The main attraction was the band's lead singer, Janis Joplin.

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

At the time of this concert, Big Brother and the Holding Company hadn't had much success with their records yet. They'd released a self-titled debut album in 1967, but it didn't fully capture their appeal and was largely ignored. But the positive buzz they were getting from their live appearances was tremendous. In August, they would release their second album, "Cheap Thrills." It would go to Number One in the U.S. and stay there for many weeks. The lead single, "Piece of My Heart," would also be a big hit.

I mentioned issues with the sound quality above. However, this set apparently was recorded by Jorma Kaukonen, lead guitarist of Jefferson Airplane. I think it does sound a little better than most of the other recordings from this festival. Presumably, he would have been able to position his tape recorder very close to the stage, and may have been able to use a better tape recorder as well. But it still was an audience boot, and suffered many of the same problems I described elsewhere. 

This album is 38 minutes long. 

01 Catch Me Daddy (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
02 Roadblock (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
03 talk (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
04 Summertime (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
05 talk (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
06 Coo Coo (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
07 Combination of the Two (Big Brother & the Holding)
08 Farewell Song (Big Brother & the Holding Company)
09 Piece of My Heart (Big Brother & the Holding Company)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/wx3ki6Bi

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/yKQ07qH6uudt1I7/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. I had to scrounge for photos for most of the other acts, but there were quite a few of Joplin, many of them in color. I went with one that showed other band members as well.

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-18-1968, Part 3 - The Grateful Dead

This is the third album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features the Grateful Dead.

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

At the time of this concert, the Grateful Dead were still in a formative stage. They had only released one studio album so far, the cleverly titled "The Grateful Dead," in 1967. Most of the songs performed in this short set were from the second side of the band's second album, "Anthem of the Sun." But that album wouldn't be released until a couple of months after this concert.

The Dead weren't originally scheduled to perform at this festival, so they didn't appear on the poster, or in articles announcing the festival from a few days earlier. However, they did get listed in the official program, as well as in an article that came out a day before the festival. 

In the two write-ups I've done for this festival so far, I extensively quoted a review of this concert from the San Francisco Examiner. It didn't say much about the music, but the reviewer highlighted a few favorite performers. In addition to calling the Steve Miller Band "astonishing", it said "Mike Bloomfield and Buddy Miles in the Electric Flag, Jerry Garcia's guitar with the Grateful Dead, and the blues of Taj Mahal were also outstanding over the weekend." 

This album is 39 minutes long. 

01 Alligator (Grateful Dead)
02 Drums [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)
03 Alligator [Reprise] [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)
04 Caution [Do Not Stop on Tracks] [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)
05 Feedback [Instrumental] (Grateful Dead)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/V37q7cce

alternate: 

https://bestfile.io/en/cLQFR8qFjNuyunf/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. That's Jerry Garcia in the middle, before he fully grew out his distinctive beard. And Ron "Pigpen" McKernan's head can be seen in a cowboy hat.

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-18-1968, Part 2 - The Steve Miller Band

This is the second album out of seven albums I'm posting from the 1968 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival. This set features the Steve Miller Band.

I said quite a lot in my write-up for the first album I posted from this festival, the Youngbloods set. I recommend you read that, because most of that applies to this set too. Most importantly, note that this is sourced from an audience bootleg, so the sound quality isn't up to my usual standards. I had to do a lot of work to fix all sorts of flaws. The final results sounds pretty decent for a 1968 concert, in my opinion, but you need to be tolerant about the flaws that still remain.

In the write-up I did for the Youngbloods set, I extensively quoted a concert review that appeared in the San Francisco Examiner. That review also had this to say: "The Steve Miller Band was astonishing on Saturday, playing the most involved guitar and bass lines I have ever heard outside a multitrack recording."

All the sound quality problems I mentioned in the write-up for the Youngbloods applies here too. In fact, this set probably sounds a bit worse than the other ones from the festival. As I mentioned there, I used the  MVSEP program to split the vocals from the instruments and then boost the vocals relative to the instruments. But for some of the songs that sounded the worst, like many in this set, the recording was too muddled for the program to be able to make that split. So in some cases I couldn't do all the fixes I wanted.

Two songs here had extra problems, meriting putting "[Edit]" in their titles. For "Steppin' Stone," there was a short section in the middle that was missing. I used a piece from another bootleg from this era to fill in about ten seconds. But there were some differences with that recording, so the edit is probably fairly obvious. Still, I felt that was better than having a gap there instead. A similar problem occurred with the song "Junior Saw It Happen." The last minute or so was missing. So I also filled that in from another bootleg. Once again, the edit wasn't ideal due to differences between the two versions, but again I'd rather have that than the song cutting out.

The bootleg version of this claimed it took place on the second day of the festival, not the first. But you can see in the newspaper review quote above that they played on the first day ("The Steve Miller Band was astonishing on Saturday"). That also jibes with the schedule posted before the festival started. According to that, the band was due to play after the Youngbloods and before the Grateful Dead. 

This album is 49 minutes long. 

01 talk (Steve Miller Band)
02 Living in the U.S.A. (Steve Miller Band)
03 Steppin' Stone [Edit] (Steve Miller Band)
04 I Just Want a Little Bit (Steve Miller Band)
05 Fanny Mae (Steve Miller Band)
06 Junior Saw It Happen [Edit] (Steve Miller Band)
07 Blues with a Feeling (Steve Miller Band)
08 Your Old Lady (Steve Miller Band)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Gi3kpdK8

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/GumjRendgOzt0Jd/file

The cover photo is from this exact concert. It's from a time when Boz Scaggs was still in the band. That's Miller on the left in the yellow shirt, and Scaggs is on the right. Note the original version of this photo was in black and white, but I colorized it with the help of the Kolorize program.

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival, Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose, CA, 5-18-1968, Part 1 - The Youngbloods

I'm posting another rock festival. Before I say more, I need to note the sound quality of the recordings from this festival have issues. With the recent advances in audio editing technology, I wanted to see if it's possible to elevate mere average sounding audience bootlegs, which is what the source here is. I'm happy to say I did make a lot of improvements. I wouldn't be posting this if I didn't think it's listenable. But be warned it's not up to my usual sound quality standards.

There were a lot of great rock festivals in 1960s that are largely forgotten now because of the lack of good audio or video recordings from them. Such as this one. If you're a fan of classic rock from that era, the lineup of acts from this two-day-long festival is impressive. First, the big names: the Doors, Big Brother and the Holding Company featuring Janis Joplin, the Steve Miller Band, Country Joe and the Fish, Jefferson Airplane, the Youngbloods, the Electric Flag, Kaleidoscope, Taj Mahal, and Ravi Shankar. There also were lesser knowns: the Sons of Champlin, People, the Loading Zone, Trans Atlantic Flash, Smokestack Lightning, Chrome Syrcus, the Indian Head Band, the Dirty Blues Band, Mint Tattoo, and the New Mourning Reign. Additionally, the Grateful Dead weren't scheduled to play, but performed a set anyway. And apparently, Eric Burdon and the New Animals were on the bill but didn't perform for some reason.

Unfortunately, I don't have most of that music, but I was able to find most of the big names: the Youngbloods, the Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company, the Steve Miller Band, Country Joe and the Fish, Jefferson Airplane, and the Electric Flag. The big miss, unfortunately, is the Doors. Jefferson Airplane was the main headliner (and final act) on the first day of the festival, and the Doors was the same for the second and last day of the festival. But while there's a few minutes of video of the Doors performance that's survived, it has no sound, and there isn't any audio bootleg. 

It seems there are two sources that someone put together. One was just an ordinary taper in the crowd. The other was Jorma Kaukonen, lead guitarist of Jefferson Airplane, who taped some of the acts from or near the stage. The Kaukonen taped parts sound slightly better, but only slightly. I believe he taped the Big Brother and the Holding Company set, plus just the second half of his own band's set, Jefferson Airplane.

There's a Wikipedia entry about this festival, but it says very little. Here's the link:

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival (1968) - Wikipedia

However, there's a Doors fan website that has a lot more pictures and information about the festival, here:

The Doors | Northern California Folk Rock Festival 1968

The festival was created and promoted by a person named Bob Blodgett. He did the festival again in 1969. I've posted the Jimi Hendrix set from that, which can be found here:

https://albumsthatshouldexist.blogspot.com/2026/01/jimi-hendrix-northern-california-folk.html

That seems to be the only set from the 1969 festival that's available. But there was some controversy about the 1969 festival, because Blodgett claimed some acts like Led Zeppelin would be performing, when they hadn't even been contacted. He did this to help drive ticket sales, but it backfired. It ruined his reputation as a festival promoter, so there was no 1970 version.

That link to the Doors fan site includes a photocopy of an article in the San Francisco Examiner reviewing both days of the festival. I'll quote some interesting parts of it here: "There is little doubt that the capacity of the flat, drab arena was reached both days, especially yesterday when listening and squatting space was at a premium even when the rains came, along with the Doors, at about six o'clock. The sound system was excellent and most of the groups performed splendidly. But overall production was disgraceful, particularly considering the 28,000 tickets sold for a gross of close to $100,000. Refreshment facilities were abominable, relaxation was impossible on the hot, dirty field (no seats, folks), and the clumsy staging required lengthy pauses between each presentation, when a split stage could easily have enabled each succeeding band to set up in advance.

"Yesterday's involvement of the Hell's Angels as a free-loading, swaggering stage guard, treated as honored guests (and announced as "our guardians") was wholly uncalled for and an obvious concession to intimidation. but sour grapes thus strewn, this observer still got great kicks out of all manner of performances. I was regularly surprised that the crowd (about two-thirds from the South Bay area, I'd say) was so passive at the end of magnificent presentations." 

Here's a direct link to the entire article, if you're curious:

San Francisco Examiner Concert Review 

Now, let me get to the sound quality issue. I decided to try to improve the sound quality of the recordings of this festival because while they come from audience boots, I sensed they had potential to sound a lot better. Plus, a festival from all the way back in 1968 with this line-up deserves to be preserved. So I put a lot of work into this. Typically, I ran each song through audio editing programs multiple times. With the source being an audience boot, one frequent problem was the sound of the crowd being heard during the songs. There was constant background noise. But worse, sometimes one could hear snippets of conversations of people nearby. Running the files through the MVSEP crowd noise filter helped a lot. I also ran the songs through MVSEP to separate the vocals from the instruments. Usually, I boosted the vocals relative to the instruments before putting the two parts back together again. While the vocals were separated, I often was able to delete conversations. But occasionally people would be talking while someone was singing. Sometimes, I was able to fix that, by running that song through MVSEP again and separating out different vocals. But that only worked maybe half of the time, so there's still some annoying talking heard here and there.

So that was a lot of fixing there. But there were additional problems. One really annoying problem was that there was a fair amount of hiss, and worse, a high buzzing sound that came and went. I ran all the songs through an MVSEP denoise filter. That got rid of most of the hiss. I took extra steps to deal with the buzzing sound. Luckily, it usually was the worst during the times between songs. That meant I could use a noise reduction filter against those parts, since I only use that during talking, not music, because it damages the music. Also, for the songs with the most buzzing, I used MVSEP yet again to separate each instrument onto its own track (guitar, bass, drums, piano, etc...). Sometimes I got lucky, and the buzzing would only be on a track that otherwise was silent, so I was able to wipe more of the buzzing that way. But still, there's some buzzing that remains, often at a lower volume than before. It's not on all the sets from this festival, but one can still hear some of it in this Youngbloods set.

There were other problems as well. One common problem with bootlegs with this era is that tapers would frequently turn tape recorders off and on between songs in order to save tape. That did happen a lot in this case, but at least the taper managed to turn the recording back on in time to capture much of the banter. But also, occasionally the taper didn't resume taping until after the song had already started. That happened here with the song "Let's Get Together." About the first minute was missing. So I filled that in with another recording from the era. It sounds somewhat better, so you can probably hear the difference between the two parts. That's why that song has "[Edit]" in its title. 

I edited these albums months before posting them, so I forget why "Rain Song" also has "[Edit]" in its title. But I think it's because I copied and pasted one part of the song over another part in order to get rid of some loud talking or some other problem like that. Whatever I did, I can't tell what it is anymore from listening, so I must have done a good job! ;)

I had yet more problems with the applause at the ends of some songs. Again, due to the tape recorder getting turned off and on, the applause often got prematurely cut off. So I patched in applause from the ends of other songs to make sure all songs had a reasonable amount.

One last point. I'm not entirely sure about the order of the performances. But if you look at the images from that Doors fan site I linked to above, there are a couple of images that show the scheduled order of the bands in the festival. So I went with that order. But it's possible there were some changes to the schedule, I don't know. And the Youngbloods were listed as performing on both dates of the festival. I don't know if that's what they actually did. But the bootleg source says this is from the first day, so I'm assuming that's true unless I get evidence otherwise.

This album is 35 minutes long. 

01 talk (Youngbloods)
02 Ain't that Lovin' You Baby (Youngbloods)
03 Rain Song [Edit] (Youngbloods)
04 talk (Youngbloods)
05 Beautiful (Youngbloods)
06 talk (Youngbloods)
07 Reason to Believe (Youngbloods)
08 talk (Youngbloods)
09 On Sir Francis Drake [Instrumental] (Youngbloods)
10 talk (Youngbloods)
11 Four in the Morning (Youngbloods)
12 talk (Youngbloods)
13 Wine Song (Youngbloods)
14 talk (Youngbloods)
15 Darkness, Darkness (Youngbloods)
16 talk (Youngbloods)
17 Too Much Monkey Business (Youngbloods)
18 talk (Youngbloods)
19 Let's Get Together [Edit] (Youngbloods)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/c6sEDcNX

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/quXaD58YIG3oECi/file

I believe the cover image of Jesse Colin Young is the only one not actually from this festival. Instead, it's from Carnegie Hall in New York City, on May 30, 1970. The picture was taken indoors, but I removed the background and replaced it with blue sky to match the other ones from the festival.

The text at the top comes from a poster for the concert. I added some color to some of the words. The festival took place over two days, as I mentioned above. This is from the first day, May 18. I highlighted that date in red in that text at the top. For the sets that took place on May 19, I highlighted that text instead.