Windsor·Video

Woodstock '99 returns to the spotlight in a new documentary. This Windsor musician was at the fest

For alternative music fans in the 1990s, Woodstock '99 in Rome, N.Y., was something you wanted to see. The infamous summer festival is being remembered in a new documentary.

Kelly Hoppe played the infamous music festival Sunday, July 25, 1999, as part of Big Sugar

Close-up photo of musician on left. Picture of a huge crowd in front of the main stage at Woodstock '99 on the right.
Kelly Hoppe, left, played the infamous Woodstock '99 summer festival in New York state. A crowd at the July music festival is shown on the right. (Submitted by Andrew MacNaughtan, left/CBC News, right)

It was the event of the year for any alternative music fan.

Woodstock '99 lined up some of the biggest bands at the time, including Slipknot, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Bush, to play at the summer music festival in Rome, N.Y. But it didn't play out like the August 1969 original.

Trainwreck: Woodstock '99, which recently debuted on Netflix, along with last year's Music Box: Woodstock 99: Peace, Love, and Rage, streaming on Crave, have brought the summer music festival back to the modern zeitgeist.

Kelly Hoppe, part of the band Big Sugar, played the music festival on Sunday night, July 25, 1999. 

  • WATCH | Kelly Hoppe checks out Woodstock '99: 

Playing Woodstock '99

2 years ago
Duration 1:54
Kelly Hoppe, from the band Big Sugar, says he walked out into the festival to see what was going on. It was just filth everywhere.

Woodstock '99 had a few Canadian bands in the lineup, including the Tragically Hip, Alanis Morissette, Our Lady Peace, Serial Joe and Hoppe's band Big Sugar. But Hoppe wasn't sure what to expect when they took the stage.

  • WATCH | How the Big Sugar concert went over at Woodstock '99:

On stage at Woodstock '99

2 years ago
Duration 1:51
The band Big Sugar wasn't sure what to expect when they hit the Emerging Artist stage at Woodstock '99
 

In 1999, CBC News reported about people at the music festival going berserk overnight, setting fire to tents, booths, trailers, and sound equipment. The reasoning at the time was the riot started because of anger over long lineups and high food prices. Seven people were hurt and seven were arrested, including a 22-year-old man from Toronto. Hoppe said he learned about what was really happening at the festival when they turned on the TV at home.

  • WATCH | Hoppe talks about the dichotomy between festivals weeks apart:

Finding out what happened

2 years ago
Duration 1:38
Kelly Hoppe, from the band Big Sugar, says he found out about what happened during the festival when he returned home and switched on the tv.
 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stacey Janzer works for CBC in Charlottetown, P.E.I. as a videojournalist. She's from Essex County, Ontario and worked as a videojournalist for CBC Windsor for eight years. Email her at stacey.janzer@cbc.ca