particularly well known at the time,
whose careers just exploded because
of Woodstock. For Bert, nothing.”
Sommer, for whatever reason, was not
included in Wadleigh’s Woodstock doc-
umentary, though he does appear in
D.A. Pennebaker’s 1994 film, Woodstock
Diary. By then it was too late for
Sommer to enjoy the exposure. After
Woodstock he scraped out a spotty
career, with a few albums and some high
points—opening for Ike & Tina Turner
and Jefferson Airplane, appearing at
Carnegie Hall and on the festival cir-
cuit. But Sommer faded into obscurity,
playing small clubs, bedeviled by drug
and alcohol use. Just a month after his
last gig, in Troy, New York, Sommer died
of a respiratory ailment in 1990, at age 41.
In 1994 a Woodstock memorial plaque
was erected to commemorate festival
performers. Bert Sommer’s name was
omitted. But in 2009, Rhino released a
six-CD set for Woodstock’s 40th anni-
versary—including three tracks by the
“rather magnificent” young troubadour
who showed such promise that steamy
August day.
Tim Hardin
8:45–9:30 PM
Bob Dylan once called Tim Hardin the
country’s “greatest living songwriter.”
Hardin’s most renowned composition,
“If I Were a Carpenter,” is a folk standard,
interpreted by everyone from Bobby
Darin to the Four Tops to Robert Plant.
Seldom remembered today, the blues-
influenced singer-guitarist-pianist
was a compelling and influential fig-
ure. “What set him apart from his con-
temporaries was a rich, artful voice and
a fistful of songs that hinted at despair,
drug abuse, and a bruised romantic
sensibility,” observed Graeme Thomson
in Britain’s Telegraph. After serving in
the Marines, Hardin came up through
the Greenwich Village café scene, but
along the way developed an intracta-
ble drug habit, sparking erratic behav-
ior onstage and off which hampered
his career—and would eventually lead
to his early death. At Woodstock, festi-
val organizer Michael Lang had sought
to launch the event with an acoustic
set, and before tapping Richie Havens
he’d turned to the 27-year-old Hardin,
a personal friend. “When I approached
him, he was strumming his guitar and
singing to himself,” Lang recalled in his
2009 memoir The Road to Woodstock. “[I
asked] ‘Hey, Tim, you want to open this
thing up?’
“ ‘No way, man! I can’t go on now—not
me, not first! I can’t deal with that!’ He
looked at me in desperation... I knew he
was fragile—he’d only recently kicked a
heroin habit by getting on methadone—
and I didn’t want to push him.”
Once he’d pulled himself together,
Hardin followed Sommer with a
10-song set including his compositions
“If I Were a Carpenter” and “Reason to
Believe” (later a hit for Rod Stewart),
starting off solo, then joined by a
WAVY GRAVY (ABOVE) AND
his communal group the Hog
Farm had been enlisted by
the Woodstock organizers
to provide “security,” in a
distinctly friendly form. He
became a memorable figure
at the festival—and more so in
the Woodstock documentary—
an ever-cheerful presence,
with his gap-toothed grin and
laughably large hat. The film
turned him into an icon of the
counterculture. And, at 83
(opposite), he still is.
30 LIFE WOODSTOCK