Tomorrow will be the 50th anniversary of this massacre. I read a fantastic article today in the Post Gazette on the effects on the music world this had.
We all have heard the legend of Neil Young being so pissed off with this news he immediately wrote the OHIO song and went to the recording studio with then band maters Crosby, Stills and Nash that became one of the most powerful protest songs of that era.
But I didn't know Joe Walsh went to Kent State and was at the protest rally at the time. Walsh quit school then, went on that summer to record Funk#49 with the James Gang in Cleveland. I think he made the right career move.
Chris Butler was friends with Jeffrey Miller and they were at the rally. Jeffrey Miller was shot dead, immortalized in the famous photo of him laying face down with the girl screaming over his dead body. The photo was taken by my former neighbor John Filo who won a Pulitizer Prize. Anyways, Chris Butler momentarily left Miller to go dampen his bandana to guard against tear gas. Chris Butler became a founding member of the Waitresses, who if you were into 80's New Wave, their hit "I know What Boys Like" got regular play, also have a popular Christmas song that would likely be familiar with.
Gerard Casale lived with Terry Hynde in an off campus apartment. They attended the rally. Casale witnessed it live. Profoundly changed, Casale eventually became one of the founders and original "New Wave" bands.....DEVO.
Terry Hynde's sister also was at Kent State at the time. His sister, Chrissie, was also there during the massacre. She then also went on to join a band. That band was known as the Pretenders, and she reached Rock Goddess standards.
Joe Vitale was a long time drummer associated with Joe Walsh (James Gang). And during one concert tour in one of the many reunions with CSN&Y, he was their drummer for some event. They played the song Ohio. Vitale told them that, "I was born and lived in Kent during the massacre and could hear the shots and see the smoke". They never knew and were blown away by his admission.
Amazing that this one event, in what is an "Artsy" school in a very conservative part of Ohio, had so many musicians there on this day.
Great article.
We all have heard the legend of Neil Young being so pissed off with this news he immediately wrote the OHIO song and went to the recording studio with then band maters Crosby, Stills and Nash that became one of the most powerful protest songs of that era.
But I didn't know Joe Walsh went to Kent State and was at the protest rally at the time. Walsh quit school then, went on that summer to record Funk#49 with the James Gang in Cleveland. I think he made the right career move.
Chris Butler was friends with Jeffrey Miller and they were at the rally. Jeffrey Miller was shot dead, immortalized in the famous photo of him laying face down with the girl screaming over his dead body. The photo was taken by my former neighbor John Filo who won a Pulitizer Prize. Anyways, Chris Butler momentarily left Miller to go dampen his bandana to guard against tear gas. Chris Butler became a founding member of the Waitresses, who if you were into 80's New Wave, their hit "I know What Boys Like" got regular play, also have a popular Christmas song that would likely be familiar with.
Gerard Casale lived with Terry Hynde in an off campus apartment. They attended the rally. Casale witnessed it live. Profoundly changed, Casale eventually became one of the founders and original "New Wave" bands.....DEVO.
Terry Hynde's sister also was at Kent State at the time. His sister, Chrissie, was also there during the massacre. She then also went on to join a band. That band was known as the Pretenders, and she reached Rock Goddess standards.
Joe Vitale was a long time drummer associated with Joe Walsh (James Gang). And during one concert tour in one of the many reunions with CSN&Y, he was their drummer for some event. They played the song Ohio. Vitale told them that, "I was born and lived in Kent during the massacre and could hear the shots and see the smoke". They never knew and were blown away by his admission.
Amazing that this one event, in what is an "Artsy" school in a very conservative part of Ohio, had so many musicians there on this day.
Great article.