This looks really good: https://www.washingtonpost.com/life...9ab23a-d11a-11ea-9038-af089b63ac21_story.html
"... Overlooked upon its theatrical debut in 1972, "Bluegrass Country Soul" is a riveting cinema verite portrait of a bluegrass festival when it was still an underground phenomenon with a rabidly loyal fan base of spectator-participants. It documents a uniquely American musical style in its prime and in its element, without pretense or talking heads or axes to grind. For decades, as the bluegrass festival tradition exploded throughout the United States and abroad, the film gained a cult following, especially among musicians...."
... "I remember seeing bikers and full-blown hippies sitting next to people like my parents," recalls Missy Raines of the First Ladies of Bluegrass. She attended the festival as a 9-year-old and appears in the film. "It was a beautiful thing to see people from so many different walks of life enjoying the music." Remarkably, peace and goodwill prevailed, and for the most part, the festival was a respite from the tumult outside the campground. "The country was split," Ihde says. "There were people in the streets demonstrating to bring home our troops from Vietnam; Nixon was bombing Cambodia; Manson had just been sent to jail. But at the festival, everybody was getting along..."
"... Overlooked upon its theatrical debut in 1972, "Bluegrass Country Soul" is a riveting cinema verite portrait of a bluegrass festival when it was still an underground phenomenon with a rabidly loyal fan base of spectator-participants. It documents a uniquely American musical style in its prime and in its element, without pretense or talking heads or axes to grind. For decades, as the bluegrass festival tradition exploded throughout the United States and abroad, the film gained a cult following, especially among musicians...."
... "I remember seeing bikers and full-blown hippies sitting next to people like my parents," recalls Missy Raines of the First Ladies of Bluegrass. She attended the festival as a 9-year-old and appears in the film. "It was a beautiful thing to see people from so many different walks of life enjoying the music." Remarkably, peace and goodwill prevailed, and for the most part, the festival was a respite from the tumult outside the campground. "The country was split," Ihde says. "There were people in the streets demonstrating to bring home our troops from Vietnam; Nixon was bombing Cambodia; Manson had just been sent to jail. But at the festival, everybody was getting along..."