Following the release of the band's new Record Store Day vinyl, Green Day drummer Tré Cool says that the legendary mud-filled gig that the record was taken from – Woodstock ’94 – was one that "changed our whole lives".
Reflecting on the show on the Member Guest podcast (featuring Linkin Park bassist Dave Farrell), the sticksman fondly remembers how "chaotic" it was, and that the weather conditions "set up really well for Green Day to take the stage and make all hell break loose".
“’94 Woodstock was a complete shit-show," he says. "It was a Pepsi-sponsored thing, it was, like, worldwide televised pay-per-view and all that stuff, and every band of significance was there. It was crazy. And of course people start going around the fence and sneaking in, and it kind of became mayhem. And then bad weather came and it was raining like crazy and the whole place became a mud pit. It was pretty chaotic, and set up really well for Green Day to take the stage and make all hell break loose.
“All of a sudden a mud fight started happening, and they were throwing it onstage and we were throwing it back and it got all chaotic. We kept trying to play, but Billie [Joe Armstrong, frontman] was getting mud hitting his guitar and Mike [Dirnt, bass] was getting it on his bass and hitting him. Luckily my drum set was just far enough back where I was less in harm’s way… It was punk as fuck, and nobody expected that to happen.
“Mike actually got tackled [onstage] by a security guard because he was covered in mud and the security guard didn’t know who was who. They tackled Mike and broke his tooth and chipped his elbow! It was pretty gnarly if you see the video – the guy grabs Mike and slams him down, and he’s a big-ass security guy.”