On This Day

On This Day in 1989, Live Music in Russia Changed Forever With Star-Studded Rock Lineup

On August 12, 1989, live music in Russia changed forever with the star-studded rock lineup that made up the Moscow Music Peace Festival. Prior to the showโ€™s first downbeat by Skid Row, the U.S.S.R. effectively banned dancing at public performances. There were still concerts, but attendees were much tamer, and security was much stricter.

But that fateful weekend in August marked a significant change for the Soviets. Suddenly, thousands of rock lovers were listening to rowdy music, screaming expletives, and even dancing in front of security with no fear of punishment.

Videos by American Songwriter

People traveled thousands of miles just to be a part of what some press outlets called the โ€œRussian Woodstock.โ€

Live Music in Russia Changed Forever in 1989

The Central Lenin Stadium in Moscow, Russia, hosted the Moscow Music Peace Festival on August 12 and 13, 1989. The concert was the first of its kind in Russiaโ€™s capital city and included Western bands like Cinderella, Scorpions, Skid Row, Mรถtley Crรผe, Ozzy Osbourne, and Bon Jovi. Russian bands Gorky Park, Nuance, and Brigada S. also performed, and Jason Bonham was a special guest for the encore jam session of Led Zeppelinโ€™s โ€œRock and Roll.โ€

Soviet citizens werenโ€™t used to Western rock culture. Strict security and harsh enforcement of these social rules meant that live music in the U.S.S.R. was a far calmer affair. In other words, it was lightyears away from the kind of performance that begins with โ€œHow the f*** you doing, Moscow,โ€ which is what Vince Neil asked at the beginning of Mรถtley Crรผeโ€™s sets over the weekend. Goading the crowd further, Neil led the happily willing audience of over 100,000 in a rhythmic chant of the F-bomb, per reporting by the Los Angeles Times.

Fans danced, played air guitar, pumped their fists, and made a general ruckus throughout the two-day event. The crowd was so ecstatic that not even a brief rainshower kept them from enjoying the show. Moreover, their distance from the backstage happenings meant that none were the wiser about the behind-the-scenes fights and drama that were happening among the event performers and producers.

It Was Unlike Anything The U.S.S.R. Had Seen

The Moscow Music Peace Festival might have been the first rock concert of its kind, but it wasnโ€™t the first time Soviets had listened to that music. Rock records circulated throughout the U.S.S.R., albeit secretly and often on alternate materials, like X-rays, allowing its citizens to get a taste of what was happening on the other side of the Iron Curtain. And for some attendees of the 1989 festival, the milestone for live music in Russia was a little bittersweet.

โ€œThis music does not mean the same to me that the old music did,โ€ a 37-year-old attendee told the Los Angeles Times. โ€œThis music is for the kids. But I wanted to be here to see them enjoy it. Maybe like I would have if it would have been possible when I was their age. It is a wonderful day.โ€ (For the middle-aged cab driver, he would have loved to see the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, or Cream.)

And indeed, Billy Joel might have liked a redo, too. He had performed in Moscow two years before the Peace Festival and had a minor breakdown after his lighting crew kept illuminating the audience while they were dancing. The crowd, still under the strict guidelines that the Moscow Music Peace Festival signaled the end of, would suddenly grow shy and timidโ€”two words one wouldnโ€™t use to describe the sea of Soviets chanting, โ€œF***! F***! F***!โ€

Photo by Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images