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As a sequel to the Clifford Ball, the Great Went was held in August 1997 at the former Loring Air Force Base (now the Loring Commerce Centre) in Limestone, Maine. (A third sequel, The LemonWheel, was held in August of 1998.) The name of the event comes from a line in a David Lynch movie, Fire Walk With Me, which is itself a reference to an episode of Twin Peaks. This is as far north and east as you can get and not be in Canada, in a beautiful area, in blueberry (and black fly) season.
Great Went events included:
The Went was reportedly the top-grossing concert of the summer, pulling in $4,337,184 (though at least that much reportedly was spent on the entire affair.) Garth Brooks ($1,478,160. Sacramento, Calif. Aug. 14-18) was a distant second. Attendance estimates range from 65,000 (said the Washington Post) to 70,800 (said a local paper). Brian Hamel (Loring Commerce Center Director) was quoted as saying "the Great Went went great!" James A. Yeager
There are some photographs on the Web in various places, and a few articles, as well as sound clips (including 8-16-97 II and III).
On a random note, Eugene Kogan
The Site: Loring Commerce Center
Loring Air Force Base, Limestone, ME, (latitude 46.95, longitude 67.88) was closed during the last week of September 1994. Prior to that time, and for at least two decades, Loring was the northeasternmost continental storehouse of nuclear arms. It was also a research site, for various purposes including observation and intelligence. At least one (early-1980s) Loring pilot developed specialties in remote sensing and space physics, and a number of Space Warning Squadron and Space Wing personnel were based at Loring. Additionally, the AFRAT (Air Force Radiaton Assessment Team), which responds to and assesses nuclear accidents and threats, was based at the Armstrong Laboratory which (I'm pretty sure) is on the base.
There was a rash of UFO sighting on the base, by military personnel and others, in October of 1975, just after similar sightings (and an abduction) at Brunswick Naval Air Station in southern Maine, and just prior to similar sightings (in November) at bases in North Dakota and Canada.
Two landfills on the site were declared Superfund sites in 1989. (A 1994 decision saved millions of dollars by keeping toxic waste on the site rather than shipping it offsite.) The landfills were (funded to be) capped, but the base remained classified as a radiation contaminated site, perhaps as recently as April 1996. An August 1996 document indicates that the full cleanup cost for the site would be over $141 million.
When the base was closed, 1326 jobs were lost and, of those, only 144 recovered. A $6,189,000 renovation planned to turn the base into a Job Corps Center; that project, focusing on seven buildings, was expected to be completed in October of 1996.
See also: site plan and event layout
The Great Went in Twin Peaks
The most common understanding of The Great Went is as a reference to the dancing/party scene of the David Lynch film Fire, Walk With Me. Indeed, Kristen Godard contended that this scene was the theme of the Great Went weekend: "We should all go watch that scene again, but the drinking, the dancing, the laughing, fire, etc... Definitely 'where' we were being put."
But the mention of "The Great Went" in this scene was, itself, a reference to another scene. M.T. Wentz is a restaurant critic (and mother of diner owner Nora) mentioned in the second episode of the second season of Twin Peaks (also referred to as "The Great Went"), and this character is referenced in the movie Fire Walk With Me (based on, following, and "explaining" (ha!) Twin Peaks).
Source scene: Richard
"The Man In Black"
Why the Great Went Jimmy
But in that scene, Jacques was, in fact, wasted, practically falling over, slobbering, yelling. The nickname The Great Went is not just something random he yelled out -- it refers to a scene in the diner, in one of the early episodes of the television series Twin Peaks (after which the movie was made). In that scene, there is fear about the arrival of I.M. Went, aka The Great Went, a feared restaurant critic.
Martin Acaster
The geology of the gorge post made me do this
The site of the Great Went, Limestone, Maine is underlain by rocks of the Hurricane Mountain Formation. The geology and tectonic history of the Hurricane Mountain formation was summarized (Boudette, Boone, and Goldsmith, 1989) for a field trip I attended at the 81st annual meeting of the New England intercollegiate Geological Conference. The Hurricane Mountain melange (Boone, 1989) represents part of an accreted wedge of carbonaceous, sulfidic scaly metapelite and metasiltstone which is charged with blocks and rafts of autoclastic and exotic rocks). Localized occurrences of different exotic lithologies along the strike of the Hurricane Mountain Formation suggest that subduction may have been oblique, and that strike-slip faulting within the forearc environment or arcward of it, brought different provenances into the zone of active fragmentation where gravity-driven submarine slides were incorporated into the growing accretionary wedge.
The Hurricane Mountain Formation retains a rather consistent structural thickness of 900 to 1000 m throughout the lobster mountain anticlinorium; this thickness probably is largely a product of Penobscottian, rather than Acadian deformation. The structural relationship of the Hurricane to the underlying, less deformed aguagene volcanic Jim Pond Formation is essentially a fault contact, involving break-up and olistostromal emplacement of Jim Pond greenwacke, quartzite and volcanogenic rocks in a matrix which is increasingly composed of siltstone protolith structurally upward into the Hurricane in the southwest part of the Hurricane Mountain Belt (Boudette, 1978).
To put this another way. ...About 600 million years ago this part of Maine was lying at the bottom of a shallow sea between a volcanic island arc and the continental margin of Laurentia (what is now referred to as North America). The Phish that lived in this sea were frequently Buried Alive or Drowned in submarine landslides caused by the numerous earthquakes that rocked the area. The unfortunate Phish were often Swept Away down the Steep slope that was formed by a Wedge of sediments that were being scraped off the top of the slab of oceanic crust as it was forced underneath the volcanic arc. Once the slabs were subducted they would usually Split Open and Melt. Soon they would once again belch forth from the mouths of a volcanic Mound or a Rift on the continental margin. Frequently this resulted in a Fire On The Mountain or a Fog That Surrounds the island arc itself. The Aftermath of all this was the formation of the Hurricane Mountain Formation. All Things Reconsidered a Day In The Life of a Cambrian Phish was Blue and Lonesome. If I Could have been there then would You Enjoy Myself as much as you will at the Great Went
See also, What does Loring think of Phish fans
Other Went Web Sites
For more information see any of the following web sites of interest:
Thanks also to Brer
"Coming home to place I had never been before was easier than I expected, if I even thought it possible. It was the land that did it first, before the people added a final dimension that made me know I had found something unexpected and rare.""
-- Charles Jones, A Separate Place"
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