Does the end of the summer bring an end to music festivals?
So summer is over and more importantly festival season has finished for another year. Traditionally, festivals were the soundtracks to our summers – events where people escape from their daily lives and enjoy a weekend of festivities (usually in some remote part of the country) whilst listening and dancing to their favourite bands and solo artists. However, this summer has seen some of the music industry’s most prolific figures (e.g. – Michael Eavis) fear for the future of the common music festival.
Eavis said earlier this year that ‘festivals are not selling out’ and fears that ‘people have seen it all before’, putting in jeopardy his own iconic (and some call the best) festival, Glastonbury. His predictions serve a stark warning to festival-goers and organisers alike as there is a real chance that in three to four years the summer music scene may be quite different from the one we experience today.
So what has lead Eavis to this stark prediction? Are we really in jeopardy of losing music festivals for good? The last few years have been economically difficult, which has meant that people have been forced to be more careful with their money. Combine that with the fact that festivals are as expensive as a holiday abroad, and it makes sense that they are the first thing people cut back on when money is tight. There has also been a growth in European festivals, which attract larger crowds at cheaper prices and usually have the added bonus of guaranteed sunshine, which means people can combine a festival with a summer holiday.
The other problem with current festivals is they all appear to be the same. As Eavis says, people are becoming bored of seeing the same bands on the same circuit each year. For a £200 ticket, people are expecting more from their experience and want to see creativity, individuality and difference when they invest in a large-scale music event. I personally, would hate to see the end of festivals. As a music fan, festivals allow you to see a variety of acts in one place and allow you to forget about everything for a weekend. However, I do believe that the festival format is becoming stale with the same line-ups appearing at festivals across the country and a lack of imagination in not only the acts playing, but also the experience as a whole. We want to experience a unique and exciting musical wonderland, which is different from anything else we have seen before. These are the things that summer and more importantly festivals were made for.
September 27th, 2011 at 9:25 am
Secret Garden Party and Standon Calling are smaller festivals offering something different – but they don’t attract what you would call ‘headliners’, so I guess it’s a trade off (but not an ideal one as they’re still relatively expensive for what is essentially three days camping in a field).
September 27th, 2011 at 9:38 am
unfortuantely I think the sheer volume of organisers jumping on the band has made it collapse but I’m sure the large ones will remain, at least for the moment, after all according to the Beeb they generate nearly £1bn a year to the UK economy
September 27th, 2011 at 9:57 am
In my view, the attendance of David Cameron (resplendent in Baby harness), Jeremy Clarkson and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall at Alex James’s Chipping-Norton set ‘Harvest Festival’ spells the end of the festival as credible entertainment for us all! Shudder at the Daily Mail’s photos and comment here: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2036065/Return-Chipping-Norton-Set-PM-Clarkson-Alex-James-reunited-local-festival.html
September 28th, 2011 at 12:09 pm
There is also Bestival, which always offers something different in terms of theme and entertainment – maybe the bigger festivals should look to the smaller festivals for inspiration??
September 28th, 2011 at 12:18 pm
I went to Standon Calling and the only ‘headline’ act, Spiritualised, pulled out 2 days before. Still fun though!