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Major Music Festival in San Francisco Was Far Out, Man

The following is a report that was written after San Francisco’s Outside Lands Festival, but was not published until now due to time constraints.

SAN FRANCISCO – The first major rock music festival to grace San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park in nearly four decades was a huge success last month (August 22-24), drawing a crowd that organizers estimated at over 150,000 people.

Outside Lands celebrated its first year as the Bay Area’s newest major rock festival with three days of music from artists and bands like Radiohead, Jack Johnson, Tom Petty, Beck, Andrew Bird, Widespread Panic, Wilco, Broken Social Scene, Rouge Wave, Manu Chao, Ben Harper, Primus and Rodrigo y Gabriela, among dozens of others.

Unlike most other summer rock festivals, there were no sun burns or cases of heat exhaustion at Outside Lands. San Francisco’s famously reliable fog, that the city is known world-wide for, drenched Golden Gate Park’s Polo Fields for most of the three-day music festival – probably not what the over-advertised Heineken vendors wanted, but what did they expect in August on the west side of San Francisco?

Believe it or not, Anchorage, Alaska has higher summertime temperatures, on average, than San Francisco, California (and it’s not because of the hot air blowing from Sarah Palin’s mouth).
But on the last day of the festival, Sunday August 24, the sun came out and blue skies replaced low-lying clouds and mist. Having been to plenty of outdoor concerts and festivals in the hot sun, it’s easy to welcome and appreciate the cooling waves of continuous fog.

MP3s from Outside Lands lineup artists:
“KC Accidental” – Broken Social Scene
“Herectics” – Andrew Bird
“Sightlines” – Rogue Wave (check out the band’s other music, they’re awesome.)

When Radiohead took the stage late Friday evening, the lights surrounding the entire venue beamed up through the fog like lasers – a common site in northern California. Just ask anyone who has shone a flashlight or drove with their headlights on through the thick summer fog – you can literally cast a beam of light for as far as the eye can see.


Perhaps this is how Stars Wars director George Lucas, a native of northern California, came up with the idea for the famous laser weapons featured in the classic trilogy.

Anyways, the sets for good indie bands and artists – like Andrew Bird, Broken Social Scene, M. Ward, Rogue Wave – were too short, and the time delay between various acts were too short for such a huge place – literally four football fields from end to end. Next time they should also do something about the dust – that really surprised me since most of the park is lush and green (thanks to the fog and irrigation); dust is just not something you see in San Francisco.

(photo by thegatos08 on Flickr)

For many festival goers, it was the first night’s headliner, Radiohead, that proved to be the highlight of the entire festival (not that big on Petty and Jack Johnson as headliners). Not only did they put on an amazing light show, but they sounded spectacular – better than on vinyl – which is hard for me to believe in a way, but it’s true.
There were two brief sound outages, but the band apologized for that. As if. No apology needed Thom, you guys were so awesome, everyone already had forgotten about it. It’s the only reason the performance gets an A instead of an A-plus.

Next year, assuming the fest will be held again (all indications are that the greedy promoters and investors made plenty of money) they should step it up have more real headlining bands (it is San Francisco, man), not try to cram so much on so many stages in three days and definitely invest more in facilities, and lower the three-day pass price.

Outside the parameters of the fenced off event were hundreds, if not thousands of people, who were presumably not ticket holders but had no problem hanging out in or under trees and on strips of grass soaking in the many artists – for free, and they didn’t have to wait in the lines for the disgusting portable toilets.

Also, it’d be nice if they could come up with some innovative ways to protect the park more from environmental damage. I can’t help but to feel a little guilty for the digging up of the grass (grass – not talking about that kind people – is a rare thing in SF) and how the loud music affected wildlife in and around the park.

Nevertheless, the festival was considered a success to most who attended. Those who were most dissatisfied were area residents who lived within an earshot of the music blaring above the trees and throughout adjacent neighborhoods. The fog actually helps carry sound, so at times residents blocks and blocks away felt almost like they were part of the festival.