FESTS:  Colorado’s Sonic Bloom electronic dance music festival is entering the metaverse

The festival will offer versions of its real-life elements through new virtual realms when the event returns from a two-year COVID-19 hiatus this month
by Angela Ufheil for 5280.com

The best music festivals are worlds unto themselves. Burning Man, for example, feels like a Mad Max–esque fever dream, while Coachella is a celebrity-studded carnival.

Since it started in 2006, Sonic Bloom, one of Colorado’s biggest electronic dance music festivals, has cultivated a techno-psychedelic summer camp vibe—and, this year, a trip into the metaverse will solidify that brand.

For the uninitiated, the metaverse is a developing network of 3D worlds that exist on the internet, à la Ready Player One. Like the characters in the 2018 sci-fi film, users can don goggles and explore virtual realms, where they interact with others.

The ever-expanding metaverse has long fascinated Annie Phillips, a Denver artist who, in 2019, designed metaversal replicas of her RiNo digital-art gallery, IRL Art, so customers could virtually peruse the exhibition space on different platforms.

“People look at the metaverse as checking out of reality,” Phillips says, “but it’s a cool way to still experience art and feel connected to a community.”

Continue reading on 5280.com

FESTS: SnapChat and LiveNation team up for augmented-reality festival experience

Snapchat has done a new deal with Live Nation to develop augmented-reality experiences for the app’s users at selected festivals, including Lollapalooza in the U.S. and Wireless in the U.K.

Open up your Snapchat camera at any of the eighteen events currently involved in this partnership and you’ll get a load of special stuff flying all over your screen that wouldn’t be there if you just used your eyes to engage with the event that is actually happening all around you.

Yeah, upon request, I will send you a recording of me tutting to enhance the experience further.

“We can leverage this huge userbase we have in a way that will make augmented reality the next phase of visual expression for artists”, says Ben Schwerin, Snap’s SVP Content & Partnerships.

“This really hasn’t been done before in a way that is part of the artist’s vision and helping it come to life”.

As well as Wireless, U.K. Snapchat users will be able to get in on all this at the Reading and Leeds festivals.

To help you picture what all this looks like, Snapchat and Live Nation have produced a video shot at Electric Daisy Carnival in Las Vegas in which the event itself looks infinitely more exciting than anything that appears over the top of it on a phone screen.

This post by Andy Malt first appeared on Complete Music Update

Coachella Releases Dates for 2022 after ’21 Cancellation News

coachella-music-festivalby Jem Aswad//Variety

The Coachella festival has officially moved to April 15-17 and April 22-24, 2022, according to an announcement from promoter Goldenvoice. The country-themed Stagecoach festival will follow the two Coachella weekends, on April 29-May 1.

“Our desert homecoming is officially set for April 2022: weekend one will take place on April 15-17, 2022 and weekend two on April 22-24, 2022,” the announcement reads.. “Our advance sale begins this Friday, June 4th at 10am PT. More time to plan and more time to pay for your passes over time with our flexible payment plan options. Information about flexible payment plans and more at coachella.com.”

Moving onto the Stagecoach festival, “Stagecoach is back in the saddle! Save the date for April 29-May 1st, 2022 for our next get-together. Be the first to find out about the advance sale right around the corner at stagecoachfestival.com.”

As usual, headliners were not announced; they are customarily revealed early in the new year.

YouTube has also returned as Coachella’s livestream partner.

“We’re back and thrilled to be partnering with Goldenvoice for the 10th year to live stream the iconic Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on YouTube,” YouTube said in a statement. “As the world’s biggest virtual stage, we are more excited than ever to celebrate live music and to bring two weekends of extraordinary performances to music fans around the world.”

2020’s scheduled headliners were Rage Against the Machine, Travis Scott and Frank Ocean, along with Lana Del Rey, Calvin Harris, Run the Jewels, Lil Uzi Vert, Rex Orange County, Megan Thee Stallion, BIGBANG, Flume, Thom Yorke, Disclosure, 21 Savage, Danny Elfman, DaBaby, Summer Walker, Daniel Caesar, FKA Twigs, Marina, Louis the Child, Ari Lennox and many more. The lineup for that edition of the festival, while never took place, was roundly criticized for its low number of female artists.

The new dates mark the fourth time the Coachella, which takes place over two weekends at the Empire Polo Ground in Indio, Calif., have been rescheduled due to the pandemic: first from April to October 2020, then to April 2021, and then October, although the October dates were not officially confirmed by promoters. Coachella regularly sells out its 125,000 per day tickets immediately.

 

Music festival hacks that will turn a rookie into a veteran

Ah, good old music festivals. One of the few times a year where you can shed your 9 to 5 alter ego and cut loose from reality surrounded by good people and even better music. From pictures, music festivals look like a walk in the park, when in reality, they can be one of the most exhausting and difficult trips of your life. The pictures don’t show people sleeping in the dirt or surviving off of apple juice and graham crackers, although those are some of the best memories. Luckily, we have a handful of tips and tricks that will help you get the most out of your music festival experience, so you can crawl out of your tent victorious when it’s time to pack up and leave.

Use A Flag To Find Your Campsite

If you’re camping at a festival, one of the most daunting tasks can be finding your camping spot after a long day in the festival grounds. While you may think you can find it during the day, you might end up completely lost once the sun goes down. Some festival campgrounds are massive, and getting lost is easier than you think.

FilmMagic/FilmMagic for Bonnaroo Arts And Music Festival

To prevent this from happening, it’s crucial to have a flag or some sort of identifiable object that stands out where your campsite is. It’s also a bonus if it lights up, so that you can see it in the dark. Nobody wants to be wandering the campgrounds looking for their tent, trust me.

Bring Your Own Caps and Lids

Robert Alexander/Getty Images

At some festivals, when you buy a beverage whether it’s a water or something else, they won’t provide you with a lid. This means that you have to drink it on the spot and won’t be able to carry it around with you very easily. They do this so that after you consume your drink, you’re forced to go buy another one when you’re thirsty again.

So, to drink on your own terms, bring a few extra water bottle caps and drinking lids so you can carry around your drinks freely and drink when you want to instead of pounding it at the vendor booth.

Sneak In Your Booze!

Axel Heimken/picture alliance via Getty Images

Let’s face it, everybody does it. Now, we’re not telling you to break the rules, but if your’re going to break any rules, it should probably be bringing in your own alcohol. Alcohol prices at festivals are through the roof, so if you’re trying to save as much money as possible, your best bet is to and sneak in your own booze.

There are a variety of ways to successfully do this. You can disguise it as mouthwash, put it in flasks designed as sunscreen tubes, or just hide it somewhere in your car before entering the festival. It’s up to you how you want to do it, just make sure it’s not obvious.

Pick Your Campsite Wisely

David McNew/Getty Images for Coachella

While you may be tempted to drop all of your gear and get set up as quickly as possible, choosing the right campsite can make or break your festival experience. There are a lot of factors that you want to take into consideration before you set up and start partying. First off, don’t want to be right off the main road where drunk people might come crashing in, or people have easy access to steal your stuff.

You also want to think about where the sun is rising and setting so you don’t get woken up by the blinding sun at 5 am every morning. And finally, you don’t want to be at the bottom of a hill in case it rains and your site turns into Atlantis.

Don’t Be Lazy About Sunscreen

PYMCA/UIG via Getty Images

We’re sure that you’ve been reminded to either put on or reapply sunscreen hundreds of times throughout your life. However, this is for a good reason, especially when you’re at a festival. Music festivals are already hard on our body as is. Whether it’s sleeping on the ground, not eating much, drinking too little water, or just roughing it all around.

All of these struggles will be amplified by 100 if you’re also incredibly sunburned. Not only is it detrimental to your skin, but if you’ve ever had a sunburn, you know how miserable it can be even sitting in the comfort of your own home. Don’t try and be a hero, just put on sunscreen.

Baby Wipes Are Your Best Friend

Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Baby wipes should be one-hundred-percent be in your bag of essentials, right along with food and water. Even if you don’t use baby wipes on a daily basis in the real world, they’re worth their weight in gold at a music festival. Nobody in the history of the human race has anyone said: “Darn, I really wish I hadn’t brought those baby wipes.”

Why? Because they’re going to be your main source of cleanliness. You can clean your campsite with them, wash your hands and face with them, or if you’re like me, substitute a shower with a thorough rubdown with baby wipes. Bring them, because they always come in handy.

The Age Of The Fanny Pack

Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Coachella

The days of making fun of people with fanny packs are long gone. Now, it would be a rookie move to step into a festival without one. If you’re with a group, not everybody needs to carry one, just one or two people who can hold everyone’s phones, wallets, keys, sunscreen etc.

This way, everything is in a safe place where you know you won’t be pick pocketed or have your items flying out of your pockets during a show. Nowadays, you can even get personalized and stylish fanny packs that you can accessorize with your outfit if you’re into that kind of thing.

Pack Your Bag With Small Items That Might Come In Handy

Gary Miller/Getty Images

Before going into the festival, think about anything else that you might need once inside. Looks around for small items that will fit into the bag or fanny pack that you plan on bringing with you. Items such as hand sanitizer, hair ties, tissues, gum, cash, extra contacts, etc. will more than likely be appreciated later.

There’s no harm in bringing extra things, because if you don’t end up needing them, one of your friends or someone in the crowd probably will. Being over-prepared will always trump being under-prepared, especially during the chaos of a festival.

Always Bring An Emergency Stash Of Money

OZAN KOSE/AFP/Getty Images

Even if you have a wallet full of money or a credit card that you plan on running into the ground, it’s always wise to bring a little bit of emergency cash. Make sure you separate it from your other money so that you have it on you no matter what. Some of the best places to store your emergency cash is on the inside of your phone case or under the sole of your shoe.

This way, if you lose your wallet or something else happens, you will have some money to get by whether you need something to eat, drink, or to buy something you’ll regret later.

Establish A Rendezvous On The First Day

Ian Gavan/Getty Images

You lose people at a music festival, it’s an unavoidable aspect of the experience. Some people want to go to one show and others want to go eat, the next thing you know, everyone is scattered across the festival. To help make regrouping a little easier, your best bet is to establish a meet-up location on the first day. Find a landmark or a booth and call it your home base.

If somebody is lost, they can go to that spot and wait for the rest of the group to come and pick them up. Trust me, this is a fool-proof system compared to wandering aimlessly around a festival hoping you’ll run into your friends.

Bring An Outer Layer Into The Festival

Ross Gilmore/Redferns

Even if it’s blazing hot during the day, chances are that it will get cold enough for a jacket when the sun goes down. While this may not always be the case, it’s better safe than sorry. If you’ve ever made the mistake of not bringing a jacket and ended up freezing, chances are you will never forget one again. Being cold is a surefire way to ruin your experience and those around you.

Nobody wants to hear about how cold you are or that you want to go back to the camp to get warm. Sure, you could buy a jacket in there, but it will cost you an arm and a leg. There are worse things than carrying around a jacket, do it for your own good.

Camp Simply

Alexander Koerner/Getty Images

When you’re camping at a festival, your mantra should be the simpler the better. There’s no need to get crazy with your tent or hangout area. Sure, decorating and personalizing it makes it as comfortable as possible. Yet, remember, you’re not going to feel even close to as good as you felt when you first arrived when you’re packing out. Most likely, you’ll be a mindless zombie that would rather leave everything behind then suffer through packing.

To make it as easy as possible, make sure you bring simple and only essential equipment. Get a tent that is easy to set up and take down and don’t get crazy with furniture or other unnecessary items. You’ll thank yourself when you see other people look like they’re moving houses.

Learn Hairstyles That Don’t Require Equipment

Jeremy Moeller/GC Images

This tip is for you girls. If you have long hair, going to a music festival isn’t going to do your hair any favors. it’s going to get greasy, nappy, and all-around gross for the most part. So, assuming that you don’t have access to your straighteners, curlers, or hair products, it would behoove you to learn some hairstyles that don’t require any equipment.

Some of the easiest and most popular include the triple twist ponytail or no hair band buns. These are quick and easy ways to keep your hair under control, out of your face, and will leave you feeling cleaner than you actually are.

Camp Near A Landmark

Axel Heimken/picture alliance via Getty Images

If you forgot to bring a flag or identifiable object of your own, try and camp close to a landmark of some kind. Maybe choose to camp by a large RV or near the ice station, that way if you see it, you will know that you’re in the general vicinity of you campsite.

If you can’t find an established landmark, take advantage of someone else’s good planning and camp near someone that does have a flag or something of their own. We’re sure they’ll be thrilled to hear that their beacon for their campsite helped those around them as well.

Getting Close To The Stage

FilmMagic/FilmMagic for Life Is Beautiful

Trying to make your way to the front of the stage is nothing short of a mission. There is an art to it that doesn’t require you to rudely push people aside to move forward. The worst thing you can do is start directly from the back and walk directly to the front. That’s taking the path of most resistance and you’re more likely to run into people that will give you a hard time for trying to sneak forward.

Your best option is to walk around the entire crowd until your on the edge of it at the front. Then, slowly inch your way towards the middle. It’s much more subtle and respectful to everyone.

Trash Bags Are A Necessity

FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI/AFP/Getty Images

Much like baby wipes, trash bags are another item that will only be beneficial for you. They’re a great way to carry a lot of things at once when you’re trying to set up and when you’re packing out. Also, in an unexpected rainstorm, the bags can be turned into makeshift ponchos, essentially just as effective as the ones you would buy at the store.

Finally, probably the best use for trash bags is to use them for what they were intended. There’s nothing worse than a dirty campsite, so use them to throw away your trash and endless flow of empty beer cans. Not only will having a clean site enhance your experience, but you’re also doing your part to help clean up as you go.

Bring At Least One Portable Phone Charger

Diane Macdonald/Getty Images

Although some festivals provide charging stations, that should only be a final option. Charging takes way too long, there’s a line, and some people have been known to steal phones. If you want to make sure that you and your friend’s phones are always in working order, make sure you have at least one portable phone charger.

Use it sparingly, and remember that your phone doesn’t always have to be fully charged. By doing this, you can avoid that horrifying moment when your phone dies and you don’t know where anyone is. Think smarter not harder people

Wear Shoes You Don’t Care About

Simone Joyner/Getty Images

Unless the main purpose of your festival experience is to look fashionable, it would be in your best interest to wear a pair of shoes that you wouldn’t mind throwing away after. Whether it’s dusty or muddy, your shoes are going to be put through the ringer. Even if the venue is grassy or on the pavement, they will get destroyed from people stepping on them for multiple days in a row.

Nobody cares what’s on your feet, so grab a pair from the back of your closet instead of putting a pair of good shoes at risk. Festival tickets are expensive enough without having to buy a new pair of shoes after.

Protect Your Ears!

Jason L. Todd/Getty Images

We know, nobody wants to be told to wear earplugs at a music festival. It defeats the purpose, right? Wrong. If you’re an avid festival-goer, having your ears blasted by the world’s best sound systems for days in a row, multiple times a year, is horrible for your ears.

Buying music-specific earplugs will help to keep your ears nice and safe so that you’ll still be able to enjoy music years down the road. And no, they won’t affect the quality of the sound, and maybe looking a little dorky is worth taking good care of one of your five senses.

Leave As Early As Possible

OLI SCARFF/AFP/Getty Images

While every cell in your body might be hurting and craving sleep, one of the best things you can do for yourself is to leave as early as possible the day you’re set to leave. The night before, it’s a good idea to pack up anything that you don’t need for that night or in the morning.

That way, when you wake up, you only have to take down and pack up a few things to make your morning less miserable. Yes, waking up early will be a literal nightmare, but what’s worse is sitting in a six-hour traffic jam just trying to get out of the venue. Believe me, isn’t a lesson you want to learn the hard way.

A Tale of Two Artists: Alfie Templeman and Holly Humberstone at The Great Escape Festival 2021

 

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Through the enveloping fog that swallowed up Golden Gate Park Aug. 17, 2012, a festival goer emerges with a flag as the crowd settles in for Stevie Wonder’s set during the three-day Outside Lands Festival in San Francisco Get daily music festival news, updates, line-ups, tickets, and more at IRC’s new Music Festivals 2021 page.

Roar writer Maisie Allen on Alfie Templeman and Holly Humberstone’s performances at The Great Escape 2021 festival.

It was very easy to be skeptical when Brighton-based festival The Great Escape, announced they would be going ahead in 2021, but rather than postponing like many other festivals, they would still be sticking to their May deadline and showing it virtually, with different streams on varying Youtube platforms.

Two of the artists making their Great Escape debut as spotlights, Alfie Templeman and Holly Humberstone, however, showed that virtual performances can still bring as much passion as an in-person gig.

18-year-old Bedfordshire-based Templeman’s evening slot on the festival’s “Stage 6” opened with his playful summer tune “Happiness in Liquid Form”, the titular single from his 2020 EP, dancing around in a burgundy suit which stood in stark contrast to his bright lyrics. Templeman never missed a beat to be a phenomenal showman, with his energy serving as a reminder of just how young he actually is, even though his musical skill would match, and if not, exceed, the most seasoned musician.

Following on from “Happiness”, Templeman performed his slightly chilled out “Everyone’s Gonna Love Someone”, with its opening line of “sweet nostalgia” setting its sugary-sweet nostalgic tone, although the late electric guitar riffs and saxophone ground it in a hybrid of 1980s pop and twenty-first-century electronic influence.

The eclectic sounds of Templeman highlight the vast amounts of music that Gen Z artists like himself and Humberstone have at their fingertips, with his third song “Wait, I Lied”, a sultry careless anthem with a bass line that wouldn’t have been out of place in the 2013 Arctic Monkeys album “AM” and he had the attitude to match, which shows throughout all of the songs on his new album, “Forever Isn’t Long Enough”. Templeman’s ability to engage viewers is a testament to how he is not only a great musician perfectly packaged as a Gen Z wunderkind, but a performer whose career will continue to thrive on stage.

An hour later, 21-year-old Humberstone was shown to be in a darkly lit house – later revealed to be her own – with its crumbling ruins; the perfect setting to her melancholy tracks, reminiscent of the haunting voices of Maggie Rogers and Phoebe Bridgers. Humberstone even revealed during her set that the house itself is haunted, after a friend’s clairvoyant mum could ‘sense it’ and that it served as further inspiration for her music; her track “Haunted House” explicitly so.

Initially sitting at a piano for heartbreak lament songs like “Falling Asleep at the Wheel”, also from her 2020 EP of the same name, Humberstone swapped to a pastel blue guitar for the second half of her set, using it to perform her first-ever release “Deep End”.

Speaking into the camera, rather than her longed-for audience, Humberstone reveals that she wrote it for her younger sister when she was struggling a few years prior as a way of showing her that she’d always support her. The revelation of this makes the lyrics all the more touching, without the saccharine connotations that the genre of melancholy pop can be given.

Both Humberstone and Templeman’s performances at Great Escape’s 2021 virtual festival show that new music can still thrive in this changing landscape, and whilst in-person gigs can never be replaced, the online performances by both artists highlight how music is a unifying force. In fact, online spaces and virtual performances open up new discussions around music accessibility and exposure. The Great Escape has always been a festival for new music, and whilst Templeman and Humberstone have been creating for a few years, their careers will only continue, and if their recent performances are anything to go by, succeed as well.

The post A Tale of Two Artists: Alfie Templeman and Holly Humberstone at The Great Escape Festival appeared first on Roar News.

Roar writer Maisie Allen on Alfie Templeman and Holly Humberstone’s performances at the The Great Escape 2021 festival. It was very easy to be sceptical when Brighton-based festival The Great Escape, announced they would be going ahead in 2021, but rather than postponing like many other festivals, they would still be sticking to their May […]

This post appeared first on Roar News.

 

All Tomorrow’s Parties Festival in U.K. Adds Slint to Line-Up; Weekend One Sold Out

All Tomorrow’s Parties was founded in 2000, with Mogwai invited to curate the line-up in the unusual setting of Pontins Holiday Camp, Camber Sands. Since then the festival has expanded across the globe continuing to set itself apart from large corporate events by staying intimate and fan-friendly, whilst influencing countless other festivals along the way. Two special December festival events at Camber Sands will be the last ever UK Holiday Camp festivals – two consecutive weekends under the title The End Of An Era. Weekend 1 is now completely sold out, making Weekend 2 the last chance fans will have to attend this very special festival in it’s original holiday camp home.

Weekend 2 running from November 29th – December 1st will be curated by ATP and Loop. Loop released three mind-blowing albums in the late 1980s highlighted by 1990’s A Gilded Eternity and ATP are very pleased to invite them to collaborate with us on the line-up which also sees Mogwai return to play the closing set of this final holiday camp festival. Today we can announce another very exciting headliner:

SLINT, hailing from Louisville, Kentucky, released two incredible albums on the Touch & Go label – 1989’s Tweez and 1991’s Spiderland. Spiderland left an unmistakeable imprint on the burgeoning ‘post-rock’ genre and gained many avid listeners across the next two decades. One of those listeners was ATP’s Barry Hogan:

“I’ll never forget the first time I heard Spiderland. It’s one of those records that changed my life and even inspired me to reform the band in 2005 by flying to Louisville, and bringing all the original members together for the first time in 13 years. Spiderland still excites me now as much as the first time I heard it. To say we are fortunate to have this incredibly influential band play the final ATP is a huge understatement.”

After Hogan’s trip, Slint ultimately reformed to headline All Tomorrow’s Parties UK in 2005, then performed the Spiderland album in full for the first time at another short series of live appearances in 2007. ATP are very excited to be able to invite Slint back to make a very rare live appearance as one of the headliners of the last ever ATP holiday camp festival.

The remaining tickets for the event are on sale now via ATPFestival.com – with more exciting names still to be added to the line-up. So far the line-up looks like this…

Mogwai
Slint
Goat
Superchunk
Girls Against Boys
Michael Rother presents the music of Neu! & Harmonia
Om
Ty Segall
Balam Acab
Edan (DJ set)
Dawn Hunger
Föllakzoid
Tall Firs
Wolf People
Civil Civic
Eaux
New War
The KVB
Thought Forms
DJ Jonathan Toubin

Curated by Loop:

Loop
The Pop Group
Comets On Fire
Fennesz
23 Skidoo
Dirty Beaches
White Fence
Kandodo
Hookworms

+ more to be confirmed!

First City Festival Photos – Beck, Phantogram, The National, Cults, Geographer, Lo-Fang, and More

Photos by Leopold Ruiz

The weekend before Labor Day, the second annual First City Festival took place at the Monterey Fairgrounds in Monterey, California. The line-up included headliners like Beck, The National, Phantogram, Geographer, as well as performances from a bunch of other mostly indie rock artists including Cults, Best Coast, Liars, Tokyo Police Club, Lo-Fang, Sleepy Sun, Dale Earnhart Jr. Jr., Liars, and many others.

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Beck rocks out during his classic track, "Devil's Haircut".
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Sarah Barthel and Phantogram at First City.
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Beck and his backup band converge during "Loser"
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The National's Matt Berninger on stage at First City.

 

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The National's guitarist Bryce Dressner.
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Geographer's cellist Nathan Blaz on stage.
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Geographer's Michael Deni performing at First City.
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Cults' singer Madeline Follin on stage at First City.
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Dale Earnhart Jr. Jr. playing the sax.

Second Annual First City Festival Kicks Off This Weekend in Monterey Featuring Stellar Line-Up

This weekend the second annual First City Festival in Monterey will kick off at the Monterey Fairgrounds, the location of what is largely considered the first major rock music festival in the U.S. – 1967’s Monterey Pop Festival. It’s also the fest where Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin first became international pop stars.

This year’s festival line-up, like last year’s, is packed solid with popular and talented artists and bands, including Beck, The National, Phantogram, Blind Pilot, Cults, Dawes, Liars, Geographer, Tokyo Police Club, Best Coast, Miniature Tigers, Future Islands, Cocorosie, Midlake, Lo-Fang, Sleepy Sun, The Naked & Famous, The Men, Cool Ghouls, among others.

The array of artists is guaranteed to attract a diverse crowd of music lovers seeking indie rock, alternative, folk, pop, techo, and dance. The fairgrounds are comprised of four stages with two large stages at opposite ends of the venue, where the headlining artists will be performing, during which time the smaller third and fourth stages will remain silent so that there is no overlapping.

The festival grounds offer a big benefit that music fans won’t find at any other music festival that we know – an authentic, full-fledged carnival that harkens back to yesteryear, featuring classic canrinval rides like the Zipper and The Scooter, specialty amusement rides like the Haunted House and Mardi Gras, a huge ferris wheel and the Fun Slide. Festival goers have full access to the existing carnival grounds, entertainment, food vendors and of course the rides. This year, festival ticket holders have access to unlimited free rides.

The premiere of the First City Festival last summer was considered a resounding success for the debut of a little-known festival thanks in part to performances from big acts like Passion Pit, MGMT, Beach House, Modest Mouse, Neko Case, and Toro Y Moi.

The two-day music spectacular featured a continuous stream of talented and popular acts that read like a who’s who of alternative and indie rock, folk and pop artists and bands, including The Black Angles, Washed Out, Okkervil River, Dr. Dog, Deerhunter, The Dodos, Akron/Family, The Antlers, Generationals, Purity Ring, Lucero, Devendra Banhart, Capital Cities, Father John Misty, Blitzen Trapper, The Hold Steady, Ernest Greene, Tennis, Guards and many others.

Compared to the much larger and well-known music festival in San Francisco, the Outside Lands Festival that took place earlier in the month, First City is a smaller, more intimate and less chaotic affair, and it is also a much more decidely indie and alternative music festival than Outside Lands as well. The event is organized and managed by Golden Voice productions.

 

Modest Mouse, Passion Pit, MGMT, Beach House and Other Artists Headline the First Annual ‘First City Festival’ in Monterey

Tens of thousands of festival goers were treated to an impressive list of indie and alternative rock artists and bands this past weekend at the first annual First City Festival in Monterey, California. The fest, featuring headliners like Modest Mouse, Washed Out, Passion Pit, MGMT, Beach House, Purity Ring, among others, drew large crowds each day of the two-day music festival held in the idyllic location of the Monterey Fairgrounds, where large grassy open spaces are shaded by groves of beautiful cypress trees and graced by fresh ocean air from the nearby Monterey Bay. It’s a perfect location for a mini-festival. In addition to three stages, there was also a vaudeville stage that drew crowds throughout the course of the festival. Plus, there were food and drink vendors, booths, charging stations, and even games and rides available at the adjoining carnival grounds.

Listen to the full playlist of songs from Day One artists via Spotify

Indie rock legends Modest Mouse closed the festival with a one and half hour set on Sunday night that included a bunch of their newer material mixed with some of their older, and more well-known, material, including highlighted tracks from the band’s mesmerizing 2000 album, The Moon and Antarctica. The band performed excellent live renditions of “Tiny Cities Made of Ashes” and “I Came As A Rat.” They also crunched out classic indie rock songs like “Dramamine” (which we included on our First City Spotify playlists) and “Float On.”

While the band played brilliantly through old and new material, things didn’t go so well when Mouse’s vocalist and guitarist Issac Brock tried to instruct the crowd to hold their breath for four seconds. When that odd request failed, Brock made even a stranger one, asking the crowd instead to boo loudly and spit on each other. Thankfully, that failed as well. That confused people, but the band’s set was so good that it didn’t matter one bit at the end of their set. Modest Mouse was the perfect band to close out a spectacular weekend featuring some of the biggest artists of indie music, from the pioneers, like Modest Mouse, to artists that have become so popular that they’re now pretty much mainstream, like Passion Pit and MGMT.

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Prior to Modest Mouse, who performed at the main Redwood stage, was a performance on the Cypress stage (located at the opposite end of the grounds) by Purity Ring. We opted to juggle sets from Deerhunter, who performed a remarkably buzzy set with excellent jams (perhaps to honor the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival at the same location, a festival that was the first major and heavily promoted rock festival in the United States) that blazed through the sky like the changing light and colors of the setting sun. Deerhunter were one of our favorite sets of the day.

In order to catch all of Deerhunter’s set, a festival goer who was not staying for the set up and performance of Purity Ring, had no choice but to miss some of Neko Case’s set. Case was essentially the opening artist for Modest Mouse, put on a predictably tight performance, selecting a range of songs from the band’s discography.

Earlier on Day Two, was a full afternoon’s worth of talented artists, including Toro Y Moi, Lucero, Devendra Banhart, Dr. Dog, Capital Cities, Antlers, The Dodos, Generationals, Avery Tare’s Slasher Ficks, Akron/Family, Seventeen Evergreen, Bleached, among others. That’s the kind of line-up we’re used to seeing at the bigger, already established and popular festivals like Coachella, ACL and Bonaroo.

Listen to more Day Two artists via IRC’s Spotify playlist

With all of those terrific bands performing one after another all afternoon, it’s hard to totally comprehend that the day’s headliners, which always draw the largest crowds, had yet to perform. As the sun began to dip little by little in the other direction, the number of Passion Pit and MGMT hipsters were increasing by the boat loads. It’s easy to conclude that many came to the festival just for one or two artists. And while the success of Passion Pit and MGMT grew out of the indie underground buzz, they are now clearly more mainstream than just a popular indie buzz band.

For example, in just the first few notes MGMT played of their popular song “Time to Pretend,” the enormous crowd roared with overwhelming approval as big crowds periodically do in the first few notes of wildly popular song. Again, a consistent theme we noticed about First City, the sound is amazing as far as outdoor festivals go. While MGMT delivered a good show, it wasn’t their best as one writer, Jody Amable, reported for a Bay Area blog called Bay Bridged. She wrote that MGMT: “rolled out the same old show they’ve been doing for years, featuring a whole lot of trippy visuals in retina-melting shades of neon to go with their brand of feathers-and-face-paint electro pop,” and while psychedelic visuals are a ‘time honored tradition’ for rock that originated in the Bay Area to begin with (and MGMT is a San Francisco band), the visuals were “starting to upstage them [MGMT] a little bit.” It’s true that the visuals aspect of the set was old hat, but the main annoyance was the temporary blinding effect and disorientation caused by overly contrasted and brightened visuals that flashed on and off repeatedly.

If you were trying to take photos from a few rows or more from the stage with a phone camera, chances are you got little else but big, blinding splashes of neon colors across the picture. Maybe that’s why they did it. Maybe it’s a secret government brainwashing mechanism. No, but seriously, tone it down guys. Or maybe it goes so well with MGMT’s hipster image and fan base that it’s purposely made to be way over the top.

By the time the closing act for Day One, Passion Pit, came on, the arena was packed with tens of thousands of people crammed into the fairground’s dusty Redwood stage area (which is built more for rodeos than music concerts). Passion Pit topped off the first day of what was an amazing afternoon and evening (11 hours total) of music. The band played with the quality of performance one would expect from such an accomplished band that started out DIY, went indie and are now admired by millions of young people around the world.

First City’s inaugural would have been solid even if all of the artists scheduled for Day One were spread out over two days. Yet, there was still another blockbuster day of performances from excellent bands still to come.

As we noticed all weekend, the sound at First City was spectacular, and there are likely a number of variables for that – one of course being the size of the grounds and the stage areas – relatively small compared to bigger festivals with a line-up the caliber of First City’s. Often times, a new festival can’t get dozens of popular indie bands booked for a variety of reasons. There are few debut music festivals that have a powerful lineup like First City did. We’re already curious about what they have in the works right now for 2014. First City is also a music festival that was clearly designed for indie rock fans. However, the festival’s name is attributed to the fact that Monterey was the first capital of California.

In the few reviews of the festival, there is not much emphasis placed on the sound quality. Sure, there is plenty of cred to the sound engineers – that’s a given. But the relatively small area, compared to Outside Lands in Golden Gate Park, keeps the sound contained and the number of trees and mostly wooden structures in and around the fair grounds absolutely help to provide a better, fuller sound inside that space. Now we can see part of the reason why Jimi Hendrix, The Who and Janis Joplin all became famous directly as a result of their performances at Monterey Pop Festival in June of 1967. The sound, even with the little sound quality technology that existed at the time, must have been incredible.

To that point, there is the once best-selling official soundtrack from Monterey Pop as well as the film by the same name. See our preview of First City that includes an embedded video of rare concert bonus footage that was not released on the official film (no idea who posted it, but YouTube could remove it at anytime).

While there is some tweaking to do here and there, for the debut of a new festival, the organizers, Golden Voice, did a spectacular job, and they also brought a major rock festival back to the place where they were born nearly a half century ago. Plus, it’s simply a terrific spot to have a music festival for the ambience, ease of parking, fresh ocean air, moderate temps, and definitely for the acoustics. During his Father John Misty set, Tillman even commented to the crowd that there was something wrong with anyone who didn’t think it was an ideal place for a music festival.

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The Monterey Fairgrounds has been home to the world famous Monterey Jazz Festival for the past 55 years. In fact, from September 20th to September 22nd, three weeks from now, the Monterey Jazz Festival will celebrate is 56th year, further solidifying its place in music history as one of the world’s oldest and continuously running music festivals.

First City will most certainly return next year based on the feedback we’ve been hearing, and a number of artists who openly praised the festival to the audience during their sets. Although the festival did not sell out of tickets by the time the gates opened on Saturday at 11 am., the crowds we saw, particularly at the Redwood stage for the top headliners, certainly seemed to be in the tens of thousands. Monterey Pop had 55,000 in attendance. From looking at the crowds in different locations throughout the two days, we’d say it was closer to 55,000 than not. The most striking similarity we could see to Monterey Pop 46 years ago was the attire. As was the case at Outside Lands just a few weeks ago, there were thousands of teenage girls and young adult women dressed in hippie-style attire, from dresses and flowery head bands to ripped jeans and colorful blouses and even polyester. For anyone who has seen many images over the years of the attire of the real hippies from the actual original time period, seeing all the hipsters as if they walked off a 1969 photograph, was trippy, mostly because it was so right on, right down to the straight, long hair and minimal facial make up.

If you’re already thinking about festivals to attend next summer in California, follow news during the coming winter and spring about First City via their mailing list. Plus, if you’ve never been to the San Francisco Bay Area (Monterey is part of the central coast region, some 110 miles south of San Francisco), and you have the ability to do so, it’s strongly recommended to spend a few extra days to see San Francisco and other amazing places in the Bay Area and central coast, including Monterey’s famous Aquarium, the 17 Mile Drive, the redwoods, and the Golden Gate Bridge, to name a few. If luck has it, the second annual First City will occur the weekend following, or proceeding, San Francisco’s hugely popular Outside Lands Festival. That’ll make it possible for visitors to California, who also love music festivals, to attend both fests. Bundling for vacations is always a good idea, and if this year is any indication, attending First City in 2014 should be high on the list for indie rock fans.

First City Festival Premieres with Modest Mouse, Beach House, Passion Pit, MGMT, Toro Y Moi

Powerhouse indie rock artists such as Modest Mouse, Passion Pit, MGMT, Beach House, Toro Y Moi, Devendra Banhart and Neko Case will headline the inaugural of the First City Festival in Monterey, California next weekend, August 24-25th. Dozens of other popular artists and bands, including Deerhunter, Washed Out, Okkervil River, The Hold Steady, Father John Misty, Dr. Dog, and The Dodos, are scheduled to perform at the premiere two-day music festival.

With the blockbuster success of the Outside Lands Music & Arts Festival last weekend in San Francisco, fest fever is running high, and for many music lovers in northern California, and beyond (especially those who were unable to attend the sold out Outside Lands), First City is a fest not to be missed.

While its location on the beautiful coast of Monterey Bay is idyllic, the main draw of First City is the amazing lineup. Altogether, there are more than 30 top-notch artists and bands scheduled to perform on three stages from noon to 11 pm Saturday and Sunday. They include, in addition to the already mentioned headliners, Georgian electro artist Ernest Greene, better known by the stage name, Washed Out; Austin’s homespun sons, Okkervil River; Brooklyn indie rockers The Hold Steady; Texas psychedelic rockers The Black Angels; famous songwriter and instrumentalist J. Tillman‘s (Fleet Foxes) newest project, featuring the moniker, Father John Misty; Portland experimental country/folk band Blitzen Trapper; plus, Civil Twilight, Delta Rae, Tennis, Quadron, Eli “Paperboy” Reed, Guards, and Guy Blakeslee. That’s just on Day One.

View the full schedules, and create a custom schedule, for Day One and Two.

“Love Is Greed” – Passion Pit from Gossamer

“Electric Feel” MGMT from Congratulations

“Real Love” – Beach House from Teen Dream

“Amor Fati” – Washed Out from Within and Without

“Bad Vibrations” – The Black Angels from Phosphene Dream

“Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings” – Father John Misty from Fear Fun

“Love the Way You Walk Away”– Blitzen Trapper from American Goldwing

Listen to the full playlist of songs from Day One artists via Spotify

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Day Two Lineup and Schedule for First City

On Day Two, in addition to top headliners Modest Mouse, Neko Case, Toro Y Moi and Devendra Banhart, artists and bands set for Sunday include Brooklyn psychedelic band Deerhunter; Candanian electro duo and Juno Award nominee Purity Ring; Philadelphia indie rockers Dr. Dog; New Orleans rockers Generationals; Los Angeles indie pop duo Capital Cities; Memphis country-punk rock band Lucero; Brooklyn indie rockers The Antlers; Portland experimental folk outfit Akron/Family; San Francisco indie rock duo The Dodos; as well as Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks, Bleached, Seventeen Evergreen, Electric Guest, and Light Fantastic.

“Dashboard” – Modest Mouse from We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank [Explicit]

“The Ocean Breaths Salty” – Modest Mouse from Good News For People Who Love Bad News

“Middle Cyclone” – Neko Case from Middle Cyclone

“Say That” – Toro Y Moi from Anything in Return

“Helicopter”– Deerhunter from Halcyon Digest

“How Long Must I Wait” – Dr. Dog from  Be The Void

Listen to more Day Two artists via IRC’s Spotify playlist

First City is a festival tailor-made for indie rock fans. With a line-up that rivals any two-day festival in the U.S. this year, the cost of admission, in our opinion, is well worth it, especially for avid indie rock fans. How many opportunities does any music lover get to see this many fantastic bands all in one place over a two-day, 22-hour music marathon?

Last week, festival organizers, Golden Voice, announced a number of after parties that include a DJ set from Passion Pit on Saturday night at the Blue Fin in historic Cannery Row. Also on Saturday evening The Hold Steady will perform a show with Eli “Paperboy” Reed at Planet Gemini, located across the street from the Fairgrounds. Get tickets for Passion Pit or The Hold Steady; as with the festival two-day passes and single day passes, there are no added fees. Carnival rides and games will also be available, which can be purchased via the official First City website.

First City is the latest of a number of major music festival to premiere northern California in recent years. With the success of the Outside Lands and Treasure Island music festivals in San Francisco, it sure seems very likely that First City will be as well.

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The picturesque seaside town of Monterey, located some 120 miles south of San Francisco, was made famous around the world as the inspiration for many of John Steinbeck’s historic novels, for the magnificent Monterey Aquarium, and for the beautiful Pebble Beach golf course.

In the arena of music, the coastal city is widely known as the location of the annual Monterey Jazz Festival, one of the longest continuously-running music festivals in the world. But it is best known in the history of rock for the Monterey Pop Festival (June 16-18, 1967), the first major outdoor rock festival in the United States. Some of the greatest rock and roll artists of all time – Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and The Who – received their first major exposure to America at Monterey Pop.

With the subsequent film and album, and press and radio air play, the now iconic artists became international rock super stars as a result of their appearances at Monterey Pop. The festival is also widely credited as a pivotal moment of the “Summer of Love” in 1967. Monterey Pop attracted 55,000 festival goers at the Monterey Fairgrounds, the same spot First City will kick-off it’s debut on August 24 and 25th.

Watch the Monterey Pop Festival, as well as bonus performances (of nearly two hours long), and various shorter performance videos via YouTube, including Jimi Hendrix’s historic performance when he burned and smashed his guitar.

The name for the First City Festival comes from the fact that Monterey was the first capital, or ‘first city,’ of California before it was moved to Sacramento.

Festival Goers Treated to Legendary Lineup at Outside Lands Music Festival; McCartney, NIN, Phoenix, RHCP, Vampire Weekend

Tens of thousands of music lovers descended on foggy Golden Gate Park this past weekend for three days of live music from artists and bands like Paul McCartney, Vampire Weekend, Band of Horses, Nine Inch Nails, Yeah Yeah Yeahs , Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Those giants of music were just some of the headliners at the 6th annual Outside Lands Music Festival in San Francisco last weekend. OSL has quickly become one of the top major music fests in the United States.

As a festival known for its emphasis on representing a diverse range of genres from folk to rock and hip-hop to pop, Outside Lands did not disappoint. On Friday evening, the legendary Paul McCartney, now 71, performed for three hours, playing a string of Beatles’ songs he penned, from “Lady Madonna” and “Get Back” to “Blackbird” and “Ob La Di Ob La Da,” with tens of thousands of festival goers singing along. When great masses of people sing together in unison, it really sounds amazing. McCartney also played many Wings‘ songs, including classic 70’s radio hits like “Band on the Run,” “Listen to What The Man Said,” “Silly Love Songs,” and “Jet.” McCartney and the band also performed a number of songs from the former Beatles solo records as well.

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McCartney performed a wonderful rendition of his classic song, "Yesterday," which many respected music critics consider one of the greatest ballads ever written. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

The stage, which is impressively gigantic considering that it was constructed in days (and has to be taken down in a couple of days as well) contained two gigantic screens, which for McCartney’s set were extended to at least 40 to 50-feet high. The picture quality was stunning, and to see a full shot of McCartney from head to toe on two massive screens was a unique perspective, and raised the bar for festival video displays.

Throughout his three-hour set, photos of McCartney through the years were splashed on the background screen. And if all of that wasn’t enough, the show included a thrilling fireworks display that illuminated brilliantly through the night fog.

Earlier in the day, festival goers crowded around stages to hear a host of artists like Band of Horses, Surfer Blood, The National (all on the main Land’s End stage) with other artists like Wild Belle, Twenty One Pilots, Zedd, Yeasayer and Pretty Lights, all of whom performed on the Twin Peaks stage, which as the venue map shows, was all of the way at the other end of the grounds, some three football fields apart.

The smaller stages like Sutro and the Panhandle featured sets from an array of artists ranging from The Heavy, Rhye and D’Angelo to Houndmouth, The Men, Daughter, Wavves and Chromatics. For fans of all types of music, Outside Lands definitely delivers in that regard.

Listen to IRC’s Spotify playlist for Day One of Outside Lands

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Crowds packed a fog shrouded Golden Gate Park Saturday for Day Two of Outside Lands

Day Two: Young The Giant, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Tallest Man on Earth, NIN, Phoenix

On Saturday, Day Two of the festival, crowds flooded in early, with lines, just to get into the festival grounds, backing up for blocks. Day Two started off at noon with Bhi Bhiman and Locura, followed soon after by The Soft White Sixties and Social Studies.

Indie favorites Young The Giant took the main Land’s End stage in the mid-afternoon. The Los Angeles band, who’ve been recording their sophomore album for months, emerged to perform for a huge crowd that latched on to the band after the release of their debut album. Of course they performed a number of their popular radio-friendly songs like “Cough Syrup” and “I Got.”

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Nine Inch Nails rock the Land's End stage on Day Two of Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Over-lapping with Young The Giant, for the most part, was The Growlers at the Sutro stage in nearby Lindley Meadow. The long-time indie band from Orange County in southern California started off their set with “Nosebleed Sun” and performed a number of their other fan favorites like “What It Is,” “Someday,” “Wandering Eyes” and “Sea Lion Goth Blues.”

Also over-lapping with those bands was the performance from Youth Lagoon who were performing at the second main stage, Twin Peaks, which is located far away from where Young The Giant and The Growlers were performing.

Alternative rap posse Jurassic 5, Thao & The Get Down Stay Down, Baauer and Bombino finished out the afternoon schedule for Day Two, opening the way for evening performances from Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Head and the Heart, Kurt Vile and The Violators, The Tallest Man on Earth, Grizzly Bear, The Mother Hips, and the Saturday night closers, Nine Inch Nails and Phoenix.

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Choco Lands played out a familiar theme of art exhibits and expressions in the tree-covered areas of the Outside Lands festival grounds. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Nine Inch Nails, which turns 25 next year, performed their dark hard rock on the Land’s End stage to a massive audience. The band ripped out some of NIN’s newer songs to start off their set, including tracks like “Copy of A” and “Disappointed,” which will appear on the band’s upcoming eight album release, Hesitation Marks.

Later in the two and a half hour set featuring 19 songs, NIN performed many of their most well-known songs, like “Closer,” “Came Back Haunted,” and “The Hand That Feeds.” For an encore, Trent Reznor, the only original NIN band member, belted out “Hurt” with his fellow band members before a crowd that stretched as far as the eye could see.

Meanwhile, at the opposite end of the festival grounds, a younger generation’s band, the popular French electro-pop outfit, Phoenix, performed to an equally large, and enthusiastic, audience, delivering tracks like “Entertainment,” “Lasso,” and “Lisztomania,” to open their one hour and fifteen-minute set. Prior to Phoenix, Brooklyn indie folk rock band Grizzly Bear performed on the Twin Peaks stage while The Head and the Heart played at the Sutro stage and while festival headliners, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, rocked the main stage at Land’s End.

The biggest downfall, in our opinion, of a festival like Outside Lands, where the two main stages (Lands End and Twin Peaks) are some three to four football fields apart, is missing sets from bands that are playing basically at the same time. The distance between the two main stages makes it nearly impossible to see a half set from one band and leave in time to catch most of the second half of the other band’s performance.

This dilemma occurred a number of times during the festival; in fact, sometimes three or four bands and artists were playing at the same time. The issue with overlapping performances occurred a number of times on Day Two including during the block of time from 6:30 to 8:30 pm when Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Tallest Man on Earth, The Mother Hips, The Head and the Heart and Grizzly Bear – three of our favorite artists at the fest.

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During their 13-song set, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs stirred up a massive, excited crowd of tens of thousands of mostly younger (under 25) festival goers who were packed in from the front of the stage area all the way back to The Dome – the spot (see here on the official festival map) where deejays and mix masters performed all weekend, and which often obscured the sound from the main stage for people furthest from the stage.

Karen O and the YYY’s opened with “Sacrilege,” followed by “Gold Lion” and “Mosquito.” By mid-set, the band knocked out the ominous “Heads Will Roll,” and saved signature songs like “Maps” and “Zero” for the latter half of their performance. A gigantic image of the band’s YYY logo graced the backdrop of the enormous Land’s End stage.

Other artists that played on Day Two included Social Studies, Locura, Milo Greene, James McCartney (Paul McCartney’s son), Cherub, and newer favorites of cafe patrons, Atlas Genius.

* Listen to a Spotify playlist of Day Two artists from Outside Lands 2013.
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The Red Hot Chili Peppers closed Outside Lands with a masterful and energetic performance. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Day Three Delivered Red Hot Chili Peppers, Camper Van Beethoven, Kaskade, Vampire Weekend

Day Three of Outside Lands kicked off with artist like Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, The Easy Leaves, The Wild Feathers and Little Green Cars. The legendary 80’s underground band, Camper Van Beethoven, from Santa Cruz, California, graced the Sutro stage. CVB performed many of their cult classics, like “Take The Skinheads Bowling” and the crowd pleasing “Northern California Girls.”

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Kurt Vile and The Violators jammed on the Sutro stage in Lindley Meadow on Sunday to a lively crowd. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Philadelphia indie folk rockers, Kurt Vile and the Violators, sounded superb during their set; that is, when they overcame technical issues. Vile opened with the standout track “Jesus Fever” from the 2011 album, Smoke Ring For My Halo. However, the on-going sound issues made the song sound flatter than it does on the official recording.

The natural surroundings actually prevented the sound issues from being even more disruptive. That’s mainly because the Sutro stage is located in smaller area, where a grassy meadow (Lindley Meadow) carpets a long and narrow raven that is shaded and shielded by towering clusters of eucalyptus and pine trees.

It was necessary to leave the Kurt Vile set a bit early to get back to the Land’s End stage to catch one of IRC’s favorite indie rock bands of recent years – Foals. The Oxford, England band formed in 2005, and in 2008, released their well-received U.K. debut album. Nonetheless, it was Foals’ 2010 sophomore album, Total Life Forever, that launched the band’s popularity in the States, a wild wave that they have surfed swimmingly all the way to their headline status at Outside Lands.

Foals opened their set with “Prelude,” that was quickly followed by songs like “Miami” and “Olympic Airways.” As the band’s 10-song set progressed, the audience, many who were claiming their spots close to the stage for the later headlining bands like Vampire Weekend and festival closer, Red Hot Chili Peppers.

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The U.K. power indie rock band Foals were one of the main headliners for the closing day of Outside Lands 2013. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Following Foals, it was off to the eastern side of the festival grounds to the Panhandle stage to catch some of King Tuff‘s set, after which it was time to return to the west side once again to the Sutro stage to catch Dawes, who have previously performed at OSL. Dawes played songs like their opening track, “From A Window Seat,” as well as “Most People,” “Fire Away,” and “Time Spent in Los Angeles.” We missed all but one song of Daryl Hall & John Oates headlining set, but it did not phase us much; we’re not really fans of their 80’s radio pop music.

Approximately 15 minutes before the end of Dawes’ set, we headed over to the adjacent Land’s End stage to catch Vampire Weekend‘s headlining performance, and thus having to sacrifice sets from veterans Willie Nelson & Family, indie rock newbies Ms Mr and the powerhouse songwriting duo Matt & Kim. Unfortunately, these are the difficult and regrettable decisions that have to be made at any festival with nearly 100 artists, five stages and 65,000 people.

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Vampire Weekend opened for the Red Hot Chili Peppers on the Land's End stage on the last day of Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz.

Vampire Weekend, it goes without saying, was one of the main draws of Day Three, and were essentially opening for Red Hot Chili Peppers, a compliment for any band. VW has improved immensely, in all ways, from when we first saw them at the Rickshaw Stop in San Francisco in 2008, before they exploded into a worldwide ‘indie rock’ pop sensation. The band took the stage to a roaring welcome from the juiced up audience, which was as interesting as it was thrilling, considering that most of those in the audience were long in place to see the closing set from the RHCP.

Perhaps there are more RHCP fans who are also Vampire Weekend fans, and vice-versa? Regardless, VW opened their 17-song, 70-minute, set with the crowd pleasing favorite, “Cousins,” followed by other VW singles like “White Sky” and “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa.” The New York band also performed most of their other signature tracks like “A-Punk,” “Horchata,” “Oxford Comma,” and “Walcott,” much of the time with the crowd singing along.

As the last shows of Outside Lands 2013 were drawing near, it struck us just how fast the entire event zoomed right by. But this happens at all festivals – there’s just too much to see and to much to do. It was now down to the last two headliners – the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Kaskade. We decided to split up to cover each separately. While it will be remembered for many great performances, these two top acts, scheduled to close out Outside Lands 2013, were among the most memorable.

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Kaskade brought his groovy beats and synth pop waves to OSL 2013's final hours with a superb set. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

The Red Hot Chili Peppers, who are easily one of the most popular rock bands of the past two decades, took the stage Sunday night to the roar of 40,000-plus festival goers who jammed the west side of Golden Gate Park for the closing set, while the remaining crowd of some 25,000 people, packed it in for the Twin Peaks performance by electro-pop beats artist Kaskade.

RHCP hit the ground running, opening with jam session that got the band and the massive crowd pumped up for the first song, “Can’t Stop,” followed by an electrifying “Dani, California” and “Otherside.” The band was just getting warmed up.

With the exception of what can only be classified as odd banter from iconic RHCP bassist Flea, the band ripped through an amazingly executed set of crowd pleasing songs that included “Under the Bridge,” “Give It Away,” and “Californication,” to name just a few of the 15 songs, including two encores.

Despite Flea’s strange ramblings, the RHCP would not have the power they do without Flea’s legendary bass riffs. And while As their name implies, RHCP were red hot, a stark contrast to the foggy, drizzly, windy and cool weather that surrounded them. Oh, and just a personal note, but the lip hair doesn’t work.

There were many festival goers that were torn by having to choose between the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Kaskade. And as with the RHCPs, Kaskade made certain that his fans would also be treated to a fantastic closing set for Outside Lands 2013, delivering a two-hour set of dance beats mixed masterfully with Kaskade’s unique electro pop grooves.

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In addition to three 10-hour days of live music, OSL 2013 also offered explorations of artistic themes like Wonder World. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Although the sun failed to break through the thick, gray fog over the three days (which is typical for San Francisco in August), that did not dampen festival goers enthusiasm. In fact, we’ve heard many say it’s preferable to the scorching heat and humidity of most other big summer time festivals.

Each day of the OSL festival, some 65,000 people flowed into the city’s Golden Gate Park, walked long distances between the five stages, browsed the many art exhibits and murals set up in the park and trekking through the forested areas that included temporary wonder lands like Choco Lands, a chocolate-centric area that included just about everything one could imagine made with chocolate.

What a way to end another historic Outside Lands festival. In fact, OSL, together with the Treasure Island Music Festival (which also began in 2008), has brought major outdoor music festivals back to San Francisco, which itself is arguably the birthplace of outdoor music festivals (which then were often free, featured a limited number of bands, were much less organized, and certainly didn’t have corporate backing) as they were an integral part of the Haight-Ashbury ‘hippie’ scene that emerged in the mid to late 1960s.

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A grove of lights illuminate a forested area of Golden Gate Park during Outside Lands. Photo by Leopold Ruiz

Major outdoor music festivals in San Francisco and the surrounding region pretty much ended in 1969 with the tragic events of the Altamount Music Festival, promoted in the weeks leading up to the fest as the “Woodstock of the West.”

Sadly, that didn’t turn out to be the case. IRC will be publishing an extensive look at music festivals in the San Francisco Bay Area and northern California in the next couple of weeks and we will also be covering the upcoming inception of the new First City Music Festival (August 24-25) in Monterey, with a line-up featuring MGMT, Modest Mouse, Passion Pit, Neko Case and many others.

Stay tuned for more coverage of Outside Lands 2013, with additional playlists, photo galleries and video to be added in the coming days.

2013 Sasquatch Music Festival Line-Up and Schedule of Artists & Bands, Playlists and Sasquatch Tips

SASQUATCH_2013-lineupThe 2013 music festival season officially launched with Coachella last month. You might think the music fest season kicks off with South By Southwest, but SXSW is not really a music fest as much as it is a music free-for-all, sort of like New York’s CMJ Music Marathon that happens each October is. In the past few weeks, there has been a stream of music festival news, line-up announcements and plans. It’s always stunning how fast it comes around and then goes away as the summer wanes. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves here; summer hasn’t even officially started yet.

The big music festival news this week is all about the Sasquatch Music Festival that is held each year at The Gorge out in the badlands of central Washington state near the town of Murray. Over the past few years, Sasquatch has really become one of the premier festivals in the U.S., not only for the expansive beauty of the surrounding area, but most notably for the amazing line-up (and the very interesting characters that show up – especially from cities like Seattle, Portland, San Francisco and Vancouver; Canadians can be very rowdy, believe it or not). The promoters have managed to put together one amazing line-up after another since the festival’s inception in 2001, but most especially over the past four to five years.

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Just take the headliners for starters. Slated to perform on the huge Sasquatch main stage on Sasquatch 2013 Day One (Friday, May 24th) are Arctic Monkeys (pictured above), Built to Spill, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Schoolboy Q & AB-Soul, Reignwolf and ZZ Ward. Other artists set to perform Friday on one of the other four stages/tents are Vampire Weekend, Father John Misty, Japandroids, Red Fang, Seawolf, Matthew Dear, Youth Lagoon, Telekinesis, and others. See the full Sasquatch 2013 schedule for Friday and listen to IRC’s Sasquatch Day One playlist via Spotify.

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Sasquatch 2013 Day Two (Saturday, May 25th) headliners scheduled to perform on the main Sasquatch stage include Sigur Ros, The xx, Bloc Party, Andrew Bird, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, among others. Performing on other stages around the festival grounds on Saturday will be artists like Empire of the Sun, Tame Impala, Devendra Banhart, Divine Fits, Atlas Genius, Laidback Luke, Totally Enormous Extinct, Porcelain Raft, Surfer Blood, Akron/Family, and Suuns. See the full Sasquatch Saturday schedule and listen to our Sasquatch 2013 Day Two playlist via Spotify.

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Sasquatch 2013 Day Three (Sunday, May 26th) headliners include Mumford & Sons, Elvis Costello, Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, Dropkick Murphys, The Tallest Man on Earth, Danny Brown and others. Scheduled to perform on other stages Sunday include artists such as Primus 3D, Grimes, Shout Out Louds, DIIV, Fang Island, Baths, Azari & III, The Presets, Shad, Hundred Waters, and Wake Owl. View the full Sunday schedule for Sasquatch and listen to our Sasquatch 2013 Day Three playlist.

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Sasquatch 2013 Day Four (Monday, May 27th) headliners to close out Sasquatch 2013 include The Lumineers (pictured above), The Postal Service, Cake, Imagine Dragons, Ryan Bingham. Set to perform on other stages on closing day include artists such as Alt-J, P.O.S., Twin Shadow, Dirty Projectors, Gold Fields, Chvrches, Steve Aoki, Toro Y Moi, Ariel Pink, Beachwood Sparks, Menomena and Grieves. See the full schedule for Monday and our playlist for Sasquatch 2013 Day Four.

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Preparing For Sasquatch

If this is your first journey to Sasquatch, there are a few things you’ll need to know. First, make sure to bring enough blankets, a good sleeping bag, plenty of warm clothes and socks and rain gear. It can get damn cold out in the big open spaces at night and it can also be chilly during the day as well. The extended weather forecast for the festival this year predicts a 30% chance of showers on Friday and a 20% chances of showers on Sunday. The daytime temps this year, unlike previous years, is forecasted to only be in the low 60s and the mid to high 40s at night. Add the wind into the equation, and it can literally feel like near freezing temperatures (particularly of note to festival goers from California making the 1,000+ mile trek to The Gorge ). One of the things that can easily ruin your experience is to be cold or chilly all night. Plus, if it is going to be damp, that will make it feel even colder. The biggest factor in that is the winds; there are like three trees in the entire area, so there’s not much protection from the winds. We found out the hard way our first time out.

Bring plenty of sunscreen too. We’ve seen many red baked people on Day Two who were obviously suffering. The winds, and often times the clouds, can really be deceiving – you can get just as much of a sunburn even with cloud cover at this time of year. One of the worst things, especially before the summer has started, is to get burnt and have to suffer for the final three days of the fest. Baseball caps, long pants and comfortable shoes are good too. Oh yeah, and the always useful ear plugs, plus sunglasses. It can also get really dusty so sunglasses and hats are not only useful for the sun, or the glare of the sun through the clouds, but also for the dust. As with all outdoor spaces where festivals are held, please respect the land. The Gorge is a beautiful, ancient place, and there is nothing worse then seeing a beautiful place get trashed. The same goes for the local people. Every festival goer makes an impression and represents the festival itself, and everyone is a better person for showing the utmost respect to the local people and the land.