Portsmouth News

WE’RE READY TO ROCK 'N' ROLL

High hopes for August return of Victorious

- by CHRIS BROOM The News newsdesk@thenews.co.uk

HOPES are rising that the roadmap out of lockdown will see the return of Victorious this summer.

While no formal announceme­nt has yet been made, Andy Marsh, a co-founder of the music festival, said: ‘We’re working very hard behind the scenes to see what we can achieve.’

THE organisers of Victorious Festival are more optimistic than ever about this year's event taking place following Monday’s announceme­nt of a roadmap out of lockdown.

Victorious is due to return to Southsea Common over the August bank holiday weekend after the team behind it were forced to cancel last year’s festival due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

While the organisers are necessaril­y keeping their cards close to their chests, there is renewed optimism in the camp.

Cofounder Andy Marsh said: ‘The roadmap that has been announced has made things look a lot more promising for events like us and we're going to be as transparen­t with everyone and as honest as possible to try and do what we can to deliver a safe festival – as long as things keep moving that way.

‘We're working very hard behind the scenes to see what we can achieve.’

And if allowed, the festival will return in all its glory.

Fellow cofounder James Ralls said: ‘At the moment, according to the roadmap, it would be on at the same scale as before.

‘There's a lot of working groups to do with putting on events and Covid and things that are going on with the government and Sage, and we're involved in some of those and getting informatio­n from them, so it's all looking quite good.

‘Obviously if it turns out you can't go ahead, then we won't, but right now, we're optimistic that we can.

‘Hopefully we can welcome everyone back. That's what we're looking forward to and that's what we're playing for.’

Earlier this week Reading and Leeds Festivals confirmed they will take place the same weekend, but the Victorious team are choosing to exercise more caution, and will be watching next week’s budget closely.

Insurance could be key – no events in 2020 were covered for Covid-19-related cancellati­ons, but fortunatel­y many of the acts agreed to either return deposits or forgo payment.

James said: ‘I don't think anyone in the UK was covered by their insurance – I heard of a festivals in Europe which were, but no-one really was, so anything you'd spent up to that point was money down the drain really.’

‘There's a million working parts,’ said Andy, ‘are the bands going to want to do it? Will they deem it safe? What insurance comes out next week in the budget? All of the festivals are going to be looking at that because if there are more spikes, the roadmap is very tight, and they won't hesitate to shut things down again.

‘But it sounds like we're heading in the right direction.’

No acts have been confirmed so far for this year's bill, but Andy added: ‘Whatever happens, we will provide an awesome line-up as we always do, so don't panic.’

Acts originally pencilled in to play in 2020 included Ian Brown, The Streets, Royal Blood, Nile Rodgers and Chic and Bombay Bicycle Club.

And since Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the plans, ticket sales have 'gone crazy.’ Many musiclover­s with tickets for 2020 had already agreed to roll them over to this year rather than ask for a refund.

The festival has become a major part of the city’s economy, bringing £12.5m to Portsmouth in 2019, and the organisers are keen to keep working with local people where possible.

James said: ‘I know it's been bad, but now it looks like there's some light at the end of the tunnel - and it should be good going forward.

‘I know some people didn't get support from the government schemes – a lot of the independen­ts and freelancer­s – but the guys we use, they're all local, and they're all still around. So we're glad we'll be able to get all of them back in work again.’

Tickets are available now from victorious­festival.co.uk

Ican barely comprehend the fact that in only a matter of weeks we’re going to have some form of normality back. Some glimmer of civilisati­on; some rays of sunshine in the darkness that has been these last few months; some hope that life may, just may, get back to some kind of normal.

But I also fear that we tried this before and it made things worse. After the last lockdown last summer, we all began to relax again. We were encouraged to support local businesses and ‘eat out to help out’ by dining in local restaurant­s and cafes.

Despite restrictin­g ourselves on meeting up in large groups we visited friends, saw family members and began to relax our shoulders from the tension it had been carrying for so long and where did it get us exactly?

Back into a deeper, darker hole than we were before and that little bit of freedom that we had meant that the worst days were ahead of us.

Christmas was restricted to just one day with only a handful of people. There was no Boxing Day; no New Year’s Eve; no New Year’s Day.

Now as we head towards the third month of 2021 without having seen anyone in real life, only in the two dimensiona­l virtual world, I worry that all the news about restaurant and pub gardens opening; news of sporting events coming back in the summer; cinemas and theatres opening and even whispers that come mid-summer, we can head to an actual nightclub and have a night of fun – dancing and cocktails – that all of this can be done with actual people that we don’t actually live with just blows my mind. Does that make me strange? Have I become a hermit over the last year?

On the one hand, I can’t contain my excitement. This year’s been amazing as we had our daughter, Harley, but it’s also been impossibly hard. Can life really go back to normal? Do we want it to?

Questions to ponder and it’s given me real food for thought this week. I just want to remain safe and I want my family to be safe. If we can do that whilst having some freedom then, that’s amazing and sign me up. But if it doesn’t can we, as society, really handle even darker days to come? That I’m not so sure of…

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 ??  ?? HUGE CROWD Professor Green performs at Victorious Festival, 2019
HUGE CROWD Professor Green performs at Victorious Festival, 2019
 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? PLAN Boris Johnson on February 22
Picture: Getty Images PLAN Boris Johnson on February 22
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