Los Angeles Times

Goldenvoic­e cancels FYF Fest

The move is a setback for the effort to bring gender parity to the male-heavy scene.

- MIKAEL WOOD POP MUSIC CRITIC

Well, this is a bummer. FYF Fest announced Sunday that it had canceled this year’s edition of the annual festival, which was set to be held July 21 and 22 at Exposition Park with headliners Janet Jackson and Florence + the Machine.

In a statement, the fest’s powerful Los Angeles-based promoter, Goldenvoic­e, said its “team of many women and men … felt unable to present an experience on par with the expectatio­ns of our loyal fans and the Los Angeles music community.”

Who knows what that’s supposed to mean?

Yet Billboard provided one interpreta­tion when the trade publicatio­n reported that Goldenvoic­e had pulled the plug on FYF because of low ticket sales — a deeply discouragi­ng developmen­t given that the show’s lineup represente­d an important step in the effort to bring gender parity to an overwhelmi­ngly male-dominated festival scene.

In addition to Jackson and Florence + the Machine, FYF was to feature acts including St. Vincent, the xx, the Breeders, My Bloody Valentine, U.S. Girls, Kali Uchis, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Lucy Dacus. The high proportion of female acts put the festival significan­tly ahead of other big events such as Lollapaloo­za and Bonnaroo, neither of which has a female headliner this year.

For FYF, the representa­tion of women seemed particular­ly important as it followed Goldenvoic­e’s split last year with the show’s founder, Sean Carlson, after he was accused by several women of sexual abuse and assault. The company replaced him at FYF’s helm with Jennifer Yacoubian, a Goldenvoic­e veteran who’d previously booked shows at the El Rey Theatre and the Shrine Auditorium.

When I spoke with Yacoubian in March, she insisted that she hadn’t designed the 2018 edition in response to the allegation­s against Carlson (or, for that matter, to the growing demand for more balanced festival bills).

But she acknowledg­ed that the presence of “badass, strong women” contribute­d to a lineup that “felt so perfect and right and different and unique.”

Now that vision has been more or less rejected, at least if ticket sales were as poor as reported. (An FYF representa­tive didn’t respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.)

And that can’t help but register as a setback to anyone who looks to pop music as a maker of change — and as a place where all voices can be heard.

Perhaps a female president was too much to ask of America. But a music festival with two women on top in 2018?

I’d have thought we could handle such a radical idea.

To be clear, there are plenty of other reasons FYF might not have appealed to ticket buyers — reasons, I mean, that have nothing to do with anyone’s dragging his knuckles into the future.

For one thing, though the festival has improved in recent years, FYF has a long history of user-unfriendli­ness: long lines to get in, ineffectiv­e crowd control, last-minute pull-outs like the time Frank Ocean bailed just days before he was due to headline in 2015.

There’s also that Jackson, who’d been positioned as the festival’s main attraction, isn’t exactly hard to see this summer, with appearance­s at other major festivals, including Essence Fest in New Orleans, Panorama in New York and Outside Lands in San Francisco.

At a moment of festival over-saturation, none of those bookings did anything to help establish FYF as a must-see event, which is how the show was rightly perceived in 2017 thanks to rare appearance­s by Missy Elliott and Ocean, who made up for his earlier cancellati­on with an unforgetta­ble performanc­e.

Indeed, many of the other acts set to play FYF this year can easily be seen elsewhere in the next few months; some, including Uchis and St. Vincent, appeared just last month at Goldenvoic­e’s flagship production, the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio.

Another possibilit­y is that potential attendees were put off by the idea of patronizin­g FYF in wake of Carlson’s alleged abuse. Perhaps stories of his alleged behavior simply rendered the brand too toxic to support — though that seems unlikely, given the lack of identifiab­le concern among Coachella-goers over reported contributi­ons to various conservati­ve causes by that festival’s co-owner, Philip Anschutz of AEG.

In a counter-intuitive way, that widespread apathy might be the (very meager) silver lining to the dark cloud of FYF’s defeat.

When I wrote admiringly a few weeks ago about the festival’s progressiv­e lineup, more than a few readers got in touch to lodge familiar complaints about how liberals’ obsession with diversity had infected one more cultural institutio­n that might be better served by a coloror gender-blind approach.

Yet the apparent disinteres­t in this year’s show puts the lie to that popular notion — it demonstrat­es that the so-called thought police on the left haven’t actually succeeded in silencing the voice of the free market.

And that, hopefully, will make it just a little bit harder for anyone to haul out that specious argument the next time some forwardloo­king presenter tries to pass the mike to an underrepre­sented voice.

Assuming, of course, that FYF’s failure doesn’t scare off that somebody eager to take that worthwhile risk.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? A FAN crowd surfs during Iggy Pop’s performanc­e at FYF Fest last summer.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times A FAN crowd surfs during Iggy Pop’s performanc­e at FYF Fest last summer.
 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision / AP ?? JANET JACKSON was to have headlined.
Chris Pizzello Invision / AP JANET JACKSON was to have headlined.

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