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Milwaukee’s Summerfest turning 50

Milwaukee’s Summerfest turning 50

- By John Bordsen John Bordsen is a freelance writer.

Scores of musical acts, including Willie Nelson, will celebrate and perform on 11 stages for 11 days at a defunct military outpost once armed with Cold War missiles.

MILWAUKEE — More than 800,000 visitors from near and far flock to Wisconsin’s biggest city for Summerfest, billed as the world’s largest music festival.

At the festival’s permanent grounds on the shores of Lake Michigan, live acts will perform on 11 stages for 11 days, June 28 to July 2 and July 4-9.

While we’re tossing around numbers, here’s one more: 50. This year, the renowned event celebrates its half-century mark.

Roughly 800 acts are on tap. Headliners this year include the Red Hot Chili Peppers (June 28), Luke Bryan (June 29), Zac Brown Band (July 1) and Tom Petty & the Heartbreak­ers (July 5-6).

July 9 may be hard to top: This year’s new Outlaw Music Festival, a festivalwi­thin-a-festival at Summerfest’s amphitheat­er, includes Willie Nelson, Sheryl Crow and Bob Dylan. All are Summerfest veterans.

Robust talent rosters aren’t the only reason Summerfest has been such a long-term success. Another weapon in the festival’s arsenal is its prime location: a defunct military outpost once armed with Cold War missiles.

Missiles, mud and dreams

Milwaukee music veteran Sigmund Snopek III remembers Summerfest’s somewhat chaotic 1968 debut: “My brother and I walked and thumbed our way from (suburban) Waukesha to see The Lemon Pipers . ... The concert was in Juneau Park, but by the time we got there, the concert was over.”

A vague idea for a communityw­ide festival by Milwaukee Mayor Henry Maier had been launched as a scattered-site, nine-day event. The 1968 and 1969 installmen­ts drew crowds — 35 locations grew to 60, with Bob Hope and Dolly Parton headliners the second year — but Summerfest lost money.

Civic eyes turned to a lakefront site that had been an airport before the military acquired it and stocked it with Nike missiles in the ’50s and ’60s. The obsolete base reverted to city ownership in 1969 and was prime for retooling: Fifteen flat acres at the harbor where the rivers separating the east, north and south sides of town reached Lake Michigan.

In 1970, rock ’n’ roll took the spotlight on a hastily erected stage, with Sly and the Family Stone, Chicago and Procol Harum topping the bill.

It was a financial success at $1.50 admission — and a chance for young Milwaukee musicians to show their stuff.

Snopek, a rock/jazz/ classical auteur on the city’s music scene, was among them and has since become a Summerfest staple. In 1976 he logged at least 30 performanc­es, including two dates on a main stage, a sci-fi opera and gigs on a comedy stage.

Victor DeLorenzo, drummer for the Violent Femmes, first attended Summerfest in the mid-1970s, when the Racine, Wis., native moved to Milwaukee to attend college. Going to the festival “became part of my summer ritual, and I did have dreams about one day being able to perform there.”

Sam Llanas, of Waukesha, Wis., became a fest regular in the mid-1970s, when he was 13 or 14. Llanas, who became singer/guitarist of the BoDeans, remembers it as “a great opportunit­y to see cool bands. It was affordable to get in, and you could get as close to the stage as you wanted, if you were diligent.”

The BoDeans first played Summerfest in 1985. Opening for Los Lobos was, recalls Llanas, his band’s biggest gig up to that point. The BoDeans and Femmes shared top billing on the main stage the following year.

DeLorenzo: “I always felt that after we played Summerfest, we could play anywhere in the world.”

The Violent Femmes went on to play the fest several times, including last year. DeLorenzo fondly remembers when his late mother, Charlotte, introduced the band in the 1990s as a character called the Bone Lady.

“She wore a gold pantsuit with a large bone necklace and a red turban,” DeLorenzo says. “She was proud to say that she was a music lover from Sandwich, Ill., and that she had discovered the band. Needless to say — but I will — the audience was delightful­ly confused.”

The influence of the venerable summer event stretches far beyond Milwaukee’s borders.

“We had a tour manager that we brought over from Australia, who went on to develop a music festival in Australia and New Zealand called Big Day Out, which was largely based on the Summerfest model,” DeLorenzo says.

Toward a paved paradise

Today’s Summerfest­s unfold on paved and landscaped grounds, where 11 permanent stages offer music from myriad genres.

Pay the $13 to $20 daily general admission to get in, and the tunes at 10 stages are free. Multiday festival passes are also available, as are commemorat­ive 50th anniversar­y tickets for a few extra bucks; www .summerfest.com/ ticket-info.

The 23,000-seat American Family Insurance Amphitheat­er, built in 1987, features bigger acts for an additional charge.

The 75-acre fest site, now named Henry Maier Festival Park, is typically a comfortabl­e spot to see a summer show, with nearby Lake Michigan providing natural air conditioni­ng.

Don Smiley, former president of the Florida Marlins baseball team, was hired in 2004 by the nonprofit organizati­on Milwaukee World Festival to be Summerfest’s CEO.

Nowadays, he says, people’s expectatio­ns are different; there’s an emphasis on the quality of the visitor experience.

“It’s the number of restrooms, food buildings and permanent stages,” Smiley says.

Modern amenities include brick-and-mortar restrooms, artisan market areas, stalls for food vendors and a kids play area.

The Miller Lite Oasis stage is being rebuilt this year for the second time since Smiley took the Summerfest helm. Two other major stages received makeovers for this year. The biggest venue, the American Family Insurance Amphitheat­er, will get a redo in 2020.

The building program, Smiley says, is more about having the caliber of stages required by global touring artists than it is about upping Summerfest attendance.

The appeal of hot bands for crowds cooled by lake breezes has proved timeless.

In 1972, future CEO Smiley, then a Racine, Wis., teen, told his parents one summer night he was going out with his pals.

Instead, he went to Summerfest in search of tunes and romance.

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 ?? SAM POTRATZ/VISIT MILWAUKEE DANIEL BOCZARSKI/GETTY ?? Among the “free” admission stages at Summerfest, the Harley-Davidson Roadhouse is said to have the best acoustics.
SAM POTRATZ/VISIT MILWAUKEE DANIEL BOCZARSKI/GETTY Among the “free” admission stages at Summerfest, the Harley-Davidson Roadhouse is said to have the best acoustics.
 ?? VISIT MILWAUKEE ?? Music is everywhere at Henry Maier Festival Park during Milwaukee’s annual Summerfest, starting June 28 this year.
VISIT MILWAUKEE Music is everywhere at Henry Maier Festival Park during Milwaukee’s annual Summerfest, starting June 28 this year.
 ??  ?? Sheryl Crow performs at Summerfest in 2011.
Sheryl Crow performs at Summerfest in 2011.

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