El Dorado News-Times

With glut of festivals, hard to match magic of Woodstock 50 years later

- By Mesfin Fekadu AP Music Writer

NEW YORK — Fifty years after Woodstock, the mystical and messy event that gave birth to a myriad of musical festivals, the entertainm­ent industry is diluted with festivals and events like it – some genre specific, some extremely diverse and others offering experience­s in addition to music, ranging from food to art, in order to appeal to wider audiences.

And while there have been historic moments at music festivals since Woodstock – from Prince's 8-minute cover of Radiohead's "Creep" at Coachella in 2008 to Radiohead's groundbrea­king Bonnaroo set in 2006 to Beyoncé's black pride summit at last year's Coachella – could what happened at Woodstock be replicated?

"It's hard to compare any modern-day festival to what occurred at the original Woodstock. It was a cultural event that was a watershed happening that captured the imaginatio­n of an entire generation," said Ray Waddell, president of media and conference­s at Oak View Group, which owns concert trade publicatio­n Pollstar. "It was an amazing summer, an incredible year. It all kind of came together at Woodstock in 1969. To try to replicate that, they've never fully been able to."

Since the original Woodstock, which took place Aug. 15-18 in 1969 in Bethel, New York, and featured Jimi Hendrix, Grateful Dead and more, festivals have grown tremendous­ly and, when done properly, are money makers. The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, which takes place every April in Southern California, is the most successful festival in the United States, selling out quickly, and even before its lineup is announced. Other festivals have maintained a strong presence, too, from the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in Tennessee to Lollapaloo­za in Chicago.

Today, about every major city has at least one festival. But it's made the festival scene overcrowde­d, and now producers are working tirelessly to make their festivals different than the next one. "What makes the festival stand out is one, the experience, and two, exclusivit­y and uniqueness of the lineup. They can ebb and flow with the lineup. You look at Bonnaroo, which fell off for a couple of years and then came back this year with the perfect mix of a lineup that captured the attention of the people who are willing to camp out three or four days," Waddell said. "The problem is there's not enough headlining acts out there."

Jordan Kurland, co-founder of Noise Pop Festival in the San Francisco Bay Area and co-founder of Brilliant Corners, the artist management company home to Death Cab for Cutie and She & Him, noted that some festival organizers need to think beyond performanc­es. "What is the festival doing differentl­y? Why does it exist? It's not enough to just fence a field and say we're going to have 30,000 people here because we have major acts," he said. "Launching a good, sustainabl­e festival is doing something unique. It doesn't just stand on talent at this point. It's festival experience. It's festival location."

Alec Jhangiani, the co-founder and producer of Fortress Festival in Fort Worth, Texas, said, "I don't think anytime soon people are going to stop their impulse to gather at these large festivals and places where there are tens of thousands of people – that seems to just be a part of human experience – but I think they're obviously going to demand more and more new and interestin­g ways of presenting the content. It's our job to keep innovating the space."

 ?? AP Photo / File ?? This Aug. 14, 1969 file photo shows a portion of the 400,000 concert goers who attended the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival held on a 600-acre pasture near Bethel, N.Y.
AP Photo / File This Aug. 14, 1969 file photo shows a portion of the 400,000 concert goers who attended the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival held on a 600-acre pasture near Bethel, N.Y.

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