Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Summerfest reports lowest attendance in at least 25 years.

Music festival industry enduring slowdown

- Piet Levy

The world’s largest music festival had its smallest attendance in at least a quarter-century this year.

Milwaukee’s Summerfest reported Friday that 766,192 people went through the turnstiles at Maier Festival Park in 2018.

That’s a nearly 8 percent drop from last year’s attendance of 831,769, and the lowest attendance since at least 1993.

Considerin­g the 2017 edition was the festival’s heavily hyped 50th edition, an attendance drop-off was likely. During the Big Gig’s run this year from June 27 to July 8 (with a day off July 2), there were excessive heat index warnings of over 100 degrees for three days. It also rained two days.

Neverthele­ss, Summerfest has faced major obstacles before. In 2015, the festival’s previously lowest-attended edition since the ‘90s, Summerfest had to contend with road closures, a three-day Milwaukee County District bus strike and chilly temperatur­es, and attendance was still higher than this year, at 772,652 people.

(Festival attendance peaked at more than 1 million patrons in 2001 and 2002, with fest officials after that aspiring for a range of 800,000 to 900,000 patrons annually.)

This year’s attendance drop is also occurring as the saturated music festival industry is experienci­ng a slowdown.

It took eight days for Lollapaloo­za in Chicago, one of the world’s premier music festivals, to sell out of four-day passes this year; in 2017, it took only 21⁄2 hours.

And reports suggest attendance dropped for the 2018 Eaux Claires, the hipster-friendly festival in Eau Claire County co-founded and cocurated by Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon.

The festival received mixed reviews for keeping its lineup a secret until the festival began July 6, with several repeat players like the National and Francis and the Lights on the bill, and no big names like past headliners Chance the Rapper, Paul Simon, Erykah Badu, or even Bon Iver.

In a press release, Summerfest officials were bullish about the festival’s success this year. The lineup included several first-time performers, including the Weeknd, Janelle Monáe, Kesha and Marshmello, and the 23,000-capacity American Family Insurance Amphitheat­er featured more shows for millennial­s than any previous Summerfest.

The Big Gig added nine sponsors, including a new stage presented by new sponsor Klement’s Sausage. There also was a built-from-scratch redo of the U.S. Cellular Connection Stage, and the northern entrance was redesigned.

Those projects were part of a series of renovation­s collective­ly costing more than $100 million, and continuing for the next couple of years.

A redesigned Uline Warehouse will open next year, and a rebuilt American Family Insurance

Amphitheat­er is tentativel­y scheduled to open in 2020.

Costs for the amphitheat­er will exceed initial projection­s of $30 million to $35 million, Sarah Smith-Pancheri, vice president of sales and marketing for Summerfest’s parent company Milwaukee World Festival Inc., told the Journal Sentinel Friday. A final figure has yet to be determined.

“In 2018, Summerfest delivered on its promise to offer one of the most diverse lineups in the industry which appealed to our entire community,” Don Smiley, CEO of Milwaukee World Festival Inc., said in a statement.

“Despite the rain and heat, our organizati­on provided 11 great days of music, food and fun and contribute­d significan­tly to our local economy.”

Summerfest also provided a series of stats for this year’s festival, including:

❚ 106,294 people attended the festival through a promotion, nearly 14% of all visitors

❚ 2,144 seasonal workers were hired

❚ 380 volunteers contribute­d a combined 3,500 hours of service

❚ 56,480 pounds of food were collected for the Hunger Task Force

❚ 98,000 one-way rides were taken on the skyglider

❚ 17,151 rides were taken on the Wheel in the Sky ferris wheel

❚ 15,999 attempts were made at the Hole in One Contest. There was no winner.

Summerfest did not report sales figures Friday.

More on Summerfest

For reviews, photos and more from the Big Gig, visit jsonline.com/ summerfest.

 ?? JOURNAL SENTINEL CHRIS KOHLEY / MILWAUKEE ?? Fans cheer as The Flaming Lips perform at the Harley-Davidson Roadhouse on July 6. Summerfest reported that 766,192 people went through the turnstiles, the lowest attendance since at least 1993.
JOURNAL SENTINEL CHRIS KOHLEY / MILWAUKEE Fans cheer as The Flaming Lips perform at the Harley-Davidson Roadhouse on July 6. Summerfest reported that 766,192 people went through the turnstiles, the lowest attendance since at least 1993.
 ?? HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL MARK ?? Fest-goers make their way down the main drag at Summerfest.
HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL MARK Fest-goers make their way down the main drag at Summerfest.

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