Monday May 12, 4:39 AM
The Wight stuff: UK island to host 4 music events
LONDON (Billboard) - In 1970, it was described as "a
psychedelic concentration camp." But this summer, the United
Kingdom's Isle of Wight Festival tops a series of events that
will turn the 150-square-mile island into the sold-out
epicenter of the UK festival scene.
Rock fans with long memories remember the Isle of Wight's
run of festivals in 1968-70, although the chaotic 1970 event
headlined by Jimi Hendrix and the Doors has long carried
negative associations. The "concentration camp" reference comes
from one of 500,000-plus attendees captured in the concert film
of that year's festival, "Message to Love."
But fast-forward into the 21st century, and one 1970
veteran has emerged as a key player behind the reinvention of
the island as a "must-go" music destination, which in summer
2008 is hosting four major outdoor events.
London-based Solo Promoters managing director John Giddings
revived the Isle of Wight festival in 2002, selling out 10,000
tickets for a bill including the Charlatans and Robert Plant.
Charlatans vocalist Tim Burgess recalls the IOW as "a
really fun place to play -- like something out of an Enid
Blyton novel." He adds, "There's a sense of adventure, like you
are leaving behind society and inventing your own little
world."
Since 2002, the Rolling Stones, David Bowie, R.E.M. and
Coldplay have all graced the IOW festival stage.
The south coast holiday island also hosts the
30,000-capacity dance/alternative festival Bestival, an
offshoot of the Sunday Best label/club events firm headed by
BBC Radio 1 DJ Rob Da Bank. The lineup for this year's sold-out
dates (September 5-7) at Robin Hill Country Park includes My
Bloody Valentine, Amy Winehouse and Underworld.
For fans, Rob Da Bank says, "as soon as you get on the
ferry, you let your hair down and leave a bit of yourself on
the mainland. The pace of life is slower down there, and that's
a good thing."
Giddings also has organized two new 10,000-capacity IOW
events July 26-27 at stately home Osborne House, one headlined
by Paul Weller and the other by Girls Aloud.
This year's main event (June 13-15) rapidly sold out its
50,000 tickets -- no mean feat at a time when the usually
pre-eminent Glastonbury Festival failed to do so.
The original IOW festival's explosive growth ultimately
proved its undoing. The 1970 event remains the biggest festival
in U.K. history, but, Giddings recalls, "it was completely,
utterly uncivilized." The rock festival, he says, "was a new
thing in modern culture; no one knew quite how to handle it."
The current festival is a vastly different beast, with
enough broad appeal to attract telecommunications giant BT as
headline sponsor. And whereas many islanders greeted the
original events with horror, IOW council leader David Pugh says
the estimated 130,000 residents now largely appreciate the big
concerts, claiming the IOW festival alone generates at least 10
million pounds ($19 million) annually for the island.
"We see our role as facilitating and encouraging these
events," he says. "It's about striking a balance. The majority
of islanders recognize this as good for the economy -- and for
the profile of the island."
Reuters/Billboard
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