Roskilde Festival
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Roskilde Festival | |
Location(s) | Roskilde, Denmark |
Years active | 1971 - present |
Date(s) | Four days, starting from last Thursday in June |
Genre(s) | Alternative rock, Pop, Hip Hop, Metal, World music |
Website | www.roskilde-festival.com |
Roskilde Festival is held south of Roskilde in Denmark and is one of the two biggest annual rock music festivals in Europe (the other being the Glastonbury festival). It was created in 1971 by two high school students, Mogens Sandfær and Jesper Switzer Møller, and promoter Carl Fischer. In 1973, the festival was taken over by the Roskilde Foundation, who has since run the festival as a non-profit organisation for development and support of music, culture, and humanism.
It being Denmark's first real music oriented festival, originally for hippies but today covering more of the mainstream youth from Scandinavia and the rest of Europe. Roskilde Festival 2006 had more than 170 performing bands and gathered more than 79,000 people paying for the concerts, more than 21,000 volunteers, 5,000 media people and 3,000 artists - which means almost 110,000 people participated in the festival.
Traditionally the campsite opens the last Sunday of June, which gives the festivalguests plenty of time to settle down and "warm up". The festival officially starts the following Thursday at the Animal Showgrounds (in recent years simply known as the "Festival Site") and lasts for 4 days.
Until the mid-1990s the festival attracted mostly Scandinavians, but in recent years it has become more and more international (with an especially large influx of Germans, Australians and Scots). A Scandinavian alternative remained in the Midtfyns Festival, until that closed in 2004 following declining ticket sales.
The music from Roskilde Festival can be tuned in on the web radio Radio Festival (www.radiofestival.org).
[edit] Stages
The tents are called 'stages', which were until 2003 named after their colour, but as the names had not matched the actual colour of the tents for a period, it was decided to rename all stages except the Orange Stage, the central and main stage. The Orange Stage is open in front of a huge field, whereas the other tents cover the whole audience, the largest of which is the Arena stage (formerly known as Green Stage), the largest tent in Europe with an official capacity of 17,000 people. The 2007 edition will see two new tents, replacing Ballroom (1997-2006) which presented mainly World music, and Metropol (2003-2006) which presented mainly Electronica.
The music covers such styles as Heavy metal, HipHop, Electronic and Rock, but the festival wants to promote new artists and has setup a special stage for alternative music. It has also become a tradition to let an up and coming Danish band open the Orange Stage on the first day of the festival. There's usually at least one performance of classical music, often a full orchestra playing (parts of) well-known compositions.
Apart from music there is always some theatre and 'lone acts' wandering around the festival site. Terrain and tents are always decorated in various ways. The current tents are:
Stage name | Year introduced | Capacity | Main genres | Replaced |
---|---|---|---|---|
Orange | 1978 | 60 000 + | All | Big Stage |
Arena | 2003 | 17 000 | All | Green Stage |
Odeon | 2003 | 5 000 | Rock | Yellow Stage |
Cosmopol | 2007 | 5 000? | Hip Hop, R&B, Electronica | Metropol |
Astoria | 2007 | 3 000? | Ballroom | |
Pavilion | 2003 | 2000 | Rock | Blue Stage |
Other | ||||
Pavilion Junior | 2005 | Camp Stage | ||
Lounge |
[edit] Campsite
The festival campsite covers nearly 80 hectares and access to it is included in the ticket price. It usually opens on Sunday morning prior to the festival itself. Apart from the small and separate Camping South it is divided into two areas, east and west, each comprising a service center with establishments ranging from food stalls to a cinema. The campsite is further divided into 'agoras' that provide toilets and luggage storage. They also host events according to each agora's theme: dance, skate, swim etc.
[edit] The naked race
For the past 8 years the naked race has been a regular event at Roskilde Festival, taking place on Saturday. It is arranged by the Roskilde Festival Radio, and the competitors, usually approximately 50/50 male and female, race three laps around a track in full naked splendour. The two winners, one male and one female, are awarded a free ticket to the next Roskilde Festival. In 2006 the race was watched by approximately 10.000 people.
[edit] 2000 accident
The first disaster in the history of the festival struck on June 30, 2000, when nine people died in an accident in front of the main (Orange) stage during the Pearl Jam performance. Due to sound problems, the audience of 50000 began shoving amongst themselves in attempting to get closer to the stage. After playing for 45 minutes, singer Eddie Vedder halted the performance in order to address the crowd to step back. However, as the ground was muddy from rain, the 9 people fell over due to crowd pressure and were trampled; cause of death was suggested to be most likely suffocation. Eight people, from Denmark, Sweden, Germany, and the Netherlands, died at the site; a man from Australia died later on July 5. 30 other people were hospitalized.[1]
Oasis and the Pet Shop Boys, who were scheduled to perform at the main stage, withdrew in response to the deaths. This was criticized by the organizers, who claimed that their absence would cause greater danger by moving crowds from the main stage to other areas. Otherwise, the festival continued as scheduled, and the organizers were not charged by police, who determined the deaths to be an accident. The incident also prompted safety investigations at T in the Park and the Love Parade, other music festivals upcoming at the time.[1]
As a result, massive security measures were installed for the festival in 2001. After the tragedy, a memorial site was set up close to the main stage. It features 9 trees and a stone inscribed with the words "How fragile we are".
[edit] Festival by year
[edit] Specific years
[edit] 2000
The year of the tragic accident where nine people died during the Pearl Jam set.
[edit] 2003
Sunny. Shows by bands such as Metallica, Blur, Electric Eel Shock,Coldplay, Björk, Massive Attack, The Streets, Iron Maiden, Queens of the Stone Age, Urlaub In Polen.
[edit] 2004
Rain, rain, thunder, rain, a ray of light and lots of mud. The 2004 festival featured artists such as Iggy Pop and the Stooges, Santana, Korn, Pixies, Fatboy Slim, Wu-Tang Clan and Morrissey. David Bowie was scheduled to play at Roskilde 2004 but cancelled due to heart problems, with a notice on his website. Instead, Slipknot, who were on tour in Europe, filled the spot.
[edit] 2005
The 2005 edition featured artists such as Audioslave, Autechre, Snoop Dogg, Black Sabbath, D-A-D, Duran Duran, Foo Fighters, Green Day, Brian Wilson, Fantômas, Kent, Sonic Youth and more than 160 other bands and DJs. This year was also a huge contrast to the previous year on the weather front. Hot and sunny all week.
[edit] 2006
- Main article: Roskilde Festival 2006
With more than 79,000 paying visitors (as well as approximately 20 000 volunteer day workers), the 2006 festival was the biggest in Europe[2] for the year. With only one day of rain and the rest of the week being sunny, this festival also ranks as one with a lucky weather. Changes from last year include a new swimming lake - which proved to be very successful due to the warm and sunny weather - and a lounge stage called Bar'n. Some of the performing artists were Bob Dylan, Roger Waters, Guns N' Roses, Tool, The Strokes, Deftones, Morrissey, Franz Ferdinand, Kanye West, Placebo, Arctic Monkeys, Sigur Rós and the Streets. For a complete list, see the Festival website's band list.
[edit] 2007
- Main article: Roskilde Festival 2007
[edit] Rumours
Word on the street is that Rage Against the Machine may appear[citation needed]. They reunite and headline the Coachella-festival in the end of April.
Queens of the Stone Age is also expected to perform at this year's event. Also nu-metal pioner KoRn might show up during their tour, but only according their unofficial fansite.
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Lofthus, Kai R. (July 15, 2000), "Loss of life fails to halt festival", Billboard 112(29): 10-11
- ^ Roskilde Festival Website.
[edit] External links
- Official Website of the Roskilde Festival
- german Fansite
- English Language Fans Guide to Roskilde Festival
- Sound Generator's massive, super-mega Roskilde 2006 coverage
- Roskilde Festival pictures from 2004
- Roskilde Festival pictures from 2005
- Roskilde Festival pictures from 2006
Festivals in Denmark | |
---|---|
Roskilde Festival | Skanderborg Festival | Midtfyns Festival | Aarhus Festuge | Spot | Aarhus Jazz Festival | Copenhagen Jazz Festival | Copenhagen Pride | Danmarks grimmeste festival | Langelands Festival | Vig Festival | Nibe Festival | Skagen Festival | Tønder Festival |