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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, April 22, 2008

FESTIVALS
Rock fests are bigger than ever

By Chris Riemenschneider
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Rock On!
Kanye West will rock the Bonnaroo festival in Tennessee in June.

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BOOKED FOR SUMMER

Whether or not the demand for festivals fades, there's an abundance this summer. Here's a rundown of the biggest ones.

Coachella

Friday-Sunday, Indio, Calif. (near Palm Springs)

Who's playing: Roger Waters, Portishead, Jack Johnson, Kraftwerk, the Verve, the Raconteurs, Death Cab for Cutie, Love & Rockets, Justice, M.I.A., My Morning Jacket, Fatboy Slim. Coachella tries to be the edgiest/trendiest of the U.S. megafests, but with Waters and Johnson headlining, it's trying to sell tickets, too. Its penchant for reunion gigs (Kraftwerk, the Verve) also suits nostalgic fans.

What it's like: Scenic and spacious, on polo fields amid the California desert, with the San Jacinto Mountains as backdrop. This is the one fest very careful about crowd control, cleanup and comfort. There are two big stages, plus a few dance tents and smaller stages.

Accommodations: On-site camping and (new this year) premium camping. Lots of hotels are nearby, and in-and-out access is fairly easy.

Info: www.coachella.com.

New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

Sunday-April 30, May 1-4

Who's playing: Stevie Wonder, Billy Joel, Al Green, Raconteurs, O.A.R., Sheryl Crow, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, the Roots, Elvis Costello, Dirty Dozen, Dr. John, the Bad Plus.

What it's like: The eight Jazz Fest stages (four under tents) are booked by genre: blues, gospel, jazz, zydeco, etc. The food stands are as big a draw as the stages.

Accommodations: Hotels only, and they fill up fast (especially post-Katrina).

Info: www.nojazzfest.com.

Bonnaroo

June 12-15, Manchester, Tenn.

Who's playing: Metallica, Pearl Jam, Kanye West, Jack Johnson, Willie Nelson, Cat Power, Phil Lesh & Friends, My Morning Jacket and the Raconteurs. Fans of Southern/Americana styles and jam bands get a better fix here than at the others.

What it's like: Set on fertile, tree-lined ranchland south of Nashville, Bonnaroo has the most out-there, middle-of-nowhere site of the big fests. Throw in its psychedelic decor and an occasional rainstorm, and you probably have the nearest thing to the (original) Woodstock experience.

Accommodations: Mostly camping. Hotels are 10 to 30 miles away.

Info: www.bonnaroo.com.

Lollapalooza

Aug. 1-3, Grant Park in downtown Chicago.

Who's playing: Radiohead, Kanye West, Wilco, Rage Against the Machine, Nine Inch Nails, Gnarls Barkley and ... the Raconteurs.

What it's like: A city skyline provides the backdrop. If Lake Michigan's breeze doesn't keep things cool enough, you can duck into the Art Institute or Field Museum a few blocks away to get out of the sun.

Accommodations: Hotels only.

Info: www.lollapalooza.com.

Austin City Limits

Sept. 26-28, Austin, Texas.

Who's playing: Foo Fighters, Beck, David Byrne and ... the Raconteurs!

What's it like: Held in Zilker Park near downtown Austin, it offers a nice mish-mash of Coachella, Bonnaroo and Jazz Fest, with country and roots-music acts rounding out alterna-rockers and jam bands. The food stands are deliciously local.

Accommodations: Hotels only, many within walking distance.

Info: www.aclfestival.com.

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Once, it looked as if the demand for giant outdoor rock festivals had gone up in flames (literally) with Woodstock '99, the fest that notoriously became known as three days of overflowing porta-potties, overpriced pizza and oversold campgrounds.

Behemoth rock festivals, however, quickly bounced back. Nationwide, there are more of them now than ever before, from big-kahuna events such as Coachella and Bonnaroo, to terrific copycats like Austin City Limits and Chicago's revamp of Lollapalooza.

Several ambitious new rockathons are entering the landscape this summer, including All Points West in New Jersey and Outside Lands in San Francisco.

"The festivals themselves have gotten better and better, and fans have responded favorably," said Charles Attal, co-founder of C3 Presents, which books Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits. Ticket sales for both were up this year, even before the lineups were announced, he said.

For a lot of 20- and 30-something fans, these outdoor events have become anchors to plan vacations around (and blow their savings on).

"It's about the whole experience as much as it is the music," said Kevin Jewitt, 31, a data analyst from Minneapolis who figures he spent about $1,000 to travel to Indio, Calif., for last year's Coachella festival.

Tickets to Coachella start at $90 for a one-day pass and reach up to $269 for three days, comparable to most fests. Despite the cost, Jewitt not only plans to hit Coachella again this year, but also Lollapalooza.

"I think a lot of people go to (a festival) just to say they've done it," he said, "and they wind up having so much fun they do it again and again while they still can, before they have families or too many other demands."

The trend at most major festivals now is to offer more high-end options. For hefty prices, organizers are offering fans ways around the two big deterrents at these fests: enormous crowds and unpredictable weather (either sweltering heat or sheets of rain).

Bonnaroo, for instance, sells VIP packages for two people for $1,170, which includes upgraded showers, food buffets and bleacher seats for the music. Coachella now offers $700 to $4,000 "premium camping" packages complete with air beds and air-conditioned tents.

"The range of our clientele is expanding, and we want our events to be just as great an experience for the people who want a little more," said Attal.

Even before the buzz of a U.S. economic recession, there was talk that the festival market might soon reach overload. Attal's company put off its inaugural Vineland festival in New Jersey until next year because Coachella organizer Golden Voice planned All Points West around the same time and place this year.

"We won't know until the end of this year if the market is starting to oversaturate," Attal said, "but we're still planning to go full steam ahead."