Bluesfest Byron Bay

Byron Bay Bluesfest

2014 festival from above
Genre Blues, roots
Dates Easter long weekend
Location(s) Byron Bay, Australia
Years active 1990-present
Website
Bluesfest website

The Byron Bay Bluesfest, formerly the East Coast International Blues & Roots Music Festival, is an annual music festival that has been held over the Easter long weekend in the Byron Bay area in Australia since 1990. It features a large selection of blues and roots performers, from Australia and around the world, and is one of the world's leading contemporary music festivals.

It was founded by Keven Oxford in 1990 and is now run by Peter Noble who joined Oxford for the 1994 event. It has been held at several locations in and around Byron Bay, and is currently held at Tyagarah, 11 kilometres drive north of Byron Bay town. Originally running for three days, it now runs for five days, from Thursday to Monday. From an original crowd of 6,000, it now attracts annual audiences of over 101,000 across the five days. Patrons range from locals to international visitors, from a wide age range.

History

The festival was staged for the first time in 1990 at the Arts Factory Lodge in Byron Bay as a five-day blues music event over the Easter weekend. In December 2004, Keven Oxford, a director and founder of the event, left the festival and sold his 50% share of the company to a consortium comprising Michael Chugg (managing director of Sydney-based Michael Chugg Entertainment), Daryl Herbert (CEO of Melbourne-based Definitive Events) and Glenn Wheatley (CEO of Melbourne-based Talentworks), who ran the festival with co-founder Peter Noble. Noble bought out the consortium in 2008 and now owns the festival alone.[1] In 2010 Bluesfest moved to its permanent home at the 120-hectare Tyagarah Tea Tree farm.[2]

Awards

AWARDS SUMMARY – BLUESFEST

BLUESFEST AWARDS

BLUESFEST NOMINATIONS

Line-up 2007

The line-up for the 2007 festival included:[3]

Line-up 2008

The 2008 festival was held at the 26 acres (110,000 m2) Belongil Fields, the original outdoor venue. The 2008 festival had more food and craft stalls, a covered area where festival goers could eat at tables, a chill-out area, plus an area for an additional, fifth stage.

Artists in 2008 included Buddy Guy, Eskimo Joe, The John Butler Trio, Gotye, The Beautiful Girls, Newton Faulkner, Seasick Steve, Charlie Musselwhite, Mavis Staples, John P. Hammond, John Hiatt, Ray Davies, Maceo Parker, Loudon Wainwright III, Ozomatli, Ruthie Foster, Jake Shimabukuro, Keith Urban, Amali Ward, Lior, MOFRO, Dan Sultan, Jeff Lang, The Cat Empire, Clare Bowditch, Raul Midon and Xavier Rudd.

Line-up 2011

The line-up for the 2011 festival included:

Line-up 2012

The line-up for the 2012 festival included:

  • Benjalu
  • Bobby Alu
  • Dan Hannaford
  • Carus Thompson
  • Daniel Champagne
  • Dubmarine
  • Kim Churchill
  • Dallas Frasca
  • Mason Rack Band
  • Lachlan Bryan
  • Marshall O'Kell
  • Claude Hay
  • Ashleigh Mannix
  • Round Mountain Girls
  • Ollie Brown
  • Mojo Bluesman
  • Kooii
  • Harry Healy
  • Blackbirds
  • Mick McHugh
  • Minnie Marks
  • Young Sounds of Byron

Line-up 2013

The line-up for the 2013 festival included:

Thursday, 28 March

Friday, 29 March

Saturday 30, March

Sunday, 31 March

Monday, 1 April

Line-up 2014

The line-up for the 2014 festival included:

Thursday, 17 April

Friday, 18 April

Saturday, 19 April

Sunday, 20 April

Monday, 21 April

Line-up 2015

The line-up for the 2015 festival included:

Thursday, 2 April

Friday, 3 April

Saturday, 4 April

Sunday, 5 April

Monday, 6 April

Line-up 2016

The line-up for the 2016 festival included:

Thursday, 24 March

Friday, 25 March

Saturday, 26 March

Sunday, 27 March

Monday, 28 March

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bluesfest Byron Bay.

References

  1. "Bluesfest buy-out". dBMagazine (451). 15 October 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2009.
  2. "Bluesfest Byron Bay Tickets". Oztix.com.au. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
  3. Archived 15 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine.

External links

Coordinates: 28°35′12.67″S 153°32′48.31″E / 28.5868528°S 153.5467528°E / -28.5868528; 153.5467528

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.