Harvest (music festival) | |
---|---|
Genre |
|
Dates | November |
Location(s) |
|
Years active | 2011–2012 |
Founded by | AJ Maddah |
Harvest (also advertised as 'Harvest – A Civilised Gathering' or 'Harvest Presents “The Gathering”') was an annual music festival held in major cities around Australia. The festival was created in 2011 by Soundwave Touring,the same team behind the heavier Soundwave Festival, as a festival to showcase the bands of lighter genres that didn't fit into the Soundwave lineup. The festival also promoted art installations, performers and all events where held in garden styled locations. The lineup featured international and Australian music acts, from various genres including Alternative rock, Indie rock, Indie folk and Shoe-gaze. The festival has been headlined by Portishead, Beck, Sigur Rós and The Flaming Lips.
The 2013 festival was planned with artists announced and tickets going on sale. On 16 September 2013, the Harvest founder, music promoter AJ Maddah, announced that the 2013 Harvest festival was cancelled due to poor ticket sales.[1].
The first year of the festival was held in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. This was Portishead's first tour of Australia in 14 years. The first lineup announcement was made on 22 July 2011, with some extra bands announced on 7 September 2011[2]. Tickets went on public sale August 4 2011 for $150, with a cheaper presale option.[3]. The Melbourne date of the festival was sold out[4].
The second year of the festival was held in the same Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne venues. The first lineup announcement was made on 14 June 2012[5] , with a second announcement on 21 August 2012[6]. Tickets went on public sale June 28 2012.
With rumours already circulating of a third installment of Harvest, on 8 May 2013 the first official details were released by AJ Maddah along with Neutral Milk Hotel leaking their inclusion as the first band on the lineup after a 15-year hiatus[7]. The Eels also leaked their inclusion on the festival ahead of the official announcement.
On June 26 2013, it was revealed that Soundwave Touring was having possible issues locking in a Sydney venue due to conflicts with the government[8].
The first lineup announcement was made on 28 June 2013[9]. with a second announcement on 21 August 2012[10]. Tickets went on public sale June 28 2012.
On 9 September 2013, AJ Maddah released a series of comments on Twitter raising concern that the future of the festival could be in doubt, blaming "lack of interest" and Big Day Out festival for a lack of available bands to book as their festival started to shift into a more "Harvest-centric line-up".[11].
The future of the festival was put into uncertaintly when AJ Maddah expressed on 12 September 2013 "that pressing ahead with the event is “too risky” and is making other arrangements to salvage Australian appearances by the acts featured on the already announced bill"[12][13]. A second announcement had been planned, but ticket sales were low with "the promoter telling Fairfax that just 18% of the 17,500 tickets for Harvest’s Brisbane event had been sold, and around 30-40% of the 20,000 tickets for Sydney. Melbourne was selling slightly better at 70-80% of 15,000 tickets" and that left him facing a potential loss of $5.5 million.[12]
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club announced that the festival had been cancelled[14] ahead of any confirmation from Soundwave Touring. In the next few hours, it was announced that AJ Maddah had bought a part share in the competition, the Big Day Out festival[15], announced that the festival looked to be 99% cancelled[16], then a few hours later he announced via Twitter that the 2013 festival had been officially cancelled[17]. Many of the bands on the lineup would be rebooked for their own individual shows or would be moved to the Soundwave or Big Day Out lineups where appropriate.
In 2014, AJ Maddah put any possible rumours to rest that Harvest would return in 2014[18].
The remaining two festivals that AJ Maddah was involved in running also were cancelled in the next few years, Big Day Out was cancelled in 2014 and Soundwave in 2016.
This article "Harvest (music festival)" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles taken from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be accessed on Wikipedia's Draft Namespace.