What is the history of music festivals

Revision as of 09:04, 9 July 2019 by Altaweel (talk | contribs) (Today's Music Festivals)

Outdoor music festivals have become a fixture of summertime for many adults. Many different music genres now have their own festivals and some of the largest in the world, such as Glastonbury or Summerfest in Milwaukee, are attended by hundreds of thousdands. While music festivals appear to be a relatively recent development, at least since the rise of Rock and more liberal lifestyles since the 1960s, their history goes back much further. Music festivals have always been about bringing people together to share a common cultural experience through music. This is one common element that has not changed for centuries.

The Early Development of Music Festivals

The earliest recorded music festival is arguably the Pythian Games that took place in the 6th century BC. These games took place every four years and were similar to the well known ancient Olympic games. This event eventually became more focused on games and athletic competitions, but the games were initially dedicated to Apollo and focused on music, with Apollo being the patron because he was the Greek god of music. Apollo is often depicted with a lyre and the Pythian Games were a chance to hold competitions among competing musicians. Both instrumental and singing performances were held as competitions among different contestants. It is also known that during the spring the Athenians celebrated the Festival of the Vine Flower, which also included drinking contests, dancing, and music. Performances would also be held to honor Dionysus, with the festival-goers using music and their drinking to honor the god.

By the high Middle Ages, between 1000-1250, music festivals and fairs became more common in towns across Europe. These festivals, similar to some of the ancient Greek festivals, were opportunities for contests and games to take place. Musical performances also became common as part of the entertainment. Competitions would be held in different towns across Europe and many of these fairs would occur in the spring or more commonly in the Summer. Festivals such as these were used as opportunities for families to connect with others or even find matches among the unmarried. Festivals, similar to today, were social but also commercial occasions for those involved.

The Development of Modern Music Festivals

In the Medieval era, most of the music that took place we would perhaps today classify as folk music or local music from regions that would involve common instruments rather than regal or more formal instruments that would have developed and became popularized in the early Modern Era after the 16th century. In the 19th century, the Bayreuth Festival, in 1876 in Baveria, became one of the first formal and annual festivals dedicated specifically to music and patronized at the highest level of government. This festival was patronized by Ludwig II and was attended to by other royalty from Europe and elsewhere. The festival began as an occasion to promote Richard Wagner, who wanted to popularize his music. The festival was effective in achieving this, as Wagner did become a well-known artist from the period. Furthermore, the festival continues until today, where it is the best-known festival dedicated to Wagner's music. For later festivals, this showed artists that music festivals could be highly effective to promote their work.

In the 20th century, Jazz was perhaps the first genre to take advantage of music festivals. There were smaller venues and festivals throughout the United States and Europe in the early 20th century. Most festivals did not have financial backing the enabled them to last beyond one year or organize such that they could draw in hundreds of thousands of people. The Bayreuth Festival was effectively an exception, and mostly because it had royal support. However, in the 1950s larger events began to be organized. At first, it was the Newport Jazz Festival in 1954 that began a trend of larger venues, mainly focusing on Jazz. The movie Jazz on a Summer's Day in 1958 popularized the festival and this arguably began a trend for audiences wanting more festivals. Newport also organized festivals for folk music, with the Newport Folk Festival opening in 1959. Although not as well known as the jazz festivals, the festival did introduce Bob Dylan to audiences and helped to promote his career. In 1961, what would ultimately become of the UK's biggest music festivals originated as the National Jazz and Blues Festival, which would later become the Reading Festival that became increasingly Rock oriented and derived music later on. As Jazz helped develop what would become Rock music, many early artists began to use Jazz festivals, in the US and UK, to showcase Rock music. This trend continued throughout most of the 1960s when larger rock bands, by now well established, still used Jazz festivals to play their music. This included Led Zeppelin and Jethro Tull.

Today's Music Festivals

By the late 1960s, Rock bands and promoters began to organize their own music festivals. Perhaps the first formal and well known dedicated festival to Rock was the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, which featured the Who and brought that band to the attention of American audiences. Another early festival was the Isle of Wight festival, in 1968, which started as an event with about 10,000 people and featured Jefferson Airplane, Pretty Things, and Arthur Brown among its performers. By 1970, the festival grew to bring in more than 600,000 people, showing the popularity of music festivals to organizers and causing many others to begin to imitate these events where multiple, often well-known bands would come and perform.

What perhaps put music festivals on the map and made Rock music festivals known to many Americans and Europeans was Woodstock in 1969, which featured many well-known bands and artists, including the Who and Jimi Hendrix, and drew hundreds of thousands of people, making it the first large-scale Rock music festival. It was billed as "three days of love and peace," making the ultimate symbol of the 1960s counter-culture movement. Interestingly, the festival almost never happened, as the governor of New York, Nelson Rockerfeller, threatened to send in the National Guard to stop the festival from taking place, where many of the locals in upstate New York did not feel it was appropriate to have such an event. In 1970, a documentary with the same name as the festival was released, which further popularized the event and encapsulated to many Americans what the late 1960s and early 1970s Rock culture represented.

Conclusion

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