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  #461  
Old Posted Feb 29, 2024, 11:33 PM
Djeffery Djeffery is offline
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A few of those will be in London that same week for Rock The Park (Neil Young, Nickelback, Tyler Childers, Tea Party). Interesting mix of some country acts mixed in with other acts instead of having a country centered night.
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  #462  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2024, 1:00 AM
huntclub huntclub is offline
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Bluesfest lineup hasn’t been good for a solid 10 years. The lineup is very underwhelming compared to festivals in Montreal or Toronto for the same price…
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  #463  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2024, 9:18 AM
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Bluesfest lineup hasn’t been good for a solid 10 years. The lineup is very underwhelming compared to festivals in Montreal or Toronto for the same price…
Which Toronto Festival do you think is better for the money? You’ve got to remember that Bluesfest is 10 days of music.

Last year’s Bluesfest was hugely successful, so pretty hard to make a general statement that the lineup wasn’t good. The festival tends to be eclectic, but that’s part of what makes it pretty unique. Ottawa people don’t tend to realize what they have.
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  #464  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2024, 1:18 PM
Lakeofthewood Lakeofthewood is offline
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I feel like every year Bluesfest ends up being better than we think when the lineup is released, so once again cautiously optimistic.

However, I am continuously disappointed that they have stopped getting young, up-and-coming hip hop artists. Don't get me wrong, it will be great to see Nas and Killer Mike (politics aside), but 50 Cent hasn't had a relevant album in over a decade.

For example, look at Osheaga's lineup: SZA, Denzel Curry, Lil Tjay, Fridayy, Kevin Abstract. We couldn't have gotten one or two of those artists? But they know their market now is country music and throwback rock artists.
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  #465  
Old Posted Mar 1, 2024, 6:58 PM
DTcrawler DTcrawler is online now
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I feel like every year Bluesfest ends up being better than we think when the lineup is released, so once again cautiously optimistic.

However, I am continuously disappointed that they have stopped getting young, up-and-coming hip hop artists. Don't get me wrong, it will be great to see Nas and Killer Mike (politics aside), but 50 Cent hasn't had a relevant album in over a decade.

For example, look at Osheaga's lineup: SZA, Denzel Curry, Lil Tjay, Fridayy, Kevin Abstract. We couldn't have gotten one or two of those artists? But they know their market now is country music and throwback rock artists.
Could be purely a rumour but I heard Bluesfest stopped aiming for more current hip-hop artists after the Migos “fiasco” a few years ago. Apparently the crowd was too rowdy for all the pearl-clutchers who prefer that Bluesfest be a place where you rock up with a lawn chair instead.
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  #466  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2024, 2:17 PM
Lakeofthewood Lakeofthewood is offline
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Could be purely a rumour but I heard Bluesfest stopped aiming for more current hip-hop artists after the Migos “fiasco” a few years ago. Apparently the crowd was too rowdy for all the pearl-clutchers who prefer that Bluesfest be a place where you rock up with a lawn chair instead.
Oh 100%. I've never heard anything official, but this was the one that ruined it, with the fence getting knocked over and stuff. Other than the insanity of the fence getting knocked over, the crowd was no different than any hip hop festival I've been to in Montreal or Toronto. Too bad.
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  #467  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2024, 4:08 PM
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Oh 100%. I've never heard anything official, but this was the one that ruined it, with the fence getting knocked over and stuff. Other than the insanity of the fence getting knocked over, the crowd was no different than any hip hop festival I've been to in Montreal or Toronto. Too bad.
Yeah. In fairness, even hip hop acts/festivals in those cities have been dealing with an increased level of hooliganery that even they’re not willing to tolerate (incidents at Rolling Loud come to mind) so that does speak a little bit to how volatile the current generation of that genre’s fans can be.

That being said, still a massive copout and disappointment for Bluesfest to give up on it completely. Learn from past mistakes, prepare accordingly, and step up to the challenge instead of abandoning an entire segment of your market.

Looking back at Bluesfest lineups from 2018 and 2019, it’s insane some of the names on there. If we can’t get back to that, I wonder if Escapade would go a similar route as Veld in Toronto and start incorporating a few hip hop acts as part of a predominantly EDM festival. Escapade organizers deserve a lot of credit for consistently bringing the biggest names in the EDM world to town.
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  #468  
Old Posted Mar 4, 2024, 10:31 PM
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The last time I've ever had fun at Bluesfest was in 2007, when the White Stripes were there.



(end curmudgeonly post)

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  #469  
Old Posted Mar 5, 2024, 5:18 PM
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Female artists including Kathleen Edwards, Norah Jones and Laufey lead charge at 2024 Ottawa Jazz Festival
The festival runs from June 21 to 30, in Confederation Park, Festival Plaza and the National Arts Centre.

Peter Hum, Ottawa Citizen
Published Mar 05, 2024 • Last updated 2 hours ago • 3 minute read


This summer’s Ottawa Jazz Festival will see Confederation Park brim with the sounds of earthy New Orleans music, a jazz-rock guitar hero and, above all, female vocalists and singer-songwriters.

The festival, which for years has striven for gender parity in its programming, is showcasing on its main stage Ottawa-based singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards (June 25), the potent Boston-based band Lake Street Dive that includes Rachael Price as its lead singer (June 27), the young Icelandic sensation Laufey (June 28), folk-jazz star Norah Jones (June 29) and jazz singer Veronica Swift (June 30).

These and other bookings continue the festival’s “conscious push” to book female musicians, says Petr Cancura, the festival’s interim executive director and longtime programming manager.

“It is inspiring to see how many more female artists are active on today’s music scene, artists who are creating some unified music representative of the times,” Cancura says.

The festival runs from Friday, June 21, to Sunday, June 30, although all of its stages will be dark on Monday, June 24.

The festival’s opening-night headliner on June 21 in the park will be the funky New Orleans hornman Trombone Shorty, while the staunchly traditional Preservation Hall Jazz Band is to play in the park on June 23. Veteran guitarist Al Di Meola, renowned for his high-velocity playing with Return to Forever in the 1970s, is to play Confederation Park on June 26. A headliner for June 22 is still to be announced.

<more>

https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainm...estival-lineup
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  #470  
Old Posted Mar 13, 2024, 2:02 PM
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What’s in a name? There might be one small change this year, but Bluesfest promises to be as good as ever

Mia Jensen, OBJ
March 12, 2024 3:58 PM ET


This summer, Bluesfest is celebrating its 30th anniversary and, incidentally, taking on a slightly different name at the same time.

“The problem that we have is that, after 30 years, everyone asks, ‘What’s different this year?’” festival executive director Mark Monahan told OBJ. “And on the 30th, it’s really no different.”

But those looking closely at this year’s marketing materials may have already noticed one small change.

For over a decade, the music festival has been advertised with a title sponsor and known as RBC Bluesfest. But this year, the festival will simply be called Ottawa Bluesfest, with an updated logo featuring the number 30 to mark its anniversary.

According to Monahan, the change came from RBC, which decided it wanted to shake things up when the time came to sign a new agreement between the two parties.

“In their previous agreement, (RBC) had title to the festival, but they didn’t have title to the main stage,” said Monahan. “When it came up for renewal, they re-signed for another five years and they really felt they wanted the title of the main stage instead.”

From July 4 to 14 at LeBreton Flats, when big name artists like 50 Cent, Mötley Crüe and Nickelback come to the city, they will be taking to the RBC Stage.

For most festival-goers, it’s a minute change, said Monahan: “I think a lot of people have just referred to it as Bluesfest, to be honest with you, over the years.”

Despite the change, Monahan said Bluesfest’s relationship with RBC remains strong.

“Their financial commitment is as great as ever,” he said. “It wasn’t a financial situation. It was more just a preference of what they wanted to have as their main visibility.”

Justin Schurman, regional vice-president of business financial services at RBC, recently congratulated the Bluesfest team on the 30th anniversary of the festival in a post on LinkedIn.

“RBC is proud to welcome so many amazing headliners to the RBC Stage this summer at Ottawa Bluesfest,” he wrote. “This builds on our 13 years of partnership with this leading live music event in the nation’s capital — one of my favourite events of the summer for sure!”

Bluesfest has expanded to cater to a variety of musical sensibilities over the years, said Monahan.

This year’s lineup will feature a number of artists playing Ottawa for the first time, including Tyler Childers and Maroon 5. Also making an appearance will be Neil Young.

“(He’s) the person that we’ve tried so many years to get,” said Monahan. “I don’t think he’s played Ottawa in about 15 years. He’s obviously an iconic Canadian as well as an international star, which I think will be huge for us.”

After hitting the 30-year milestone, Monahan said one goal for the festival going forward is to bring in more programming that engages local businesses and the community.

“Part of the whole financial model is to enlist the support of sponsors and partners that will help support the festival,” he said. “This is a big thrust of ours going forward — developing ways that any business in Ottawa can participate in, whether large or small. We are really working towards developing some meaningful programs that not just the RBCs of the world can participate in, but the smaller businesses as well.”

https://obj.ca/small-change-this-yea...-good-as-ever/
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  #471  
Old Posted Mar 14, 2024, 11:09 AM
eltodesukane eltodesukane is offline
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Taking a break out of the Sandcrawler...
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  #472  
Old Posted Mar 15, 2024, 12:17 AM
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Taking a break out of the Sandcrawler...
Exactly. Where is Threepio?
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  #473  
Old Posted Apr 4, 2024, 7:53 PM
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Parliament-Funkadelic booked for 2024 Ottawa Jazz Festival
After 15 years, P-Funk returns to O-town, and will play in Confederation Park on June 22.

Peter Hum, Ottawa Citizen
Published Apr 04, 2024 • 1 minute read


The 2024 Ottawa Jazz Festival’s cool factor just doubled with the announcement that the late-June event has booked Parliament-Funkadelic as its last headliner.

Known as P-Funk to its legion of fans, the seminal Afro-futuristic R ‘n’ B collective helmed by George Clinton will play the festival’s Confederation Park main stage on June 22 at 8:30 p.m.

P-Funk last played Ottawa 15 years ago, when the 2009 Ottawa Bluesfest presented the band on a stage in the ByWard Market.
Article content

While P-Funk’s origins date back to the doo-wop group called the Parliaments that Clinton, now 82, formed in the late 1950s, the group became a funk and psychedelic rock trailblazer by the late 1960s.

As the collective’s output grew through the decades, it went on to influence hip-hop, electronica, gospel and soul music. The band received a lifetime achievement Grammy Award in 2019.

Clinton completes the roster of main-stage acts at the jazz festival, which runs from June 21 to 30. Among its previously announced bookings are Laufey (June 28), Norah Jones (June 29), Kathleen Edwards (June 25), the Preservation Hall Jazz Band (June 21), and Lake Street Dive (June 27).

For more information and tickets and passes, go to ottawajazz.com.

https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainm...-jazz-festival
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  #474  
Old Posted May 28, 2024, 1:01 PM
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CityFolk lineup revealed: List of performers includes Greta Van Fleet, The Beaches, Jason Isbell
Ottawa's CityFolk festival will take place Sept. 11-15 at its usual home on the Great Lawn at Lansdowne Park

Lynn Saxberg, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 28, 2024 • Last updated 8 hours ago • 2 minute read


This year’s edition of CityFolk will mark the 30th anniversary of its roots as the Ottawa Folk Festival with an eclectic lineup of performers that includes retro rockers Greta Van Fleet, punk stalwarts Rise Against, Toronto quartet The Beaches, country rocker Jason Isbell and more.

The program is all about balance, said Mark Monahan, executive director of CityFolk and its big-sister festival, Bluesfest. Instead of booking a blockbuster headliner each night, this year offers a curated selection of acts across a spectrum of genres.

“I’m not going to say any one act is the best get,” Monahan said. “But we’re very happy with the overall lineup. There are multiple acts every night that we think will hopefully draw people.”

The festival runs Sept. 11-15 in its usual home on the Great Lawn at Lansdowne Park, with live music presented on three stages, including a main stage sponsored by TD. Total capacity of the site is about 10,000, Monahan said.

The pop-rock power chords of The Beaches are in the spotlight on opening night, followed by a muscular Thursday-night bill featuring Michigan’s Zep-inspired Greta Van Fleet and Canadian rock duo Crown Lands, along with folkier fare such as Ontario’s train-loving singer-songwriter Fred Eaglesmith, the pow wow-meets-classic country sounds of Tennessee Cree and the youthful Wakefield guitar hero Jacob River Milnes.

Friday brings a blast of rock energy with Chicago’s Rise Against headlining a program that also includes Texas’ musical adventurers Explosions in the Sky and Swedish prog-metal act Soen, plus Cat Power Sings Dylan 66, which is her take on Bob Dylan’s 1966 concert at Royal Albert Hall.

Germany’s electro-pop duo Milky Chance will get folks dancing on Saturday night, sharing the program with the globe-trotting Montreal-Ottawa band, Half Moon Run, Ottawa’s soulful Almyr Jules and indie folksinger John Muirhead.

The final day of the festival sees alt-country Grammy champ Jason Isbell and his band the 400 Unit in the top slot, with guitar legend Alejandro Escovedo, country darling Maren Morris and Toronto’s sweet-voiced newcomer Billianne filling out the schedule.

As for pricing, Monahan said passes will cost the same as last year.

“We’ve established a certain audience for CityFolk, and as long as we sit with this game plan of being a single-weekend event and curate the programming so people feel there’s value to get them out, we can keep the price reasonable. That’s part of the target,” he said.

A one-day presale on weekend passes ($169) starts at 10 a.m. and runs until 11:59 p.m. Wednesday (May 29). Regular prices ($189) and single-day sales begin at 10 a.m. Thursday (May 30). To purchase, go to cityfolk.frontgatetickets.com.

For more details, head to https://cityfolkfestival.com/.

lsaxberg@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainm...s-jason-isbell
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  #475  
Old Posted May 28, 2024, 5:58 PM
stolenottawa stolenottawa is offline
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Originally Posted by rocketphish View Post
CityFolk lineup revealed: List of performers includes Greta Van Fleet, The Beaches, Jason Isbell
Ottawa's CityFolk festival will take place Sept. 11-15 at its usual home on the Great Lawn at Lansdowne Park

Lynn Saxberg, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 28, 2024 • Last updated 8 hours ago • 2 minute read


This year’s edition of CityFolk will mark the 30th anniversary of its roots as the Ottawa Folk Festival with an eclectic lineup of performers that includes retro rockers Greta Van Fleet, punk stalwarts Rise Against, Toronto quartet The Beaches, country rocker Jason Isbell and more.

The program is all about balance, said Mark Monahan, executive director of CityFolk and its big-sister festival, Bluesfest. Instead of booking a blockbuster headliner each night, this year offers a curated selection of acts across a spectrum of genres.

“I’m not going to say any one act is the best get,” Monahan said. “But we’re very happy with the overall lineup. There are multiple acts every night that we think will hopefully draw people.”

The festival runs Sept. 11-15 in its usual home on the Great Lawn at Lansdowne Park, with live music presented on three stages, including a main stage sponsored by TD. Total capacity of the site is about 10,000, Monahan said.

The pop-rock power chords of The Beaches are in the spotlight on opening night, followed by a muscular Thursday-night bill featuring Michigan’s Zep-inspired Greta Van Fleet and Canadian rock duo Crown Lands, along with folkier fare such as Ontario’s train-loving singer-songwriter Fred Eaglesmith, the pow wow-meets-classic country sounds of Tennessee Cree and the youthful Wakefield guitar hero Jacob River Milnes.

Friday brings a blast of rock energy with Chicago’s Rise Against headlining a program that also includes Texas’ musical adventurers Explosions in the Sky and Swedish prog-metal act Soen, plus Cat Power Sings Dylan 66, which is her take on Bob Dylan’s 1966 concert at Royal Albert Hall.

Germany’s electro-pop duo Milky Chance will get folks dancing on Saturday night, sharing the program with the globe-trotting Montreal-Ottawa band, Half Moon Run, Ottawa’s soulful Almyr Jules and indie folksinger John Muirhead.

The final day of the festival sees alt-country Grammy champ Jason Isbell and his band the 400 Unit in the top slot, with guitar legend Alejandro Escovedo, country darling Maren Morris and Toronto’s sweet-voiced newcomer Billianne filling out the schedule.

As for pricing, Monahan said passes will cost the same as last year.

“We’ve established a certain audience for CityFolk, and as long as we sit with this game plan of being a single-weekend event and curate the programming so people feel there’s value to get them out, we can keep the price reasonable. That’s part of the target,” he said.

A one-day presale on weekend passes ($169) starts at 10 a.m. and runs until 11:59 p.m. Wednesday (May 29). Regular prices ($189) and single-day sales begin at 10 a.m. Thursday (May 30). To purchase, go to cityfolk.frontgatetickets.com.

For more details, head to https://cityfolkfestival.com/.

lsaxberg@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainm...s-jason-isbell
Monahan sure loves booking the same acts over and over again.
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  #476  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2024, 10:18 PM
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Hopefully the troubles of the owners of the Phoenix in Toronto doesn’t mean trouble for the Bronson Centre:

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts...fter-33-years/
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  #477  
Old Posted Jun 5, 2024, 10:22 PM
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Hopefully the troubles of the owners of the Phoenix in Toronto doesn’t mean trouble for the Bronson Centre:

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts...fter-33-years/
They are restoring the facade of the Bronson Centre atm. It's probably safe for at least another decade.
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  #478  
Old Posted Jun 6, 2024, 1:43 PM
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They are restoring the facade of the Bronson Centre atm. It's probably safe for at least another decade.
Yeah, I wasn't thinking in terms of redevelopment of the building. More in terms of the impact on the operators' business given that they are losing their primary venue.
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  #479  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2024, 8:28 PM
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Bluesfest adds extra day, not to boost sales, but to accommodate an act too big to pass up

Lynn Saxberg, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jun 16, 2024 • Last updated 50 minutes ago • 3 minute read


Bluesfest is adding an extra day to the program to accommodate a last-minute booking by an act that puts on a “great live show,” said Mark Monahan, executive and artistic director of Ottawa’s biggest summer music festival.

Although the identity of the act won’t be revealed until 10 a.m. Tuesday, the date was leaked Friday when the festival put out a call for volunteers to sign up for extra shifts on July 9. That day was originally intended to be one of the two dark days during this year’s festival, which starts July 4 and runs until July 14 on the grounds of the Canadian War Museum at LeBreton Flats Park.

Monahan said the date was not being held for any reason other than to give staff and volunteers a two-day break in the middle of the fest.

“We didn’t have any specific plans but when this came up, we thought ‘Geez, we could do this and it would complement the whole summer event,’” he said.

“The reality is that everything is there,” he added. “The stage is there and all the infrastructure so it’s not like mounting a concert in a field on a random night. There is some economy of scale and it gives us a chance to take advantage of the opportunity we’ve been given.”

Monahan said the festival’s programming team had been negotiating with the act last fall, but the routing didn’t work out. But when the act decided they wanted to add an excursion into Canada, Bluesfest was at the top of the list.

“They came back to us about six weeks ago, and said, ‘Look, we’d really love to come to Canada. Could you do it at Bluesfest?’”, Monahan said. “We felt it was a great opportunity for us and we didn’t want to miss out. What I love about it is it just seems to be a great show. We’re confident there’s going to be some interest.”

Part of the reason for wanting to play Bluesfest was the guarantee of a built-in audience of thousands who have already bought full-festival passes. For them, the additional day will come at no extra cost.

It was also important to the act to keep ticket prices affordable for fans who don’t have Bluesfest passes. A July 9 day pass will be $50, Monahan said, or $35 if purchased as part of a three-show package. Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Wednesday at https://ottawabluesfest.frontgatetickets.com/.

Contrary to some speculation, the show was not added to boost ticket sales. Monahan says the festival is already on track to have “if not the best, then certainly the second-best year we’ve ever had” in terms of sales.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the festival Monahan co-founded in 1994. Headlining the birthday party is a slate of headliners that includes rock legend Neil Young and his classic band, Crazy Horse, hip hop heavyweight 50 Cent, Can-rockers Nickelback, Moves Like Jagger entertainers Maroon 5, glam metal outfit Mötley Crüe, country troubadour Tyler Childers and more.

The music takes place on three outdoor stages and one inside the museum’s Barney Danson Theatre, plus two areas for DJs, the Accora Village Spin Stage and the Crazy Horse Saloon, a new feature of the setup.

Last year’s Bluesfest was a record-setting year. With an expanded site, good weather and a program that saw single tickets to three of the festival’s nine nights sell out in advance, the 2023 edition was the biggest iteration in its almost 30-year history. In all, more than 300,000 people attended.

The three sell-outs were Shania Twain’s opening-night country-pop romp, the Foo Fighters’ blues-busting workout and a bombastic Saturday-night bash with Pitbull and Ludacris.

lsaxberg@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...big-to-pass-up
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  #480  
Old Posted Jun 16, 2024, 9:03 PM
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Bluesfest adds extra day, not to boost sales, but to accommodate an act too big to pass up

Lynn Saxberg, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jun 16, 2024 • Last updated 50 minutes ago • 3 minute read


Bluesfest is adding an extra day to the program to accommodate a last-minute booking by an act that puts on a “great live show,” said Mark Monahan, executive and artistic director of Ottawa’s biggest summer music festival.

Although the identity of the act won’t be revealed until 10 a.m. Tuesday, the date was leaked Friday when the festival put out a call for volunteers to sign up for extra shifts on July 9. That day was originally intended to be one of the two dark days during this year’s festival, which starts July 4 and runs until July 14 on the grounds of the Canadian War Museum at LeBreton Flats Park.

Monahan said the date was not being held for any reason other than to give staff and volunteers a two-day break in the middle of the fest.

“We didn’t have any specific plans but when this came up, we thought ‘Geez, we could do this and it would complement the whole summer event,’” he said.

“The reality is that everything is there,” he added. “The stage is there and all the infrastructure so it’s not like mounting a concert in a field on a random night. There is some economy of scale and it gives us a chance to take advantage of the opportunity we’ve been given.”

Monahan said the festival’s programming team had been negotiating with the act last fall, but the routing didn’t work out. But when the act decided they wanted to add an excursion into Canada, Bluesfest was at the top of the list.

“They came back to us about six weeks ago, and said, ‘Look, we’d really love to come to Canada. Could you do it at Bluesfest?’”, Monahan said. “We felt it was a great opportunity for us and we didn’t want to miss out. What I love about it is it just seems to be a great show. We’re confident there’s going to be some interest.”

Part of the reason for wanting to play Bluesfest was the guarantee of a built-in audience of thousands who have already bought full-festival passes. For them, the additional day will come at no extra cost.

It was also important to the act to keep ticket prices affordable for fans who don’t have Bluesfest passes. A July 9 day pass will be $50, Monahan said, or $35 if purchased as part of a three-show package. Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Wednesday at https://ottawabluesfest.frontgatetickets.com/.

Contrary to some speculation, the show was not added to boost ticket sales. Monahan says the festival is already on track to have “if not the best, then certainly the second-best year we’ve ever had” in terms of sales.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the festival Monahan co-founded in 1994. Headlining the birthday party is a slate of headliners that includes rock legend Neil Young and his classic band, Crazy Horse, hip hop heavyweight 50 Cent, Can-rockers Nickelback, Moves Like Jagger entertainers Maroon 5, glam metal outfit Mötley Crüe, country troubadour Tyler Childers and more.

The music takes place on three outdoor stages and one inside the museum’s Barney Danson Theatre, plus two areas for DJs, the Accora Village Spin Stage and the Crazy Horse Saloon, a new feature of the setup.

Last year’s Bluesfest was a record-setting year. With an expanded site, good weather and a program that saw single tickets to three of the festival’s nine nights sell out in advance, the 2023 edition was the biggest iteration in its almost 30-year history. In all, more than 300,000 people attended.

The three sell-outs were Shania Twain’s opening-night country-pop romp, the Foo Fighters’ blues-busting workout and a bombastic Saturday-night bash with Pitbull and Ludacris.

lsaxberg@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...big-to-pass-up
Knowing the musical tastes of Ottawa, I'm guessing on Trooper, Prism or April Wine.
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