Support |
Matthias asked: "So what do you say? do these numbers mean anything? why has almost none of these guys ever played on a festival? some of them did appear on this mailing list..." I can't speak for others who have put on looping festivals, but the simple answer is that almost all of these names cost a lot of money and the revenue from the big Y2K festival doesn't come close to generating income like that. I was able to bring Arild Andersen a couple of years back (wonderful!) only because an anonymous donor gave me a $5,000 unsolicited gift out of the clear blue sky......an incredibly generous gesture that has not been repeated. It cost me $3,000 to fly him here and back, to put him up and to pay what for him, was a modest performance fee. That's close to twice the revenue of the door for the entire six day festival. Even on the minuscule budget that we have (and thanks to all the loopers who have generously donated even when they haven't been able to attend) this is an AMAZING festival! Ask anyone who came this year. It's stunning that we pull it off on the scale we do, given the lack of real solid support (part of this may also just be down to the fact that Santa Cruz has more musical entertainment per capita than any single city I've ever been to in all of my touring in 15 countries----it's just not a very big place....only 50,000 people and there's a large mountain with a scary road between us and the 3 million people of the SouthBay). ********************* Now, a quick few words in defense of this approach to Live Looping Festivals: The festival (or perhaps, we should call it a live looping convention which might be more accurate if it weren't for the fact that almost everyone who attends also performs) is really wonderful and I hope everyone gets a chance to come to it next year. I'm taking all comers! It will be my last big one and then I'm going to turn it over to the community and see if it's even a sustainable idea from that point onward. Please come! Please witness how sophisticated this community has become in 10 years. The overall level of artistry has really grown. The technology has really grown. The feeling of community has really grown. That's the single reason I've devoted so much of my life to it in the past ten years. Even if other promoters like Sjaak Overgauww and Bernhard Wagner have adopted different philosophies in the way they have put on their own festivals: eschewing a more populist and egalitarian vibe in their booking practices in favor of a more exclusive roster (which I"m entirely 'down' with and supportive of), it has to be noted, historically, that they were initially influenced and inspired by the spirit of these festivals and the ones that they attended. It's all good and the plethora of live looping festivals and mini festivals that have arisen out of this particular one are really wonderful in that each promoter has a different take on the whole thing. Sjaak, Bernhard, Andy, Fabio, Massimo, Per, Mir-0, Luca, Os, Gareth, Paul, Hans and all the many other people who have put on looping festivals have all made really fantastic contributions to our whole community. Each festival has been unique and all have been fantastic (at least all the ones I've had the pleasure of attending). In this particular festival, the newbies and less experienced artists tend to play earlier in the day and the more experienced and accomplished ones tend to play later in the day and evening, so one can adapt a more refined and picky approach to the professionalism and artistry they want to watch or they see or embrace a more supportive, encouraging and egalitarian vibe and come early. There are so many acts that anyone can pick and choose who they want to see. I'm particularly gratified that most of the top acts who attend these festivals are there at noon on Saturday to be supportive of the newbies who play. This support has really meant a great deal to those young or experientially young artists who play and I think many would agree that some of the true delights of the last several festivals have come from adapting such an atypical supportive approach to booking. The highest quality of performances also represent artistry that is as good as any looping artists on the planet (even if they are not 'big bucks' commercially successful artists). Ask anyone who's been recently and they'll tell you this. So, don't let youtube samplers determine your judgment about all of this: Come see it for yourself. Better yet, come play it and see it. You'll be glad you did. yours, Rick Walker ps just as a side note to Rainer's comments about the festival's audiences not growing: the size of the festival's audiences has slightly risen in the past four years (and I've added dates which increases a bit as well), but it should be noted that the number of people who've listened to this festival in real time from around the world increased significantly this year. We had over 700 people who watched the videos and immediately archived videos from Saturday night as a result. Previously, we'd had a few dozen people at the very most listening in. This is not enormous, but it certainly at least adds to the number of people who want to be play the festival each year. I'm curious how those numbers stack up to the recent NinJams that you've organized. Are you experiencing increases in listenership with each successive one you do? Whether or not, do such numbers ever diminish your desire to put these events on? I certainly hope not. Relative small audience numbers haven't diminished how much I look forward to the festival each year, myself because the entire event is so much more than just the sum of it's parts. **********