Bluesfest
Lineup
includes everyone from Steely Dan to Fergie
Lynn
Saxberg, The Ottawa Citizen
Published: Wednesday, April 23,
2008
Organizers have come up with the
word "funkalicious" to describe this year's Bluesfest program and its
diverse lineup. Mainstage acts announced yesterday range from a black eyed pea
to Great Big Sea.
Hiphop princess Fergie, indie
sensation Feist and boogie-blues rockers Black Crowes, along with
singer-songwriter James Taylor, disco queen Donna Summer, jazz-rock pioneers
Steely Dan and the formerly reclusive rock legend, Brian Wilson, are also among
the headlining artists confirmed to appear on the Bank of America mainstage at
Bluesfest, which runs from July 3 to13 on the grounds of the Canadian War
Museum. (Thanks to the Bank of America's recent takeover of MBNA, you'll be
thinking of the stars and stripes when you're at the main stage of one of
Canada's biggest music festivals.)
It's a terrific lineup, though
perhaps not quite the blockbuster of last year, which included Bob Dylan, Van
Morrison, the White Stripes and Kanye West. However, you don't have to delve
too far into the 2008 program to find artists like Lucinda Williams, Primus,
Akon, the Wailers, Johnny Winter, Richard Thompson and Metric on the side
stages. That's where it gets exciting.
Last year Bluesfest drew huge crowds
to the big shows, and set new records for attendance, with more than 300,000
people over 12 days. But some nights it seemed as if there was nothing much
else going on beyond the main stage. There were whispers that organizers blew
the budget on the big names, and plugged the holes in the side stages with
whatever would fit.
That won't happen this year. The
quality of side-stage acts is up considerably, partly the result of a pivotal
decision that shifts the festival's focus from growth to programming. The
reason? Executive and artistic director Mark Monahan says there were some
illuminating statistics after last year's festival. First of all, he saw a
"dramatic" increase in passport sales, from around 10,000 to around
15,000. Then, among passholders, there was a significant increase in the
average number of shows attended, from seven to eight. "Looking at our
research, we now know if you want to get a younger audience, or if you want to
keep the audience, you have to have enough stuff on seven or eight nights that
they want to go to," he says. "We're basically now in a position
where we've got a wide demographic to please. So we've sort of tried to program
against ourselves on certain nights."
Take opening night on July 3, for
example, with secret machines and the Tragically Hip on the main stage, TV on
the Radio on Rogers, Cassandra Wilson on Black Sheep, Taj Mahal on River and
gospel kings the Blind Boys of Alabama on Roots.
Or, if you don't want to see Fergie
on July 8, there's Boz Scaggs or Tokyo Police Club on the same night. Not a fan
of Great Big Sea? Check out Theory of a Deadman, Metric or singer-songwriter
Shelby Lynne instead on July 11. Never heard of Widespead Panic? No doubt
you'll find something else of interest on July 6, with Primus, Johnny Winter
and the Wailers on the other stages.
The budget for talent is up about
half a million dollars, to about $3.5 million, and the extra money is being
spread around all six stages. "We need a substantial amount of dollars to
do that," says Monahan. "A couple of years ago, if we spent $100,000
on an act, we didn't have another 100,000 to spend on everything else. So we've
expanded the budget so that if something came along, we could have a completely
different demographic on the same night."
It's also a way to spread the crowd
more evenly throughout the site, hopefully avoiding the huge throngs that
clogged the main stage area last year. Fifteen years into the festival, the
point is not to get too much bigger, but to nurture the existing audience.
"Given the growth we had last
year, my hope is we'll grow marginally," says Monahan. "We want
people to go and have a good time and not feel like they're jammed in. Our goal
now is we've grown to a certain size and we want to look at it now and see how
we can maintain that audience. There's always going to be opportunities to grow
on certain nights."
One of the most significant changes
to this year's festival is the addition of a sixth stage. The Roots stage will
be tucked in between the River Stage and the Black Sheep Stage, on the north
side of the museum, with space for a crowd of about 4,000. Among the artists
booked to appear are Zappa Plays Zappa on July 5, the Wailers on July 6, Bette
Lavette on July 7, Dr. John on July 8, Calexico on July 9 and Don MacLean on
July 13.
Including the new stage, there were
about 30 more time slots to be filled this year, bringing the total on all six
stages to about 220. For Monahan and his core programming team of Paul Symes
from the Black Sheep Inn and Revolution Rock promoter Shawn Scallen, the
challenge was not only to fill the spots but also to keep in mind the
demographic appeal and musical style of each act, plus the decibel level.
"I had to look at the timing of
each stage so I'm not putting in a punk rock act that's blowing something else
out of the water," Monahan says. "Hopefully over the years, you get a
little better at it and you anticipate some of the problems from previous
years, but it's never going to be perfect in terms of the sound bleed and
people wanting to see acts that are scheduled at the same time.
"My approach is just give them
more: give them more music."
©
The Ottawa Citizen 2008
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Feist, Tragically Hip, James Taylor to play Bluesfest
Last
Updated: Wednesday, April 23, 2008 | 11:07 AM ET
CBC News
Music veterans such as James Taylor
and Steely Dan and newer stars such as Fergie and Feist are among more
than 2,000 musicians who will share the six stages at Ottawa's annual
summer music festival this year.
The Cisco Ottawa Bluesfest released
its 2008 preliminary lineup Wednesday for the event that runs July 3
to 13 at Lebreton Flats.
The festival's 15th edition will
include popular Canadians The Tragically Hip, Great Big Sea and Sam Roberts, other well-known musicians such as
Brian Wilson, Donna Summer, and the Black Crowes, and popular indie bands such
as Stars, The Weakerthans and Wintersleep, a news release announced.
Hundreds of other blues, rock, pop,
R&B, soul, gospel and world musicians will play near and inside the
Canadian War Museum over 11 days.
Tickets will go on sale on April 26.
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Some artists playing at Bluesfest
2008:
James Taylor; Steely Dan; The
Tragically Hip; Feist; Wyclef Jean; The Black Crowes; Fergie; Widespread
Panic; Brian Wilson; Great Big Sea;
Boz Scaggs; Three Days Grace; TV on the Radio; Akon; Primus; Zappa Plays
Zappa; Taj Mahal; Lucinda Williams; Donna Summer; Plain White T's; Richard
Thompson; Matthew Good and His Band; Don McLean; Keb' Mo'; Robert Randolph
and the Family Band; Theory of a Dead Man; Blind Boys of Alabama; Joan
Armatrading; Jakob Dylan; Dr. John; Canned Heat; The Secret Machines; Corb
Lund, Metric; Calexico; Sean Kingston; The Weakerthans; The Wailers; Johnny
Winter; Cassandra Wilson; Kathleen Edwards; Adrian Belew; Bettye LaVette;
Shelby Lynne; Wintersleep; Allen Toussaint; Sam Roberts Band; Ray Davies;
Martha Wainwright; Master Musicians of Jajouka; Tony D; JW-Jones; Shawn
Tavernier; Jose Gonzalez; Michael Jerome Browne; Fiftymen; Amanda Rheaume;
Ball & Chain & The Wreckers; Jim Bryson; The Hammerheads; Alexis
O'Hara; Budos Band; Ana Muira; Cooper Brothers; Quarter Life; Steve Marriner;
Watters Brothers Rebellion; Royal Wood; Lindsay Ferguson; Samuel James; Jeff
Rogers; Evil Farm Children; Anders Drerup; Kid Beyond; Guy Forsyth; Guitar
Shorty; Roxanne Potvin; Orchestra Baobab; Sonny Landreth; Guy Davis; Seun
Kuti; Dave Bidini Band; Christine Fellows; Trevor Alguire; Anders
Osborne; Samuel James; Harper; Angelique Kidjo; Back Door Slam; Justin
Rutledge; Jon Amor; Michael Burks; Chuck Prophet; Eric Eggleston; Brothers
Chaffey; Theory of a Dead Man; NQ Arbuckle; Nick Moss & The Flip Tops;
Crooked Still; Ladytron; JJ Grey & Mofro; Lil' Brian Terry & the
Zydeco Travelers; Becky Abbott; Hayden; Luke Doucet; Jenn Grant; Guy Forsyth;
Krueger Brothers; Elliot Brood; The Holmes Brothers; Nation Beat; Tom Wilson;
Otis Taylor Band; The Super Fantastics; Don Vappie; The Bluerunners; Pappy
Johns Band; Digging Roots with Hoop Dancer, Jill Buckshot; Sandy Schofield;
Billy Joe Green, Mumbo Jumbo Voodoo Combo; The Sauce Boss; Anson Funderburgh
& The Rockets; That 1 Guy; David Maxwell; Justin Nozuka; Terry Gillespie;
Hollerado; Infected Mushroom; James Blood Ulmer; Terry Evans; The Acorn;
HiLoTrons; L'il Ed & The Blues Imperials; Hamell on Trial; Bryan Lee
& the Blues Power Band; Chuck Prophet; Catherine Russell; Federico
Aubele; Frank Vignola; Rachid Taha; Becky Abbott; Pierre Bensusan; Jully
Black; Born Ruffians; Jason Collett; Lil' Dave Thompson; Tokyo Police Club;
The Most Serene Republic; Dorit Chrysler; Jason Ricci & New Blood; Stars;
Eric Eggleston; John Nemeth; John Allaire; Harry Manx & Kevin Breit;
Lurrie Bell; Nappy Brown; Walter Trout; Rozasia; Hayden; Bernard Allison;
Sadie Hell; Ben Cooper; Plants and Animals; Lurrie Bell; Melissa Ferrick; Eli
'Paperboy' Reed; Three Days Grace; The Dynamites; Brights; Brothers Chaffey;
Acres; Nikkii Yanofsky; Balkan Beat Box; Steve Riley & The Mamou
Playboys; The Love Machine; Jesse Stewart; If Then Do; Shelby Lynne; Ryan
Montbleu Band; World Gospel Jam with Canton Jones, Sharon Riley & Faith
Chorale, Sonz of Thunder, Danny Eason, God’s Plan Ministry, New World Son,
and Shirley Ceasar; John Kilduff; Porkbelly Futures; Red Volkaert with Cindy
Cashdollar; Shakura; Gina Sicilia; Blues in the Schools Performance; Jam
Clinic; John Henrys; Grupo Fantasma; The Bush Pilots; Stars; Rozasia; Debbie
Davies; Harrison Kennedy; Trevor James and Perfect Gentlemen; Lance Anderson;
Nihilist Spasm Band; Baobab Tree and Akpokli; Mr Something Something,
Jetplanes of Abraham
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Where is Stormy?