Satellite Party News
- nexis
- One West
- Posts: 286
- Joined: Thu Dec 21, 2006 8:28 pm
Satellite Party News
Anyone have any news/updates on SP's plans for the new year? I assume they'll be playing at Lolla next summer but anything b4 then? There was talk on myspace a little while back of rescheduling some of the canceled shows...
- hydro
- Addict
- Posts: 3652
- Joined: Thu Aug 09, 2007 9:20 am
- Location: O-HIGH-O
- Contact:
hey Nexis heres some info on next years lolla I just found
http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/m ... 16.article
Lollapalooza expanding to Philly? It could happen
November 16, 2007
BY JIM DeROGATIS Pop Music Critic/jimdero@jimdero.com
The promoters of the giant Lollapalooza summer music festival in Chicago's Grant Park are looking to take their act on the road, but their plan to expand to Philadelphia for a second three-day concert next August hit a snag this week.
Promoters C3 Presents have a contract with city officials to bring Lollapalooza here for the next four years, but the company has made no secret of its ambitions to expand. Now it would like to host a festival at Belmont Plateau in the City of Brotherly Love late next August.
A C3 spokeswoman could not say what the new concert would be called, but promoters told Philadelphia officials that it would follow the models of Lollapalooza and include many of the same acts. C3 has some competition in Philadelphia, however: A long-running local promoter -- Electric Factory Concerts, which is now owned by the national giant Live Nation -- is looking to celebrate its 40th anniversary next summer with a big concert of its own at the same site.
Philadelphia's Fairmount Park Commission was expected to choose between the C3 and Electric Factory proposals at a meeting Wednesday. Last week, the commission said it prefers the C3 proposal because of the company's experience producing big events and its willingness to contribute at least $500,000 to city parks.
But after a contentious debate about whether or not Belmont Plateau could handle a big festival, the vote choosing between C3 and Electric Factory was tabled until next month.
Concert founder Perry Farrell, who retains an interest in the fest, made a revealing comment about how he views the new Lollapalooza in a recent interview with Rolling Stone.
"The scariest predicament we face in music is that commercialization has killed off the underground scene," Farrell said. "It used to be at Lollapalooza that the audience was full of 20,000 freaks and miscreants and outcasts. But now people look like they walked out of the Gap."
http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/m ... 16.article
Lollapalooza expanding to Philly? It could happen
November 16, 2007
BY JIM DeROGATIS Pop Music Critic/jimdero@jimdero.com
The promoters of the giant Lollapalooza summer music festival in Chicago's Grant Park are looking to take their act on the road, but their plan to expand to Philadelphia for a second three-day concert next August hit a snag this week.
Promoters C3 Presents have a contract with city officials to bring Lollapalooza here for the next four years, but the company has made no secret of its ambitions to expand. Now it would like to host a festival at Belmont Plateau in the City of Brotherly Love late next August.
A C3 spokeswoman could not say what the new concert would be called, but promoters told Philadelphia officials that it would follow the models of Lollapalooza and include many of the same acts. C3 has some competition in Philadelphia, however: A long-running local promoter -- Electric Factory Concerts, which is now owned by the national giant Live Nation -- is looking to celebrate its 40th anniversary next summer with a big concert of its own at the same site.
Philadelphia's Fairmount Park Commission was expected to choose between the C3 and Electric Factory proposals at a meeting Wednesday. Last week, the commission said it prefers the C3 proposal because of the company's experience producing big events and its willingness to contribute at least $500,000 to city parks.
But after a contentious debate about whether or not Belmont Plateau could handle a big festival, the vote choosing between C3 and Electric Factory was tabled until next month.
Concert founder Perry Farrell, who retains an interest in the fest, made a revealing comment about how he views the new Lollapalooza in a recent interview with Rolling Stone.
"The scariest predicament we face in music is that commercialization has killed off the underground scene," Farrell said. "It used to be at Lollapalooza that the audience was full of 20,000 freaks and miscreants and outcasts. But now people look like they walked out of the Gap."
- Mike
- Addicted Archivist
- Posts: 5971
- Joined: Sun Jun 18, 2006 12:20 am
- Location: In the mud
- Contact: