Opinion

THE LAST WORD

Support your local festival

At a time of political uncertainty and in an atmosphere of economic precarity it is great to get a break from the doom and gloom and see that one thing at least is thriving

Sum­mer is the most im­por­tant time of year for Cat­alo­nia. Last year, more than two mil­lion peo­ple vis­ited the coun­try in July alone. The weather, the beaches, the food, the land­marks, the land­scape, the cul­ture, the list of at­trac­tions goes on, and one of the most im­por­tant is the fes­ti­vals. In re­cent years, Cat­alo­nia has be­come some­thing of a spe­cial­ist in sum­mer fes­ti­vals. As even a cur­sory glance at our cov­er­age of the main sum­mer events (pages 21 to 33) shows, cul­tur­ally speak­ing, there is some­thing for just about every taste, at just about any point dur­ing the sum­mer months. It all adds up to a three-month ex­trav­a­ganza of music, the­atre and dance that cov­ers the en­tire coun­try.

It all began with the Sónar fes­ti­val, the music and media arts fes­ti­val in Barcelona from June 14 to 16, which saw record at­ten­dances of more than 120,000 peo­ple this year. The Grec, Cruïlla, Mas i Mas, Per­al­ada, Cam­brils, all are still to come, and thou­sands upon thou­sands of peo­ple will pack these fes­ti­vals out to see their favourite artists per­form, often in the open air and under a balmy sum­mer sky, in an ex­pe­ri­ence they will never for­get. At a time of such po­lit­i­cal un­cer­tainty and in an at­mos­phere of eco­nomic pre­car­ity it is great to get a break from the doom and gloom and see that one thing at least is thriv­ing.

If only it were so sim­ple. While it is true that Cat­alo­nia’s sum­mer fes­ti­vals make some­thing like 300 mil­lion euros in all (ac­cord­ing to gov­ern­ment data for 2015), only the biggest of them can sur­vive in­de­pen­dently on ticket sales, such as Sónar and Cruïlla, dis­pens­ing with a re­liance on spon­sor­ship and in­vest­ing in in­no­va­tion and ex­pan­sion. For the many smaller fes­ti­vals around the coun­try things are not so rosy. The an­nual re­port from the music pro­mot­ers as­so­ci­a­tion for 2015 found that fewer than 14% of peo­ple in Cat­alo­nia vis­ited a fes­ti­val, a drop of 3% com­pared to the pre­vi­ous year. Mean­while, a study car­ried out by the UOC open uni­ver­sity found that peo­ple are in­creas­ingly at­tend­ing in­di­vid­ual con­certs in a fes­ti­val rather than the whole event. The same ex­perts also found that pub­li­cally funded fes­ti­vals have seen a drop in at­ten­dances of more than 6%.

So, I guess that means you can’t take any­thing for granted, and if we want Cat­alo­nia to con­tinue to enjoy its golden age of sum­mer fes­ti­vals, we’ll just have to make the ef­fort, check out what’s on offer and re­serve those tick­ets. Did I men­tion that we have a com­pre­hen­sive round-up of the main cul­tural events avail­able this sum­mer ?

Summer festival round-up Pages 21 to 33
Every summer Catalonia gears up for weeks of summer festivals offering a wide range of music, theatre and dance, all over the country. It is also the time of year when Catalonia Today magazine offers its readers a round-up of what’s on over the summer months. This year is no different and our multi-page spread has everything you need to know to go about choosing and reserving you favourite event. One of the main features about the range of festivals in the country over the summer is the variety. Whether it is pop and rock you prefer, jazz, classical music, ballet, hip-hop, havaneres, circus, heavy metal, soul, opera, or just about any style you can imagine, you are sure to find something that takes your fancy. Check it out and let us know what you went to see!
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