New Zealand music festivals

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Mountain Rock with Kevin Borich on stage

Music festivals have a long and chequered history in New Zealand. The first large outdoor rock music festival was The Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival in 1973. The largest was the 1979 Nambassa festival, one of several Nambassa festivals held around that time, in Golden Valley, just north of Waihi.

"There are regular jazz, folk, ethnic and country music awards and festivals, some of which have been in existence for decades. Large music festivals, for example Sweetwaters Music Festivals, Nambassa and The Big Day Out have been staged periodically since the 1970s", says Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand.[1]

Parachute Music Festival is a Christian music festival held in New Zealand. It was one of New Zealands largest music festivals and it is the Southern Hemispheres largest Christian music festival. On March 27, 2014 Parachute Music released a statement on its Facebook and its website announcing that Parachute Music Festival would no longer be running.

Largest

Nambassa 1979 was the largest music event in New Zealand. "Nearly 60,000 came, making it, per capita, the world’s largest festival of its type." "Nambassa will be remembered for many things. It was the largest campsite, the biggest and brightest party, and the best attended and most successful musical and cultural event ever in New Zealand."

Current recurring events

Past recurring events

  • Big Day Out - 1994-1997, 1999-2012, 2014 - Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland.
  • Big Gay Out - Pt Chevalier, Auckland.
  • Brown Trout Festival - 1980, 1983 - on a farm east of Dannevirke
  • BW Summer Festival - 2004–2015- Lead-up to Rhythm & Vines in Gisborne.
  • Coromandel Gold - Whitianga.
  • The Gatherings - 1996-2002 - Canaan Downs, Takaka Hill, near Nelson (96/97, 97/98, 98/99, G2000) and Cobb Valley, Golden Bay, near Nelson (G1 and G2).
  • G-TARanaki Guitar Festival - 2008-2010 - International guitar festival in New Plymouth, Taranaki.
  • La De Da - 2010-2013 -held at Daisybank Farm, in Martinborough.
  • Mountain Rock Music Festival - 1992-1996 - Farm near Pahiatua.
  • Nambassa - 1978, 1979, 1981 - Music and alternatives festivals in Golden Valley, north of Waihi and Waitawheta valley near Waikino.
  • Parachute Music Festival - 1995-2014 - contemporary Christian music attracting around 30,000 people each year to Mystery Creek, Waikato.
  • The Phat Festivals - Maitai Valley, near Nelson, and Inangahua. The 2007 event was called 'Phat07 Bass Camp'
  • Redwood music festivals - unknown - Farm/orchard at Redwood Park, West Auckland.
  • Strawberry Fields Music Festivals - 1993-1995 - Farm near Queenstown; farm at Te Uku near Raglan.
  • SummerDaze - Queenstown.
  • Sweetwaters Music Festival - 1980-1984, 1999 - Farm near Ngaruawahia; farm near Pukekawa.
  • Te Wairua - January 1986-89 and Gathering 1989 and Gathering 1990 (not connected to the Canaan Downs Gatherings); New Age festivals held on a farm east of Owhango on the bank of the Whakapapa river. No mainstage, but a marquee and permanent building as HQ. Intensive, day-long Native American style sweat lodges were a feature of these festivals. Te Wairua is Māori for "The Spirit".

Past events

Memorable events

  • The Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival - Corben Simpson removed all his clothes on stage and was reported nationwide in the media, Black Sabbath burned a cross on the hill while getting the entire audience to light a match or lighter. "Todd (Hunter) ... gathered some friends and fellow performers for an appearance at the Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival. They wrote original songs for their set list, and someone pulled the name "Dragon" out of an I Ching book. Their performance at the Ngaruawahia Music Festival led to a better gig, a few weeks performing at the Occidental Hotel in Auckland."
  • Sweetwaters Music Festival - On closing night with jam packed traffic, A man had a serious seizure, a doctor was called via helicopter, the police boat transferred the man across the Waipa river to a waiting ambulance, bound for Waikato hospital. On opening night a girl broke both ankles while riding the bonnet of a car into the farm.
  • Hinuera - Mother Goose.
  • Hinuera - Ragnarok The main stage stopped due to rain, a rapid system was put together in the Barn for Ragnarok, using Greg Peacocks Cerwin-Vega composite bins, previously used as cross stage side fill monitors, on the main stage.

Gallery

Books

  • Keighley, Daniel. Sweetwaters: The Untold Story. Reviewed by Simon Sweetman: "Daniel Keighley was the man behind the financial disaster that was Sweetwaters ’99. He was charged with fraud and jailed and Sweetwaters: The Untold Story is his account of what went wrong. Billed as an autobiography."[1]
  • Nambassa: A New Direction, edited by Colin Broadley and Judith Jones, A. H. & A. W. Reed, 1979.
  • Template:DixStranded1988

References

  1. Nancy Swarbrick. "Creative life", Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 18 November 2005.

External links