'It didn't miss a beat': Music fans flock to Bluesfest after pandemic hiatus - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:16 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

'It didn't miss a beat': Music fans flock to Bluesfest after pandemic hiatus

When Rage Against the Machine took the stage at Bluesfest Friday night, it was the symbolic culmination oftwo years ofanxiety and anticipation for both fans and festival organizers.

Executive director hopes it's a step toward normal, though COVID cases remain high

A large crowd of people raise their hands toward a stage where a band plays music.
Fans cheer during the Rage Against the Machine show at Bluesfest in Ottawa on July 15, 2022. The city's biggest festival returned after taking two years off during the pandemic. (Joseph Tunney/CBC)

When Rage Against the Machine took the stage at Bluesfest Friday night, it was the symbolic culmination oftwo years ofanxiety and anticipation for both fans and festival organizers.

It was in that momentexecutive director Mark Monahansaid he felt the excitement of a crowd that hadn't seen live music on this scale at LeBreton Flats since 2019.

"It was just such a pent up demand for them," he said. "You just felt the excitement as you were coming in the gates that this was going to be something really special."

Withgroups like The National andThe Beaches set to close outBluesfest's10-day schedule on Sunday, Monahansummed up hisfeelingsabout seeing the festival play outwithone word: relief.

"We've planned many things in the past couple of years, many of which we've been unable to do," he said. "So actually planning our regular event and being able to pull it off has just been a huge relief."

The festival was cancelled in 2020after the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and then was revived in a much smaller, all-Canadian format at Lansdowne Park in 2021.

Thathiatus led to a few bumps early on, Monahan said,including long lineups and a need to get new volunteers up to speed.

"The only advantage is we planned this event for 2020, so we did have three yearsto plan it," he said with a laugh.

By the time the ticket sales are tallied, Monahanestimated the festival will have brought in between 250,000 and 300,000 fans,comparable to years past.

Roughly 30,000 of those tickets went to Rage Against the Machine fans, according to festival organizers, including some who held onto tickets they'd bought back in the spring of 2020.

Attendees waiting to enter the grounds Saturday night said they were thrilled the festival, food and screaming fans were back.

'Acalculated risk'

Rob Bennett was among those lining up, though he's more used to being on stage with his band The Bushpilots.

A Bluesfest regular, Bennettsaid he'sbeen coming out for more than 20 years and rarely misses a day.

"It's amazing, it's like it didn't miss a beat," he said of the 2022 edition.

"It was just really great to hang around with my friends ...enjoying beers, enjoying the late afternoon sun, just basking in the warm glow of the festival."

Despite the fact COVID-19 is still prevalent in the community, Bennett who said he's had four vaccine doses didn't hesitate to come out.

"We've been cooped up for a really long time and it's kind of picking up where we left off," he said."It's a calculated risk to enjoy life."

A man wearing sunglasses, a cap and a brightly-coloured shirt covered in a flower design smiles at the camera.
Rob Bennett says he's been going to Bluesfest for more than 20 years, both with his band The Bushpilots and as an audience member. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Masks 'strongly recommended'

The festival is being held asseveral COVID-19 indicators are on the rise in Ottawa, including hospitalizations, outbreaks and the coronavirus levels in the city's wastewater.

The region is in theseventh wave of thepandemic,andhealth officials said last week, as Bluesfest began, that it was "strongly recommended" people wear a mask in crowded outdoor settings such as the festival.

Monahansaid he and other Bluesfest organizers have kept a close eye on public health and provincial guidelines.

They set out to organize an event where people can feel safe listening to music from wherever they chose, he said, and have asked concert-goers to mitigate their level of risk.

As Bluesfest2022 winds down, Monahan said his thoughts are already turning to next year and what it will look like.

"The fact that we've been able to pull this off and we're back is just a huge sense of accomplishment," he said. "And it sort of leads to ... trying to get back to normal hopefully, in the next couple of years."