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E-grāmata: Music Festivals in the UK: Beyond the Carnivalesque

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The outdoor music festival market has developed and commercialised significantly since the mid-1990s, and is now a mainstream part of the British summertime leisure experience. The overall number of outdoor music festivals staged in the UK doubled between 2005 and 2011 to reach a peak of over 500 events. UK Music (2016) estimates that the sector attracts over 3.7 million attendances each year, and that music tourism as a whole sustains nearly 40,000 full time jobs. Music Festivals in the UK is the first extended investigation into this commercialised rock and pop festival sector, and examines events of all sizes: from mega-events such as Glastonbury Festival, V Festival and the Reading and Leeds Festivals to ‘boutique’ events with maximum attendances as small as 250. In the past, research into festivals has typically focused either on their carnivalesque heritage or on developing managerial tools for the field of Events Management. Anderton moves beyond such perspectives to propose new ways of understanding and theorising the cultural, social and geographic importance of outdoor music festivals. He argues that changes in the sector since the mid-1990s, such as professionalisation, corporatisation, mediatisation, regulatory control, and sponsorship/branding, should not necessarily be regarded as a process of transgressive ’alternative culture’ being co-opted by commercial concerns; instead, such changes represent a reconfiguration of the sector in line with changes in society, and a broadening of the forms and meanings that may be associated with outdoor music events.

List of figures
ix
Acknowledgements x
Abbreviations and acronyms xi
Introduction 1(6)
1 Contextualising outdoor music festivals in the UK
7(30)
Music festivals: a countercultural narrative
7(12)
Music festivals and the countercultural carnivalesque
19(4)
Other histories of the music festival in the UK
23(12)
Conclusion
35(2)
2 The proliferation, professionalisation and mainstreaming of outdoor music festivals
37(37)
Proliferation, diversification and volatility
37(12)
Market structure and issues
49(12)
Mainstreaming
61(11)
Conclusion
72(2)
3 Branded landscapes: sponsorship, marketing and mediation
74(28)
The `brand matrix'
74(6)
Commercial sponsorship
80(13)
Music festival sponsorship strategies
93(3)
Festival audiences and critiques of branding and sponsorship
96(4)
Conclusion
100(2)
4 Always the same, yet always different: music festivals as cyclic places
102(32)
Liminality and the outdoor music festival
103(8)
Cyclic place
111(17)
Music festivals, Britishness and the rural
128(5)
Conclusion
133(1)
5 The social life of music festivals: audiences and atmosphere
134(30)
Motivations
135(13)
Sociality
148(5)
Atmosphere
153(9)
Conclusion
162(2)
Conclusion 164(6)
Bibliography 170
Index
Chris Anderton is an Associate Professor at Solent University, UK, where he

teaches music management, business, history and culture. He is co-author of

the book Understanding the Music Industries (Sage, 2013) and has published

book chapters and articles on music bootlegging, music blogs, progressive

rock, and music festivals. He established the in-house music organisation

Solent Music (solentmusic.com) in 2011 and is co-Executive Producer of

the annual Solent SMILE Festival (smilefest.co.uk). His research interests

include the cultural economy of music festivals and live events, the future of

the music industries, and the hidden histories of popular, underground and

niche music genres.