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Guest Post by Corey Teich on MediumThere are three music festivals in America, which each set the summer’s tone: Coachella, Bonnaroo and Lollapalooza. The aforementioned ranking is not random; It’s the last decade’s cumulative pecking order in terms of each as a cultural institution. These festivals exist for different reasons; Coachella is an oasis in the desert, Lollapalooza is an icon in one of our most iconic cities. And then there’s Bonnaroo. Not quite an oasis and certainly not in the middle of a city. While technically the youngest of the three, I’d say that Bonnaroo stuck closest to its roots for longer than its contemporaries. Which was hard to reconcile this morning, after reading its 2017 lineup.Bonnaroo 2017 Headliners & Undercard: U2 (yawn), Red Hot Chili Peppers (again), The Weeknd (nope), Lorde (over-rated), Marshmello (wtf?), Chance (personal favorite, but likely ubiquitous this summer)Founded in 2002, Bonnaroo quickly made it to Rolling Stone’s 50 Moments that Changed Rock n Roll just one year later. They did it first by booking quality jam bands and they did it next by expanding — Always staying true to what broke them in the first place while taking qualified chances. As the festival moved away from a jam-only environment, it grew into, for lack of a better term, a music-person’s festival. Top acts like Neil Young & Crazy Horse, The White Stripes, Bob Dylan, early debuts by My Morning Jacket, Band of Horses and Bon Iver. Bonnaroo used to be the type of festival that looked past sales or status, relying more on aesthetic. Essentially, and snobbish-ly: Would someone with good taste listen?Now to be fair, sans the jam aspect, Coachella and Lollapalooza both started off as more intricately curated festivals too. Perry Farrell of Jane’s Addiction rooted Lollapalooza in Alternative Rock — Coachella’s first lineup featured Tool, Morrisey, and Rage Against the Machine. But as always, leaf subsides to leaf, [and] Eden sank to grief. Coachella and Lollapalooza couldn’t ignore the lure of big bucks. Just a few years later Coachella sold their festival to a rich homophobe, while Lollapalooza needed a boost after going away for several years. Lineups changed and new audiences followed, but I think the key to each’s respective success lies elsewhere: Convenience.Depending on who you ask, you’ll get different answers as to when Bonnaroo got shitty. I say it started last year, when the festival experienced their worst ticket sales to date. (depending on your proclivity to jam music though, this could have occurred even as far back as a decade ago) The last time I went to Bonnaroo was in 2014; Headliners were Kanye West, Jack White and Elton John. Each, artists truly at the top of their respective genres. It was a festival worth going out of my way for. In the years prior, they included acts like Paul McCartney, Radiohead, Phish and Widespread Panic. The two at the start of that list and the two at the end are both significant but for different reasons.Related articles



