515 Alive 2008
This event is ridiculous - and not necessarily in a good way. I remember the first year I went - in 03 I was pretty excited about such an "urban" music festival. But at that point, I was a bedroom DJ myself, fresh out of college, and had never been to a real music event like lollapalooza - or even 80/35. I know, bad comparison, but still. I'm comparing success to - not success.
How do you expect an event to be successful if you can't pay any of your acts? You scrape up enough cash to cover the cost of the event and fly in a headliner... but everyone else... how do you expect reputable, good DJs to come out and perform when you can't even throw them $100?
Everything at 515alive this year was unorganized. Did you see a map anywhere at the event? I didn't. You had to guess the freakin stages based on which no-name DJ (no offense to the DJs) was on stage. Did you see a schedule? Only in poster format... and the schedule on the poster had 2 main stages listed, wtf? How do you know which main stage is which? I asked several of the "515alive girls," but none of them knew. And why did the headliner flown in from Amsterdam go on before other acts had even started on their stages?
Uh, what a disappointment...
But despite the horribly planned event. There were some good things to see.
And one last point, upgrade the music. Times have changed. Jungle and happy hardcore is not what will bring a crowd. You need to stay with the times. Bring on some mashup DJs or whatever and attract some kids.
Anyway... I'm now rambling. Check out my pics from this year's event.
How do you expect an event to be successful if you can't pay any of your acts? You scrape up enough cash to cover the cost of the event and fly in a headliner... but everyone else... how do you expect reputable, good DJs to come out and perform when you can't even throw them $100?
Everything at 515alive this year was unorganized. Did you see a map anywhere at the event? I didn't. You had to guess the freakin stages based on which no-name DJ (no offense to the DJs) was on stage. Did you see a schedule? Only in poster format... and the schedule on the poster had 2 main stages listed, wtf? How do you know which main stage is which? I asked several of the "515alive girls," but none of them knew. And why did the headliner flown in from Amsterdam go on before other acts had even started on their stages?
Uh, what a disappointment...
But despite the horribly planned event. There were some good things to see.
- The graffiti artists are always fun to watch. I'd really like to see more of this around DSM. Are there some legal graffiti murals/spots around?
- The B-Boys were also good this year. There were plenty of non-floor spiders that made their way onto the linoleum and really busted out. I like that we have a respectable breakdance scene in DSM.
- I finally saw the Des Moines Boyz and... eh. They were alright, not amazing, but not bad. It'd be fun to have some mainstream rap thrown into our DSM hip hop scene though.
- Cleo's apartment always seems to make it to 515 alive, and they're better than ever. That group is really starting to pull in some amazing talent. I wish they could make a national name for themselves. They need some management!
- Flatform was good stuff. The set seemed a little familiar, but it was still solid. Too bad they got pushed back so late because the whole crowd was watching the headliner - Misjah.
- And Misjah was pretty decent. Not quite headlining material maybe, but he was good. Very minimalistic repetitive techno beats. Seems a little dated.
- The fire dancers were fun to watch and photograph.
- And last but not least - the people watching. I think it gets better every year.
And one last point, upgrade the music. Times have changed. Jungle and happy hardcore is not what will bring a crowd. You need to stay with the times. Bring on some mashup DJs or whatever and attract some kids.
Anyway... I'm now rambling. Check out my pics from this year's event.