Jump to content

Rebellion Festival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rebellion Festival
GenrePunk rock
Location(s)Blackpool (1996, 2002, 2006–2019, 2021-2024) / Morecambe (1997–2001, 2003–2005), Lancashire, England, UK
Online (2020)
Years active1996–present

The Rebellion Festival, formerly Holidays in the Sun and the Wasted Festival is a British punk rock festival first held in 1996. The festival has attracted mainstream press coverage from such sources as The Independent,[1] The Daily Telegraph[2] and Kerrang.[3]

The first festival in 1996 was held at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool England. It is still held there now, although on some years the festival has been held in nearby Morecambe. In 1999 and 2000, a related event Holidays in the Smoke was held at The Dome, Tufnell Park, London.[4] Festivals have also been held under the Rebellion and earlier brand names in Australia, United States, Japan, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Belgium, the Basque Country, Ireland and Austria.

It is still a family-run, family-orientated event which celebrates Punk in all its forms, but also puts on bands from other alternative genres plus some Glam Rock artists and seminal bands from the 1960s and 1970s . There are up to seven music stages plus also an acoustic stage, a literary stage and a Punk Art gallery along with many workshops, and stalls for clothes, music and other products. Each year, over 300 acts perform at the festival over a four-day period, usually spread over the first weekend in August from Thursday to Sunday. There were some clashes with riot police outside the Winter Gardens in 2007.[5] Since then the festival maintains a positive relationship with Blackpool Council and the people of Blackpool in general and has been commended for its involvement with local charities.[6]

Another punk festival, Nice 'N Sleazy in Morecambe, began life as an offshoot of Wasted in Morecambe, the 3B's (Breakfast, Beer, Bands) Festival, providing campsite accommodation with an unofficial stage. When Wasted reverted to Blackpool in 2006, the Morecambe campsite event continued as a separate festival.[7]

2017 was the 21st anniversary of the festival which coincided with the 40th anniversary celebrations of Punk. The 2020 event was postponed to 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic and replaced with an online festival.[8] In 2021 - although the full festival was postponed again until 2022 - organisers held a smaller replacement live event: the HITS 25 25th anniversary commemoration of the original 1996 Holiday In The Sun festival,[9] announced at short notice as soon as the way was clear with regard to COVID-19 regulations.[10]

The full festival resumed in 2022 with an additional event: R-Fest, held outdoors on the seafront on the Comedy Carpet.[11]

The 2024 festival coincided with beginnings of the 2024 United Kingdom riots, during which attendees staged an anti-fascist counter-protest to a gathered far-right group in the city. This led to a stand-off in which chairs, bottles and planks of wood were thrown.[12]

Festivals

[edit]

UK

[edit]
Year Name Location
1996 Holidays in the Sun Blackpool
1997 Morecambe
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002 Blackpool
2003 Morecambe
2004 Wasted
2005
2006 Blackpool
2007 Rebellion
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020 online
2021 HITS 25 Blackpool
2022 Rebellion
2023
2024

Rest of the World

[edit]
Year Name Location
2000 Holidays in the Sun Germany
2000 Basque Country
2001 USA
2002 Japan
2002 Ireland
2002 USA
2004 Wasted Belgium
2005 Netherlands
2006
2006 Australia
2007 Rebellion Netherlands
2008 Austria
2010 Italy
2011 Netherlands
2014
2017 Ireland
2018 Netherlands

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Punks gather for the annual Rebellion Festival, The Independent, 11 August 2014 - Accessed 14 June 2017
  2. ^ Rebellion in the UK: punks arrive in Blackpool for international punk festival (Photo Gallery of at least 10 images) The Telegraph, Accessed 14 June 2017
  3. ^ THE 13 PEOPLE YOU’RE SURE TO BUMP INTO AT A PUNK ROCK FESTIVAL - Kerrang.com Accessed 2018-09-05
  4. ^ Rebellion 1996-2016: 20 Years of Rebellion, 40 Years of Punk. 2016. pp. 38, 42.
  5. ^ Rebellion 1996-2016: 20 Years of Rebellion, 40 Years of Punk. 2016. p. 88.
  6. ^ "Rebels are ready to rock!". www.blackpoolgazette.co.uk. 5 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-10-13.
  7. ^ BCB 106.6fm Radio Interview with Nice N Sleazy promoter Ivan Harrison by Johna Johnson transmitted live 29 June 2018 from Bradford Community Broadcasting Studios. Event occurs at 0:20 - 1:14
  8. ^ Rebellion Festival 2020 (live review of online festival), Tom Chance, Vive Le Rock issue 75, p102-103
  9. ^ "Rebellion punk festival announce special one day Blackpool event celebrating 25 years of Holidays in the Sun". 11 July 2021.
  10. ^ "2021 - Cancelled statement". Rebellion Festivals. 6 May 2021. Archived from the original on 7 May 2021.
  11. ^ "Rebellion Festival & R-Fest 2022 Preview". 7 July 2022.
  12. ^ Stevens, Mike (3 August 2024). "Chairs and bottles thrown as protesters clash in resort". BBC News. Retrieved 5 August 2024.