LONG AND SHORT OF LATITUDE

June 29, 2009 by Editor  
Filed under CULTURE, MUSIC

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It’s the height of festival season again, and this years Latitude Festival is gearing up to be quite the weekend. From Thom Yorke to the Phenomenal Hand Clap Band ( yes you read that right), it seems this years festival is pushing the meaning of the word diversity.

Before Henham Park in Suffolk ever hosted a Festival it had on average 150 visitors a year. So when the Latitude Festival launched in 2006 this sleepy part of the world had 50,000 people thrust into its midst. This festival is a must for any festival lovers, a true testament to musical and artistic unorthodoxy. A festival in the truest sense of the word.

Picture 1In total there will be 15 stages running all weekend, which facilitate music,comedy, poetry,films and there is even a children’s arena in case you want to bring the saplings out to the Henham woods. Within in this artistic circus there is of course the acts. And this year its hard to see who exactly is the headline act to see. Thom Yorke from Radiohead will be an obvious crowd puller, while he brings his new solo projects to the masses. While Nick Cave,The Doves, Pet Shop Boys and Grace Jones are but a few of the others making appearances. Along with them comes the rubber stamp of festival kingdom as the BBC have turned up again and created there own stage to be present music and go live on Radio 2, 4 and 6 over the weekend.

Picture 1Latitude will be, as most festivals are on these isles, compared to the blockbuster of Glastonbury. But latitude has something more, something different to offer people. Poetry, Books, Comedy and Cabaret, all of which have there own separate stages. This gives the festival goer a true arts experience. Such concentration on diversity combined with stages which are intimate and close to the people is an experience that is almost personal. Of course it may never reach the heights of its Somerset sister but it has originality and an artistic depth  which goes beyond the brashness and showmanship of Glastonbury.

The festival doesn’t just give you art and music, it lets you produce your own festival by what you like. Where else could listen to poetry and then watch Ed Byrne doing his comedy set and move on to the Pet Shop Boys. Latitude has a variety of faces that you need to and enjoy. The earl who owns the land had a family motto which was ‘ I live in hope’ to which he added ‘ We fight like Lions and breed like rabbits’, which tells the whole story of how this is a serious festival inviting you to relish its overt jollity and escapades.

Latitude Festival – 17th to 19th July 2009

latitudefestival.co.uk

Words Kehlan Kirwan

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