Roadburn 2021

Kann ich grundsätzlich verstehen. Allerdings hat das Roadburn für mich jetzt schon ein extrem gutes Billing, was aber tatsächlich auch an den etwas anderen Bands liegt. Liegt vielleicht auch ein bisschen daran, dass der Stoner Bereich momentan (gefühlt) überall so stark vertreten ist.
Ich würde mich jetzt eh noch nicht so weit aus dem Fenster lehnen eine Prognose abzugeben was die Abdeckung bestimmter Genres angeht, noch sind ja nicht so übermäßig viele Bands bestätigt. Was man allerdings in den letzten Jahren schon feststellen konnte ist es eine wenig offener geworden ist was nicht Metal/Rock Künstler angeht, was ich durchaus begrüße.
 
Und die Hälfte der Tickets ist schon verkauft:

Wow! Thank you *so* much to everybody who has picked up a ticket already! Almost 50% of tickets gone in the first two and a half hours is so encouraging and your support is overwhelming. We're thrilled!
 
NEU DABEI:
JAMES KENT’S CURATION:
ORANSSI PAZUZU (kommendes Album in voller Länge)
BLANCK MASS
HANGMAN’S CHAIR

EMMA RUTH RUNDLE’S THE GILDED CAGE:
MIZMOR
CLOUD RAT (2tes Set - Don't Let Me Off This Cliff)
SRSQ
FVNERALS

ALSO ANNOUNCED…
BIG BRAVE & JESSICA MOSS
JESSICA MOSS
CRYPT SERMON
LANA DEL RABIES
RED KITE


Ich freue mich dabei sehr über Big Brave.
 
Also ich setze nach 7 mal in Folge nächstes Jahr mal aus. Die Kuratoren sagen mir überhaupt nicht zu und das was bis jetzt so veröffentlicht wurde, reizt mich leider null. Zudem empfinde ich es persönlich jedes Jahr voller von den Menschen. Ganz zu schweigen von den Locations mit der dazugehörigen Lauferei. Vielleicht ist dann die Freude auf 2021 größer. An alle Roadburner, lasst es krachen und viel Spaß!
 
Ich glaube, das wird mein erstes Roadburn, bei dem ich JEDE EINZELNE Band des Kurators angucken MUSS! Bis jetzt nur absolute Volltreffer bei Kent, der Mann hat einen echt geilen Musikgeschmack! :verehr::verehr::verehr::verehr::verehr:
Wie genau ist das eigentlich mit Kurator usw.?
Geben die selbst Konzerte und sind diese Konzerte der Kuratoren dann spezielle Konzerte mit den Kuratoren, oder wie genau kann/sollte ich mir das vorstellen?
 
Wie genau ist das eigentlich mit Kurator usw.?
Geben die selbst Konzerte und sind diese Konzerte der Kuratoren dann spezielle Konzerte mit den Kuratoren, oder wie genau kann/sollte ich mir das vorstellen?
Normalerweise spielen die selber auch und die suchten immer die Bands für einen Tag auf der Mainstage aus. Hat glaube ich damit angefangen das David Tibet nur spielen wollte wenn er die anderen Bands auf der selben Bühne auswählen durfte.
 
Normalerweise spielen die selber auch und die suchten immer die Bands für einen Tag auf der Mainstage aus. Hat glaube ich damit angefangen das David Tibet nur spielen wollte wenn er die anderen Bands auf der selben Bühne auswählen durfte.

Sowas finde ich ja schon irgendwie unsympathisch! Also cool, wenn ein Festival sowas macht und die Idee ist auch geil, aber als Forderung oder Bedingung finde ich das irgendwie eher uncool...

Aber gut...das klingt ja dann schon mal ziemlich gut!
 
Wow, so uninteressant war das Roadburn für mich noch nie. Nichts gegen die eingeladenen Bands (ein paar davon mag ich auch recht gerne) aber insgesamt finde ich alles absolut verzichtbar.
Geschmack und so, klar. Die Sunn-Jugend wird sich sicherlich freuen! :D
 
Wow, so uninteressant war das Roadburn für mich noch nie. Nichts gegen die eingeladenen Bands (ein paar davon mag ich auch recht gerne) aber insgesamt finde ich alles absolut verzichtbar.
Geschmack und so, klar. Die Sunn-Jugend wird sich sicherlich freuen! :D
Für mich sind ein paar unverzichtbare Sachen dabei: Blanck Mass, Boy Harsher, Dool, Health, James Kent & Johannes Persson, Oranssi Pazuzu, She Past Away, Warhorse... Aber insgesamt ist das Lineup momentan schon eher unspektakulär, sehe ich auch so. Und ob es wirklich je 4 Auftritte von Full Of Hell, Lingua Ignota und Dead Neanderthals braucht? Ich weiss ja nicht. Das Lineup ist aber noch lange nicht komplett und insbesondere aus dem Black Metal-Bereich dürften noch ein paar interessante Bands dazukommen.

Gibt es eigentlich schon Infos zur neuen Bühne, die das Het Patronaat ersetzen soll?
 
Und es geht weiter:

ROADBURN 2020 TICKETS

Less than 10% of 4-day tickets remain for Roadburn 2020, and single-day tickets will go on sale on December 10. More information about tickets and accommodation options can be found HERE.

EMMA RUTH RUNDLE’S THE GILDED CAGE:

DAVID EUGENE EDWARDS
At Roadburn, David Eugene Edwards has graced us with his presence on two occasions as part of Wovenhand. Each performance pulsated with energy and elevated the sets to be highlights of each respective edition of the festival – in no small part due to David’s electrifying presence. We’re delighted to bring him back to Roadburn, this time as part of Emma Ruth Rundle’s curation, The Gilded Cage. David will perform an acoustic, solo set that promises to showcase the diversity of his delivery and the nuances of his craft.

Emma comments: “It’s been a secret wish to see DEE playing solo and delivering his songs in their most bare forms. This was the very first thing that came to mind when I was asked to co-curate Roadburn and it’s going to be a rare and precious jewel of a performance.”

JAMES KENT’S CURATION:

REGARDE LES HOMMES TOMBER
A product of the burgeoning French underground scene that has produced so much incredible music in the past few years, over the course of two records so far, Regarde Les Hommes Tomber have used scraps from the most sinister subgenres, from black metal to sludge to build up truly frightening epics. Always apocalyptic in feeling, emotional and ruthless in equal measures, drenched in religious imagery and references, and creating a sonic depiction of the fall of mankind… and its subsequent rising to replace the cruelty of the established gods. Not only will we be expecting all of this maelstrom of fiery feelings, but also a healthy measure of the unexpected as well, since Regarde Les Hommes Tomber will be playing their new not-quite-announced-yet album in its entirety.

HANGMAN’S CHAIR X REGARDE LES HOMMES TOMBER
Regarde Les Hommes Tomber will join forces with Hangman’s Chair for a collaboration at Roadburn 2020. Hellish, sludgy black metal will clash horns-first with cold, despondent doom, and the result will surely transcend even the most delirious of descriptions that we can come up with at this point. Originally commissioned by Red Bull, this unholy collaboration has occurred just once previously, in Paris. That performance lasted 45 minutes, but for Roadburn an additional 15 minutes of material will be debuted just for us.

PLEBEIAN GRANDSTAND
Plebeian Grandstand are a band that have morphed from a core of quite technical, hardcore charged metal to be the hulking beast of black metal fury we see before us today. The creative journey they have been on has led to an infusion of influences from outside the black metal sphere, resulting in nuance and depth that can sometimes be hard to find within the genre. On top of that, they eschew the cartoonish elements of extreme black metal – you’ll find no burning churches here – in favour of something rooted more firmly in reality. After all, what’s more nightmarish than the real world?

TRUE BODY
With a calculated sense of tension and just enough human touch to cut through their own cold post-punk atmospheres, Virginia‘s True Body has built a following with their urgent and impassioned music. Instead of falling into melodramatic excess or disconnected affectations, the band manages to bring the best of each realm for something that leaves audiences rapt and thrilled. With this masterful take on such a beloved sound, we’re honored to announce that True Body will be performing at Roadburn 2020 as part of James Kent’s curation.


In 2020, The Flenser will celebrate the tenth anniversary of the label’s first release. The San Francisco based label has been committed to releasing experimental, avant-garde music for a whole decade – which – naturally – has not escaped our notice here at Roadburn HQ. To celebrate this milestone and to acknowledge the impact that The Flenser has had on our record collections and the broader musical landscape we have invited several of the label’s current artists to perform at Roadburn 2020.

The Flenser label manager, Jonathan Tuite comments: “Roadburn is my absolute favorite festival in the world. The lineup is always diverse, the audience enthusiastic, and the curation is second to none. I can’t think of a more appropriate place for The Flenser to celebrate our ten years of existence.”

GILES COREY
For over ten years Dan Barrett has been cementing his role as a visionary in dark music history. Perhaps none of this work has resonated with more intimacy than Giles Corey, his acoustic guitar led, ghost noise-soaked songwriting vessel. While on paper an acoustic led-project sounds like a potentially low-key affair, Giles Corey is bursting with electric energy–recordings are awash in swirling organs, reverberating choirs, striking horns, and blown out drums. While Giles Corey has performed as a solo-act, Roadburn 2020 will mark the project’s first appearance as a full-band. Members of Have a Nice Life, including central figure Tim Macuga, will help bring the album’s haunted sounds to life: expect the stage and audience to be left in a scorched earth state of desolation.


ELIZABETH COLOUR WHEEL
“Otherworldly” is a description often applied to artists that evoke the ethereal, and whilst that is occasionally applicable to Elizabeth Colour Wheel, the otherworldliness they invoke is more to do with the fact that it’s not always clear if they really inhabit the same world as we do. Their debut album, Nocebo, laughs in the face of genre descriptors, forging a new path that may be tricky to describe but that offers a wildly enticing prospect.


DROWSE
Drowse is an outlet for Kyle Bates to explore his place in the world; his music echoes what he experiences on the varied paths of this internal-reflection. Sometimes those paths lead to extraordinary places – this year’s Light Mirror LP was inspired by an isolated trip to northern Iceland where he took up an artistic residency in 2018. The melancholic results are the sonic equivalent of a sliver of sunlight permeating an otherwise bleak and drizzly morning. The weight of Bates’ reflections is mighty, but it never quite succeeds in suffocating the shards of harmonious hope that glint in the winter sun.


MAMALEEK
Mamaleek have been unearthing truly uncategorizable sounds from the catacombs of black metal since 2008. Founded by two anonymous brothers, the Bay Area project has become known for both its wild experimentation and aesthetic cohesion. The use of left-field samples threads their discography together, with sound sources growing more bizarre with each release. The current lineup mixes childhood friends and total strangers. Their participation is an outgrowth of the core duo, an experiment in a live setting, using instruments and sounds that highlight experimentation and flout genre conventions. Who knows how long this iteration will last before the next metamorphosis.


MIDWIFE
As a multi-instrumentalist, Madeline Johnson AKA Midwife has sculpted a fuzzy take on experimental dream pop, drenched in melody and punctuated with distortion. Despite a central theme of “devastation” Midwife makes for nuanced and evocative easy listening that can’t help but feel like something of an audio honey trap. We’ll have to wait until April to find out exactly what lurks beneath the surface…
 
Und noch mehr Bands:

FÖLLAKZOID AND ATOM TM
Spearheading Chile’s vibrant psych scene, Föllakzoid will transport Roadburn 2020 on an all-encompassing voyage. Joined once again by German electronic artist and producer, Atom TM, the band will make their Roadburn debut, aiming to, “modulate the gravitational waves in order to alter the temporality perception and get sucked into the timeless space continuum,” as guitarist/singer Domingæ Garcia-Huidobro aptly puts it.

PRIMITIVE MAN
It is with great anticipation that we’re delighted to announce that Primitive Man will be playing twice at Roadburn 2020. One set will be a business-as-usual, throat-ripping, bone crushing display of what makes them a must-watch band. And one set will be a run through of their 2017 album, Caustic. This is the kind of endurance test we relish – an audio pummelling so intense that there’s no way to come out the other side without a shift in our worldview.

LANKUM
When The Livelong Day – the latest offering from Dublin four piece, Lankum – passed over our desks, our ears pricked up and we knew we had to invite them to Roadburn next year. It’s not uncommon to find us feeling effusive about noise, drone and ambient projects in the Roadburn world, but it’s a much rarer prospect to find such tonal qualities on what is undoubtedly, most definitely a folk album. Uilleann pipes and harmonium come together to create a cinematic soundscape that many Roadburners will feel right at home with.

The album makes for an appropriate gateway for those attending Roadburn, regardless of which side you’re approaching from – a folk fan heading towards darker territories, or a heavy music fan lured by the promise of a genre steeped in history and countless traditional flourishes.

HILARY WOODS
Hilary Woods wrote her debut full length, Colt, alone – before before taking her recordings to Berlin to work with James Kelly (Wife, Altar of Plagues). The solitude is palpable, and listening to what she has made feels like a cautious invitation into a quiet place that she has created. Imagine a soft cocoon of sound, enveloping you as you step through into the netherworld of her making.

TORPOR
Rhetoric Of The Image showcases Torpor’s confidence; lengthy post-metal tracks smoulder whilst shorter, more experimental cuts punctuate the album. The three piece will expand a little for Roadburn in order to do justice to the full fifty one minutes that make up Rhetoric Of The Image as they perform it in full for us at Roadburn.

PH
Earlier this year, PH released Osiris Hayden, their second offering through Svart Records and fifth overall in their prolific decade together. Their latest work finds them embracing new reaches of the cosmic infinite, taking on electronic charge as they never have before and exploring the connection between organic and inorganic audio experiences.

SUM OF R
The current incarnation of Sum of R already sees Reto teamed up with Jukka Rämänen (Dark Buddha Rising, Hexvessel, Waste Of Space Orchestra), which has allowed them to forge even more adventurous paths from their dark ambient / drone of yore, but now yet another figure from that particular Finnish scene will be adding his own very particular twist to the proceedings and giving them a new voice, quite literally, as it is none other than vocalist Marko Neuman (Dark Buddha Rising, Waste Of Space Orchestra, Convocation, Ural Umbo).

MANY BLESSINGS
Those of you familiar with Ethan McCarthy will know him as the formidable frontman for Primitive Man. Under the banner of Many Blessings, Ethan performs a much less frenzied kind of music – and yet somehow it manages to be no less disturbing and spine-chilling. Many Blessings has seeped into our consciousness – a slow, creeping threat of sonic menace. Whilst the ferocity we are are perhaps more accustomed to is not present, the wordless missives are brooding and visceral.

EYE FLYS
After listening to their blistering debut album Context, and considering the fact that guitarist Spencer Hazard was already roped in for Roadburn 2020 as a member of one of our artists in residence, the wonderful Full Of Hell, how could we ever pass on Eye Flys? The Backslider rhythm section of Jake Smith – here on guitar and vocals – and Patrick Forrest plus Triac‘s Kevin Bernsten complete the line-up.
 
Argh! Ich will echt hin, aber ich kann noch absolut nicht abschätzen ob das was wird. Hat da jemand Erfahrung? Kriegt man da eventuell noch etwas kürzer davor Tickets, oder ist das einmal ausverkauft auch wirklich nur noch mit Glück zu bekommen?
 
Argh! Ich will echt hin, aber ich kann noch absolut nicht abschätzen ob das was wird. Hat da jemand Erfahrung? Kriegt man da eventuell noch etwas kürzer davor Tickets, oder ist das einmal ausverkauft auch wirklich nur noch mit Glück zu bekommen?
Schwierig einzuschätzen. Das komplette 4-Tages-Ticket war die letzten beide Jahre um Weihnachten herum ausverkauft. Danach kommt man gelegentlich über die Facebook-Gruppe (entweder Veranstaltung oder "Roadburners") noch an Tickets. Ist aber jetzt nicht so, dass es eine Flut an Verkäufern gibt. Je nachdem, mit wie vielen Leute du/ihr hinfahren willst/wollt, könnte es aber schwer werden, an schööne Unterkünfte zu kommen. Wenn notfalls nur Camping mit Zelt eingeplant ist, gibts da jedoch kein Problem.
 
Puh! Das erste Roadburn, wo ich mich bislang nur auf eine Band (Mizmor) wirklich freue. Dieses Jahr war schon hart, 2020 ist 90% des Line-ups zum jetzigen Stand absolut nichts für mich, da ich weder mit Wave, noch mit Synth-whatever noch mit Postpunk noch mit wie auch immer gearteter elektronischer oder Industrial-noisiger Musik was anfangen kann. Red Sparowes holen mich ab. Cloud Rat, okay. Torche sind live immer gut. Lingua Ignota auch immer gerne. Dazu eine Handvoll Entdeckungen, wo ich nach kurzem Anchecken mal reinschauen werde. Gut, dass wir einen Bungalow mit Sauna haben. Da werd ich dann mein WE überwiegend verbringen. :D
 
Argh! Ich will echt hin, aber ich kann noch absolut nicht abschätzen ob das was wird. Hat da jemand Erfahrung? Kriegt man da eventuell noch etwas kürzer davor Tickets, oder ist das einmal ausverkauft auch wirklich nur noch mit Glück zu bekommen?
In der Regel kann man bis kurz vorher in der Veranstaltungs-Facebook-Gruppe noch Tickets zum Originalpreis bekommen. Hat bei Bekannten in den letzten Jahren immer geklappt.
 
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