Paul Wellman
Ziggy Marley
West Beach Music & Arts Festival
Friday-Saturday, September 12-14.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Kicking off Friday afternoon and wrapping up beneath clear skies and a full moon on Sunday, the second annual West Beach Music & Arts Festival came to life on the dusty sands west of Stearns Wharf over the weekend. The three-day festival, one of the few in the U.S. that takes place on the beach, boasted an eclectic (albeit reggae-heavy) musical line-up on four stages, a small vendor village, a staggering assortment of inflatable bouncers and slides, and the usual carnival culinary fare.
Santa Barbara-based Twiin Productions presented an impressive roster for such a young festival, featuring performances by Ziggy Marley, Jason Mraz, Natasha Bedingfield, Big Head Todd and the Monsters, and Parliament/Funkadelic with George Clinton. Plugged in among the headliners were Twiin darlings Jackie Greene, Kate Voegele, DJ Matty Matt, Jim Bianco, Iration, and Matthew McAvene. Deejays from near and far (from Santa Barbara’s own Gavin Roy to New York-based Global Noize) spun throughout the festival in the chronically underpopulated Oasis area.
By Paul Wellman
West Beach Music and Arts Festival
Far from comparable to Coachella or Outside Lands, West Beach has some stripes to earn prior to induction into the pantheon of major music festivals. Some challenges were attributable to the layout of the space. Although the promoters reportedly expected a critical mass of more than 6,000 attendees per day, the maximum headcount at any given time was half that, leaving a vast, desert-like expanse of beach between the stages and creating a dramatically empty feel during most of the daytime sets. The upside, of course, was that there was plenty of elbow room for everyone, as the push-and-shove often associated with music festivals was nonexistent here. The most unfortunate and damaging side effect of the festival layout was the sound bleed. Much to the chagrin of musicians and audience alike, bands frequently found themselves drowned out by acts on the main stage, in some instances forcing them to abandon their sets ahead of schedule.
Brett Leigh Dicks
West Beach Music and Arts Festival
Although a handful of vendors offered T-shirts featuring original artwork, blown-glass pipes, and colorful hula hoops, the “arts” element of the festival’s title might be a bit of a stretch. Another mystery was the notable absence of the promised local activist groups, despite the promoters’ assertion that nonprofit support is a major festival initiative (the exception being a table for the Friends of the World Food Program, to whom a portion of festival proceeds were donated).
Despite the glitches, Twiins’ sophomore effort deserves props for scoring some very fine talent. Let’s hope they take note and fine-tune next year’s West Beach Festival accordingly-it’s a homegrown effort we’d like to see succeed. The following is a rundown of festival highlights and pleasant surprises.
Dominic Balli
Carpinteria-based Dominic Balli, winner of the Indy‘s Road to West Beach contest, showcased reggae-rock tracks off their recently released debut album, Public Announcement. Balli’s hopeful lyrics, infused with hip-hop sensibility and intricate, soulful instrumentals, got several of the 200+ audience members on their feet and dancing, but most were content to loll on their blankets, soaking up the midday sun and the band’s atmospheric reggae rhythms.
Brett Leigh Dicks
Ziggy Marley
The ever-smiling Ziggy Marley brought his own positive vibrations to West Beach with two appearances on Saturday. Although his evening performance on the main stage was laden with crowd-pleasers like “Tomorrow People” and “Look Who’s Dancing,” the real delight was his 30-minute set on the Sandbox children’s stage. Noting with a grin that the audience was full of “big kids” as well as small, Marley serenaded the assembled fans with upbeat songs such as “Family Time,” “Walk Tall,” and, from his father’s canon, “Three Little Birds.”
Although some found her thin, little-girl voice irritating, the off-kilter, primal rhythms of Jesca Hoop lent a much-needed indie touch to the festival. Hoop’s spooky, ethereal chanting and self-layered vocals on “Seed of Wonder” and “Summertime” held the attention of the few assembled at the secondary stage, but ultimately, many of them seemed to drift off in search of other sounds.
Well over a decade since Big Head Todd and the Monsters have received any significant airplay, the Colorado-based blues-rock outfit delivered a tight and solid set as the evening cooled and the full moon rose on Saturday. Selections included more recent, harder-rocking material alongside such well-aged classics as “Bittersweet,” “Circle,” and “Broken Hearted Savior” from 1993’s Sister Sweetly.
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