Festival Of Colours Tour

Festival Of Colours
Genre Festival Tour (untimed)
Location(s) International
Years active 3
Inaugurated July 2012
Berlin, Germany
Website
holifestival.com

Festival Of Colours is a concert like event with music and coloured powder. It takes place on 4 different continents. The event usually takes place on a Saturday from 12 noon to 10 pm.

Festival Of Colours is an event that is owned and operated by the Holi Concept GmbH from Jasper Hellmann, Max Riedel and Maxim Derenko.

History

Origins

Festival Of Colours Mexico City 2013

The Festival Of Colours is inspired by the traditional Hindu festival Holi, which usually takes place in March an marks the coming of spring.[1] On this day, people throw powdered paint, known as gulal, at on another. For one day the distinctions between castes, religions and gender are set aside and everyone is equal.[2] The festival is primarily observed in India and Nepal, but also in many other countries with a large Hindu population.

Beginnings

This is where the Festival Of Colours tour takes its inspiration from. It first came to Europe on June 29, 2012. The first Festival was held in Berlin on the grounds of the Postbahnhof. 2500 colourful guests had a great time despite the rainy weather. By the end everyone was covered in a layer of paint.[3]

Growth

There were three more Festivals Of Colour in 2012 in Munich, Hannover and Dresden. Munich was the biggest with 10.000 guests. In 2013 the Festival Of Colours Tour went global, starting in Berlin on the 10th of May [4] and hitting 3 continents and 7 different countries. The focus of the 2013 tour was Germany with 14 cities and 15 events (Berlin had two events in 2013).[5] However, there were events in many big Cities, like Vienna, Amsterdam, Barcelona, London, Mexico City and Cape Town. Overall the total number of events in 2013 was 25. 2013 was also the first time that the Festival Of Colours was held on 2 subsequent days. London hosted a total of nearly 30.000 people at the Battersea Power Station on August 10 and 11. The biggest single-day festival took place in Mannheim with 20.000 guests. 2014 the expansion is set to continue with new countries and cities joining the list, including Italy (Rome), France (Paris), New Zealand (Auckland), Ireland (Dublin), Tunisia (Hammamet) and Switzerland (Zurich).

How it works

Festival Of Colours London 2013

Procedure

The procedure is very similar in all the cities of the Festival Of Colours tour. The festival begins at 12 noon. The first guests arrive and a local warm-up DJs have the chance to show their stuff. Each of the acts plays for 1–2 hours, with occasional guest showcases who are on shorter. At 3 pm everyone comes together for the first simultaneous colour throw of the day. This is then repeated every hour until the end.[6] At 10pm the event is over and the music stops. The festival usually takes place on a Saturday, with the exception last year of London, where there was an event on a Sunday as well to accommodate the enormous demand for tickets. A video is produced for each event [7] and onsite photo team follows each event, publishing pictures on the respective Facebook pages.

Set Up

Generally there is one large stages where the DJs perform. There are also showacts, such as Indian dancers, drummers and Performers. Of course food and drinks are essential for a daytime festival. There are numerous food and drink stalls spread over the festival grounds. There is a large variety, from Curry over Pizza and Pasta to French fries and icecream. The colour powder can be bought at the festival as well, along with various merchandise products, like t-shirts, masks, sunglasses or Indian decorations.

List of cities and countries

Source:[8]

Performing DJs

  • Aka Aka
  • Andhim
  • Animal Swing Kids
  • Bara Bröst
  • Benga
  • Bombay Boogie Soundsystem
  • Borgeous
  • Breakage
  • Christian Varela
  • Cuebrick
  • Daniel Steinberg
  • Das Bo
  • Dirty Doering
  • Drauf & Dran
  • Drunken Masters
  • Dumme Jungs

See also

References

Happy Holi 2015

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.