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Golf buggies delivering drinks, 'Pods' instead of mosh pits - these will be crucial additions to the first major music festival to be held in Adelaide since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Source : PortMac.News | Independent :

Source : PortMac.News | Independent | News Story:

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Adelaide's Summer Sounds Festival COVID-safe fan 'pods'
Golf buggies delivering drinks, 'Pods' instead of mosh pits - these will be crucial additions to the first major music festival to be held in Adelaide since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

News Story Summary:

Music fans to socially distance in COVID-safe 'pods' at Adelaide's Summer Sounds Festival

After months of negotiations with SA Health, organisers of the Summer Sounds Festival have been granted permission to stage the three-week event in Bonython Park.

Artists such as Lime Cordiale, Ruel, Ball Park Music, Mallrat and Ocean Alley feature on the festival's line-up, which will be headlined by Bernard Fanning and also include 2000s bands Something for Kate, Spiderbait and Jebediah.

The key innovation will be groups of concert-goers splitting into dozens of "pods" which will include between four and six people.

Event director Daniel Michael said the idea was based on so-called "pig pens" which were a feature of concerts held in the UK in the northern summer.

"Heaps of people sent me photos of something that was happening in Newcastle in the UK and I thought we'd never do that, it'd cost too much, there's no way," he said.

"Then we were like, actually, we can probably do it and make it work like this … we can make this happen."

How will it work?

Up to 2,000 music fans will attend the concerts each night until January 31, spread across 10,000 square metres.

"It's basically 2,000 VIPs," Mr Michael said.

Tickets are sold in groups of four or six, and then those people have to stay within their pod for the duration of the concert, apart from going to buy food or go the toilet.

Inside each pod, fans will be allowed to eat, drink and dance.

"There are no bars … drinks are delivered by golf buggy after being ordered on an app," Mr Michael said.

"We've been working with SA Health for months now just to get it right, to make it COVID-safe and to make it safe for people to dance and to drink."

People attending the concerts are given a 15-minute window to arrive to avoid queues developing, and will be issued a wristband with their pod number, so every person at the event will be traceable.

Fanning to isolate when offstage

The festival was originally set to start on December 30, but was delayed until January 8 because of travel restrictions between New South Wales and South Australia, in response to Sydney's coronavirus outbreaks.

"We've had to reprogram the dates a couple of times because of clusters in various states but here we are and we're opening on Friday," Mr Michael said.

"All of us have taken a risk, all of us have got together and thought how can we get this industry going."

Headline act Bernard Fanning has been granted an SA Health exemption to travel from Byron Bay for the festival, as SA currently has a hard border closure with NSW.

Mr Michael said as part of the exemption, the former Powderfinger frontman would have to self-isolate when not performing in a venue that had no shared facilities or lifts, and would have to wear a mask except while performing.

"[Bernard Fanning] is the sort of the artist that probably wouldn't do an event for 2,000 people in normal times, or definitely wouldn't — the fact he's willing to do it is just a demonstration that the artists themselves are willing to give back to the industry," he said.

He said there was still a possibility of individual shows being cancelled, especially if artists could not attend because of any changes to border restrictions.

Model for the future?

Adelaide band TOWNS will perform its first "normal" show since February on Friday as a support act to The Jungle Giants.

Aston Valladares said he and bandmate Daniel Steinert would "go harder" to make up for the spread-out crowd.

"It's definitely going to be an adjustment, but I'm excited because it's a challenge and challenges are fun," Valladares said.

"Part of me wants to clone myself so I can have a go myself and see what it's like," Steinert said.

Mr Michael said he was excited to be putting on the new festival at a time when most others were being cancelled or scaled back.

He said he hoped, and expected, that the idea of pods would catch on.

"People want to see music — they want to enjoy themselves — so we've just been looking at ways we can do it and be safe," he said.

"It's also heart-warming to see people who've had their careers crunched by the pandemic to be able to work again.

"I think it'll be a while before we see packed mosh pits, but I think we will start to see larger numbers of people in the pods."

Could this be the way of the future for Byron Bay Bluesfest & Splendor in the grass ?


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