VirtualWayfarer

My First Time At The Roskilde Music Festival

I was deep in thought, a conversation about something that seemed relevant at the time raging as my friend and I lugged our heavily-laden backpacks down the road toward our campsite in the B section of Roskilde’s sprawling camping area. So, it was with some surprise that I looked up and realized that the chain link fence to our right was lined by people.  These people were a mixture of men and women, some in the midst of their own conversations, but all diligently focused on not falling over while peeing on the fence.  The men unashamedly looked around, equipment in hand and fully exposed, as they artistically sought to wet the criss-cross of metal links. The women, casually enjoying a public squat, were a bit more furtive in their efforts.  Some had friends making some effort to block their naked bodies, while most just embraced the moment with a very typical Danish pragmatism. It’s just a naked body, right?

I shouldn’t have been surprised, after all I have a running sense of amusement at the fact that most Danes won’t jaywalk, regardless of how foul the weather is, but have no qualms about waiting for the light to change, crossing the street, walking 10 steps, turning, and peeing. It is somewhat comical, a bit disgusting, and utterly entertaining. Especially coming from a culture that is otherwise highly rule-oriented and well behaved.

This strange blend of order and chaos is part of what makes the Roskilde Music Festival such a fascinating (and highly entertaining) experience. But, before I dive into the specifics, let’s start out with the basics.

Photo by Raquel Sertaje

The Basics

The Roskilde Music Festival has been going on since 1971 and is held each year outside of the Danish city of Roskilde in a sprawling set of fields. This year it drew more than 160 bands from 30+ countries and had more than 100,000 paying ticket holders in addition to another 31,000 volunteers (not a typo).  The organizers say that it is the largest music festival in Northern Europe and it is most definitely the largest music festival in Scandinavia. The festival is non-profit and is anticipating a benefit of between 2 and 2.7 million Euro from this year’s festivities which it will then donate to charity.

It also has a cult following and reputation for being an absolutely amazing experience with a lot of hard-partying fun and ridiculous antics.  While popular with Danes of all ages, it is a sort of coming of age experience for the Danish youth.  The festival, as with a handful of other events over the course of the year, is a sort of initiation to Danish youth culture. Tell a Dane you haven’t been to Roskilde Festival and they’ll look at you with a mixture of pity and confusion.  Tell a Dane you’ve been, and you’re suddenly initiated to a secret society that brings with it an intimate understanding of what “Roskilde” is, which no blog post or story can ever illuminate.

The easiest way to understand the festival is to understand that there are actually two different key parts.  The first are the camps and camp experiences.  The second is the music festival. While these two are inherently interconnected, they are also two separate identities with their own personalities, protocols, and rich experiences. The Roskilde Festival experience starts in the camps on Sunday when (tens of?) thousands of people line up for the first crack at the camping areas.  The gates open and a hilariously insane rush begins with backpack-laden festival goers racing towards the campsite area of their choice, often at a full run, in the hopes of squaring away prime real estate.  Depending on the size of the camp, these groups of runners have their work cut out for them. Once they find a spot, it is all about laying out the gaggle of tents they’ve dragged with them and claiming the space as quickly as possible. While the urgency varies depending on how picky you are about location and the size of your camp – it is, in general, a mad dash.

The “camp” culture is a core component of the festival experience. For Americans, you can think of it a bit like a seven day tailgating session. Camp complexity and size varies widely, but most consist of at least five tents and a pavilion.  In our case we had 19 tents of various sizes huddled more or less on-top of each other, all surrounding a central pavilion.  Our festival veterans had chosen the “B” camp, due to its smaller size, location, and reputation for being social, but much less crazy than areas like “C” which was a 3 minute walk away. There are also “quiet” camps and “clean” camps, which tend to be less chaotic and draw an older crowd.

Sunday-Wednesday generally consist of one massive camp-wide party that never really ends.  Each camp typically has a name and a theme.  Larger camps tend to go all-out, with several having famous reputations as go-to party places.  These camps can include everything from massive speaker systems to DJ boxes and nightclub-style lights rigged on wheels. This turns entire sections of the camps into giant churning street parties that blend together. During this period there are also a number of small shows put on by various groups. These included things like a hip-hop battle and BMX stunt bike competition. The camps also tend to get disgusting pretty quickly. Within two days all of the grass on the pathways in camp “C” was completely gone and the sheer amount of trash, empty beer cans, broken folding chairs, and damaged tents makes the camping areas look like a post-apocalyptic refugee camp gone wrong. A visual which is reinforced by the sight of passed out festival goers resting where they fell.

On Thursday the official festival grounds open, and the main music starts. With 7 stages and 166 bands the biggest challenge is figuring out what you want to see.  The music component of the festival lasts until Sunday and often stretches well into the evening with some performances lasting until 3AM.  The crowd is decidedly more balanced age wise and slightly more focused on the festival events.  A large number of day-ticket holders also arrive and bring a relative level of balance to the equation.

Photo by Eddi Andersen

A Festival Newbie

I had no idea what to expect from Roskilde. I vaguely understood the relationship between the music and the camps, but didn’t really fully grasp just how rich both experiences would be. I also had no clue what to anticipate as far as what the camp would look like or what the caliber of the musical performances might be. I was also expecting significantly smaller facilities with radically fewer amenities.  So, here are a few of my takeaways.

Food & Shopping

Logistics

Get Social

The Music

Alright, this WAS a music festival after all.  So, how was the music?

It was awesome!  With a festival line-up that sported more than 160 bands from multiple genres, vastly different styles were represented. You had the super energetic and playful music of Manu Chao at the same festival as a soul-rending performance by Rob Zombie. All on the same stage that hosted Stevie Wonder, the Arctic Monkeys, Rolling Stones and Major Lazer.

The music line-up was awesome. More than that though, the performers seemed to be having an absolute blast.  They were playing all sorts of extra sets, pausing for photos with the crowd, and just seemed as hyped and ecstatic as the audience at large. From start to finish the shows were full of life and all around epic.  A few of the performers (here’s looking at you Arctic Monkeys) were obviously a bit drugged out or drunk, but for the most part they still managed to put on decent performances.

The audio was extremely well handled and solidly balanced at the main (Orange) stage. It was also quite well done at the other secondary stages, though I found the acoustics at Arena (a large tent) to be ever so slightly sub-par.

The visual team handling the massive screens also did a decent job, though they were the least impressive of the mixture.  At Orange in particular there were a surprising number of out of focus shots, or instances where they were focusing almost exclusively on the lead performer while failing to cut to/ignoring band members who were doing solos.  Still, this is just nit-picky video stuff, and I doubt most people even noticed.

The stages were also set up in locations that made a lot of sense. I was a bit concerned about noise pollution from the seven different stages all situated in a relatively small area. I shouldn’t have been. The viewing areas and stages were also set up in a fashion that made viewing the main stage really easy, which was great. Even shorter friends had a less-difficult-than-normal time seeing the acts.

After an incident a few years ago, a series of pit dividers were installed. These were designed to break up the crowd and prevent crowd crush from happening. It also ensured that there was typically much more space, even in the tightest packed parts of the crowd, than I was expecting.  Pit access was easy and usually didn’t require long waits.  It was also really nice that within the pits the security guards were liberally distributing cups of water.

The Memorable List

A lot of memorable things happened at Roskilde. Here are a few standout moments, for better or for worse.

“The Aftermath” Photo by Eddi Andersen

Post Festival Reflections

I went into Roskilde with mixed sentiments. On the one hand I was excited to experience a core part of Danish culture, for a great party scene, and some really top-tier musical acts.  On the other hand, I’m not a big day-drinker and no-longer have a strong desire to party on back-to-back days, let alone for the better part of a week.  I was concerned the music quality and venues would be unimpressive, that the crowd would be overly obnoxious, and that five days would end up being about three too many. Particularly when I considered the ever-unpleasant combination of a hangover, porta-potties, and sleeping on the ground.

As with so many experiences, these concerns turned out to be mostly fluff. The music was absolutely amazing, the party scene was pure mayhem but survivable and possessed of a giddy energy level that was invigorating.  The food was much better than I thought, the facilities were much cleaner and less disgusting than I anticipated, and the overall experience was a blast. I can safely say that I’m now a Roskilde convert.

That being said, one issue that Roskilde does need to address moving forward is that of trash. It is deeply impacting seeing photos of the festival’s aftermath. Many of the tents purchased are essentially cheap throw-away items that cost about $20 USD. The same goes for the camping chairs used, air mattresses, and other objects. At the end of the festival, common practice is to leave behind any items you no longer want, think may be recyclable, or for which the trade-off of lugging them home outweighs their replacement value. During the festival many of the camping areas were filthy with discarded refuse. Halfhearted efforts were made to use the trash cans in some areas, but in others (eg: C) people left most of their trash where it fell. While obviously more responsibility among attendees and increased trash pickup infrastructure would make a difference, I also find it to be a very interesting insight and visualization of just how much waste we produce on a daily basis. This leads me to think that the rare visualization of just how much trash we produce is actually quite profound. Festival organizers could improve and invest more heavily in trash cleanup BUT that would only reduce refuse visibility while having no impact on actual trash output.  In this way, I think that while initially shocking, the images of trash stemming from the festival are actually quite compelling and perhaps even a highly valuable illustration and lesson that brings a sense of reality to our actions and lifestyles which we are otherwise detached from.

If you get a chance, definitely jump at it. While this was my first major music festival, I now know it definitely won’t be my last.

*Full disclosure – I attended Roskilde on a reduced price media-ticket, which also gave me access to several minor amenities which were not otherwise available to normal-ticket holders. 

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