This year, 2012, was the 20th Fairbridge Festival and all the signs are that the momentum and enthusiasm continues to grow. The scene is set for another great weekend of joyous music making. As well as a growing number of top international, interstate and home grown artists there are the youth and children’s festivals, numerous workshops, street theatre, a vibrant markets area, poetry and much much more to enjoy.
Fairbridge Village makes a wonderful festival site, with graceful, mature bush and sweeping views over the Darling Escarpment about 100 km south of Perth’s outlying south-eastern suburbs. Over the weekend the site comes alive with music in numerous marquees and permanent buildings, and in the church which is the home for a now-legendary Sunday morning Gospel session and a plethora of a cappella singing in its natural habitat.
The festival is now established as a major event on the WA cultural calendar with a devoted audience base, a strong pool of volunteers, and a remarkably stable organising committee led by president Carole Winfield. Its reputation has spread to the point where each year it receives well over 500 applications from acts wanting to play, many of them from interstate. It has stayed true to the original vision of catering to a family audience, and presents probably the largest children’s program, in proportion to the festival as a whole, of any such event in the country.
The success of the festival is an inspiring example of what can be done from the grass roots, at the far-off, sparsely populated end of the country, by a small group of people dedicated to the love of folk music and community events.
So we decided to go and have a look.
It was a very pleasant drive, east of Perth. Along the way we saw the now compulsory plethora of bikeys, classic cars and inumerable towable camping caravans and Winnebago's.
Arrived about 11.30am, made our way to the entrance to be greeted by a very nice lady wanting $240!!!! We never imagined that there was even a cost, but anyway, we had travelled to far not to go and have a look.
Well, it was brill. The place was wall to wall folkies, earth dwellers, you know the type. embracing the flower power era, dressed how I imagine Glastonbury/Woodstock people would be.
A flavour of the acts!
The Ball Point Penguins - comedy
Big Rory & his Great Scottish, (very amorous and incontinent) Beer Hound, Ochie.
Big Rory |
Ochie |
They were really really funny |
He just pee'd on anyone who came near him! |
My Friend the Chocolate Cake - singing duo, folkie name or what?
Ye Old Mucky Duck Bush Band - what do you think? Say that when you've had a few.
Rocket Girl - Rocket Girl Rocket Show is a spectacular and exciting outdoor performance. Fun for all primary school and lower high school aged kids Rocket Girl introduces the science of rocket flight, 'Newton's third law' and 'conservation of momentum'. Safe and inclusive educational fun - well Peter liked it!!
Perth Morris Men - Yeah they even have 'em over here.
Same the world over! |
Shogglenifty -Famous the world over for inventing techno ceilidh, acid croft and hypnofolkadelia, Shooglenifty is one of Scotland's most unique musical exports. NEVER HEARD OF 'EM.
Spookeymen of the West - I watched these for a while, and they were right!!
Stiff Gins - aboriginal
All in all a good day out. Think we might indulge in a bit of 'Glamping' next year.
The Skerritts in Oz
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