EXODUS'S FIRST LEGAL OUTDOOR RAVE

Ecovillage Network UK tony at gaia.org
Fri Aug 18 15:08:14 BST 2000


LEGAL AND GREAT

Unskewed news from SQUALL central     http://www.squall.co.uk/yes/ind2.html

EXODUS'S FIRST LEGAL OUTDOOR RAVE IS MASSIVE SUCCESS

The Exodus Collective held their first legal outdoor rave on July 29 after
eight years of squatting land and dodging police. Around 5000 people
attended what became a one night mini-festival just off Junction 13 of the M1.

Two large marquees were hired, one for the Exodus sound system where the
Collective's DJ's were joined by guests including Leftfield, and one for a
live band stage on which around ten bands performed during the night,
including Luton's up-coming hip hop outfit Phi-Life Cypher and the
Mancunian dub maestros, Nucleus Roots. The specially prepared site also
presented several other cafes and sound systems including Gangsta Dolphin
from Milton Keynes and SQUALL's 10 speaker rig and new cocktail bar.
SQUALL's stable of DJ's were joined by guests from Exodus and All Crew.

Bedfordshire Police had agreed to confine their activities to minding
traffic in the locality after Lord Andrew Howland had offered to loan a
piece of his land for the event without charging.

At the last minute Beds Police slapped a 2am limit on alcohol sales saying
they had to be fair to commercial businesses in Luton, but in the end it
made little difference. The in excess of £3000 it cost to provide tents,
toilets and lights for the event was covered through drink sales which
simply switched to donations after the 2am watershed. Not only did the free
event break even, it passed off so well that it now looks likely the four
day Free the Spirit Festival held on Exodus's 17 acre farmstead for the
last three years will be situated on the same site. A festival licence was
applied for within days of the July 29 event.

Local fears about noise from the site proved unfounded whilst environmental
health officers from the council pronounced the event well organised. Lord
Howland's estate manager commented that the land and fencing was now in
better shape than it had been before the event.

Exodus refused to allow Radio 1's Newsbeat to cover the event during their
Saturday bulletins in an effort to keep numbers down. Their decision paid
off when just the right number of people for the facilities turned up.

The success of Exodus' first legal one-night event now looks set to provide
a new working example of non-commercial, non-profit making festival
organisation which it is hoped will provide both the inspiration and legal
precendence for similar events elsewhere in the country.




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