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Hellfest (American music festival)
Hellfest was an American all-ages music festival that existed between 1997 and 2005. The festival showcased hardcore music in its broadest sense, including punk rock, metalcore, emo, post-hardcore and more. It originated in Central New York, in and around Syracuse, but eventually relocated to Central New Jersey during its final years. Hellfest was known for its fan-friendly atmosphere, including a lack of barriers that provided easy access to the stage for stage diving and sing-alongs. It also encouraged social-awareness through workshops that discussed such causes as animal rights, LGBTQ and politics, with many of its bands and attendees following straight-edge and/or vegetarian or vegan lifestyles. Not unlike many festivals of its size, Hellfest encountered several problems, notably the changing venues mere days before starting. This was the case for 1999's Syracuse Hell Fest 99, 2000's Hellfest 2K, 2001's Hellfest 2001 and 2005's Hellfest '05. The relocation caused an entire day to be missed of the 2000 edition, while the 2005 edition was cancelled altogether. The considerable financial dilemma that resulted from the 2005 event's cancellation led to the termination of the festival.
History and etymology
Co-promoter Josh Grabelle, who was also a sponsor of the festival through his record label Trustkill Records, claimed in 2001 that the event was named Hellfest because "This festival has always been the first weekend in July and it is always extremely HOT, hence, the reference to the blazing inferno known as Hell". This explanation, though inaccurate, has since become de facto, even though Grabelle was not involved with the early years of the festival. The factual reason behind the naming of the festival was linked to founding promoter Keith Allen's concert booking agency, Hardcore As Hell. Allen and his partner Ryan Canavan had been booking and promoting concerts in the Syracuse, New York area since 1996. Canavan also had his own booking agency, Hanging Like A Hex, which gave name to a fanzine that he published and, later, the record label Hex Records. Canavan's fanzine Hanging Like a Hex published the first festival's guide/pamphlet as issue number 7.5. Allen and Canavan co-booked the first three festivals: the first event in 1997 was promoted as Syracuse 3-Day Super Festival; the two events in 1998 were promoted as Syracuse Hardcore Festival and Syracuse Hardcore Festival 2.5. It was only with the fourth event in 1999, once Allen became sole promoter, that the word hell was added to the name and the event was promoted as Syracuse Hell Fest 99. The single-word Hellfest was first used for the 2000 edition as Hellfest 2K. Allen was also keen on booking his own bands (Order of Deceit, The August Prophecy, Found Dead Hanging and Architect) in favorable time slots. For Hellfest 2004, Allen relocated the festival from New York to New Jersey, forming a new partnership corporation. Paper Street Music Co. LLC was co-founded by Allen and Shawn Van Der Poel and was based in Mount Holly, New Jersey. They copromoted 2004 Hellfest with Heath Miller and Excess dB Entertainment at Rexplex in Elizabeth, NJ.
Hellfest lineups by year
June 20–22, 1997: Syracuse 3-Day Super Festival
Location: Hungry Charley's, 727 South Crouse Avenue, Syracuse, New York.
Friday, June 20
Saturday, June 21
Sunday, June 22
June 13–14, 1998: Syracuse Hardcore Festival
Location: Cornell Cooperative Extension, 248 Grant Avenue, Auburn, New York.
Saturday, June 13
Sunday, June 14
December 5–6, 1998: Syracuse Hardcore Festival 2.5
Location: The Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road, Syracuse, New York.
Saturday, December 5
Sunday, December 6
June 26–27, 1999: Syracuse Hell Fest 99
Location: The Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road, Syracuse, New York.
Saturday, June 26
Sunday, June 27
June 30–July 2, 2000: Hellfest 2K
Locations: The Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road, Syracuse, New York / Club Mirage, 6815 Manlius Center Road, East Syracuse, New York.
Friday, June 30 *
Saturday, July 1
Sunday, July 2
July 6–8, 2001: Hellfest 2001
Location: Action Sports & Skate Center, 2299 Brewerton Road, in Mattydale, New York
Friday, July 6
Main Stage
Second Stage
Saturday, July 7
Main Stage
Second Stage
Sunday, July 8
Main Stage
Second Stage
July 12–14, 2002: Hellfest 2002
Location: New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Boulevard, Syracuse, New York.
Friday, July 12
Main Stage
B Stage
C Stage
Saturday, July 13
Main Stage
B Stage
C Stage
Sunday, July 14
Main Stage
B Stage
C Stage
July 4–6, 2003: Hellfest 2K3
Location: New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Boulevard, Syracuse, New York / Planet 505, 505 Westcott Street, Syracuse, New York.
Friday, July 4
Stage A
Stage B
Stage C
After Party
Saturday, July 5
Stage A
Stage B
Stage C
After Party
Sunday, July 6
Stage A
Stage B
Stage C
July 23–25, 2004: Hellfest 2004
Location: RexPlex, 2 Ikea Drive, Elizabeth, New Jersey.
Friday, July 23
Main Stage
Hot Topic Stage
Dinosaur Stage
Saturday, July 24
Main Stage
Hot Topic Stage
Dinosaur Stage
Sunday, July 25
Main Stage
Hot Topic Stage
Dinosaur Stage
August 19–21, 2005: Hellfest '05
Location: Sovereign Bank Arena, 81 Hamilton Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey.
Friday, August 19 *
Main Stage A: 1x1 Music
Main Stage B: Peta2
Outdoor Stage A: Goodfellow Records/Abacus Recordings
Outdoor Stage B: Eulogy Recordings
Outdoor Stage C: Hot Topic
Saturday, August 20 *
Main Stage A: 1x1 Music
Main Stage B: Peta2
Outdoor Stage A: Goodfellow Records/Abacus Recordings
Outdoor Stage B: Eulogy Recordings
Outdoor Stage C: Hot Topic
Sunday, August 21 *
Main Stage A: 1x1 Music
Main Stage B: Peta2
Outdoor Stage A: Goodfellow Records/Abacus Recordings
Outdoor Stage B: Eulogy Recordings
Outdoor Stage C: Hot Topic
Hellfest Battle of the Bands
In 2004, Hellfest sponsored an official battle of the bands contests, both nationally and in Central New Jersey, giving the chance to unsigned bands the opportunity of playing the festival's stages. New Jersey bands were required to enter the local competition organized by concert promoter Excess dB Entertainment, while national acts could apply through //radiotakover's competition.
Excess dB Entertainment's Hellfest Battle of the Bands
The Excess dB Entertainment Battle of the Bands contest offered a total of fifteen prizes: nine Hellfest playing slots for first-place winners and six Excess dB Entertainment concert playing slots for second and third-place winners. The competition was held over three days, two at Club Krome in Sayreville, New Jersey, and one at Cricket Club in Irvington, New Jersey. Five winners were picked at the end of each event by a selection of judges from the New Jersey hardcore community. The judges were Carl Severson (owner of Ferret Music), Alex Saavedra (owner of Eyeball Records), Josh Grabelle (owner of Trustkill Records), Fred Feldman (owner of Triple Crown Records), Kyle Kraszewski (owner of No Milk Records), Joanna Angel (owner of BurningAngels), Andrew D. Keller (A&R scout at Columbia Records), Michelle and Stacy (writers at The Aquarian Weekly), DJ Rob, DJ Ralph and DJ Q (disc jockeys at WSOU), Geoff Rickly (vocalist of the band Thursday) and Evange Livanos (promoter at FATA Booking). The bands Endwell, Malice Aforethought, Flat Earth Society, Nothing Left to Mourn, The Dead Season, Breath of Silence, Sycamore Dreams, Nag Hamadi and Starting to Wonder all won first place and played at Hellfest 2004. Endwell, Nothing Left to Mourn, Breath of Silence and Sycamore Dreams played on the Hot Topic Stage, while Malice Aforethought, Flat Earth Society, The Dead Season, Nag Hamadi and Starting to Wonder played on the Dinosaur Stage.
June 13, 2004: Club Krome Battle of the Bands 1
Main Room
Lounge
June 19, 2004: Cricket Club Battle of the Bands
Upstairs Room
Downstairs Room
June 27, 2004: Club Krome Battle of the Bands 2
Main Room
Lounge
//radiotakover's Hellfest Battle of the Bands
The //radiotakeover Battle of the Bands contest was sponsored by Hot Topic, Revolver, Hopeless Records and Trustkill Records. Instead of hosting live shows and judging the bands by their live performances, this Battle of the Bands was hosted digitally with artists submitting pre-recorded songs to //radiotakover's website using a user-based voting system. Bands were required to pay a $5 entry fee and submit their songs between May 7–14, 2004; but due to an overwhelming response, the deadline was extended to June 21, 2004. The eleven top-voted bands were selected on June 21, 2004, and presented to a judging panel of industry professionals (likely the same judges from Excess dB Entertainment's Battle of the Bands). The judging panel had four days to select the winners, based on a single song, which were scheduled to be announced on Friday, June 25, 2004, but was delayed to Monday, June 28, 2004. The Grand Prize winner was given a slot on Hellfest's main stage, accommodations and expenses for the weekend of the event, as well as inclusion on the documentary DVD scheduled to be released by HighRoller Studios (which was ultimately shelved). First Prize winners received slots on Hellfest's Hot Topic stage, free passes to attend the event and free Hellfest merchandise, but were required to provide their own accommodations. Runner up winners (Second Place and Third Place winners) received free passes to attend the event and free Hellfest merchandise.
Winners
The list of winners was announced along with the selected songs upon which they were judged. The top four bands were given playing spots at Hellfest 2004; the Grand Prize winner on the Main Stage, and the three First Prize winners on the Hot Topic Stage.
Home media releases
All Hellfest events have been filmed, either by fans or by professional production companies. However, only three official VHS/DVDs have been released.
Hellfest Syracuse, NY - Summer 2000: The Official Documentary
Hellfest Syracuse, NY - Summer 2000: The Official Documentary was the first officially released video recording of 2000's Hellfest 2K. It was released on VHS and DVD by Trustkill Records on June 12, 2001, and features live footage, interviews, commentaries by fifteen bands, the majority of which were already signed to Trustkill Records.
Track listing
Credits are adapted from the VHS/DVD's liner notes.
Personnel
Hellfest 2002
(2 discs) (released January 6, 2004): Featuring live performances from Coheed and Cambria, Bleeding Through, Hatebreed, Merauder, NORA, Open Hand, Freya, Throwdown, Lamb of God, Bloodlet, Eighteen Visions, Most Precious Blood, Terror, Death Threat and more.
Hellfest Vol III: Official Video Documentary Filmed Live At Hellfest 2003 In Syracuse
(2 discs) (released July 13, 2004): Featuring live performances from Anti-Flag, Thursday, The Dillinger Escape Plan, Norma Jean, Lamb of God, Murder By Death, Walls of Jericho, The Bled, Terror, From Autumn to Ashes, CKY, Comeback Kid, My Chemical Romance, Full Blown Chaos, The Locust, Biohazard, Unearth, Bleeding Through, Bouncing Souls and more. Hellfest's final year, the 2004 weekend at Rexplex, Elizabeth, New Jersey was filmed by High Roller Studios to be released on DVD, but the footage was never released publicly. When High Roller Studios ended, their MySpace page (www.myspace.com/highrollerstudios) explained the company's reason for disbanding, adding that the Hellfest DVD would never be released. Unbeknownst to most, the entire 2004 DVD had been edited and was ready for release, however Radiotakeover president Shawn Van Der Poel had failed to negotiate agreements with the bands that would have appeared on the multi-disc set. Director Doug Spangenberg and editor Anderson Bradshaw went on to form a new video production company (Space Monkey Studios, Inc.). Hellfest 2001/2004 Resurrection (July 2013): In the summer of 2013, Doug Spangenberg gave the surviving tapes from Hellfests 2001 and 2004 to hate5six so that the sets could be properly edited and released to the public for free. This long-term project promises to make the "lost" footage available in an ad-free and non-commercial setting.
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