The North East Art Rock Festival, or NEARfest for short, was a multi-day event celebrating the resurgence of progressive and eclectic music in the United States and around the world. The event was held annually in early summer in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, approximately one hour north of Philadelphia and less than two hours west of New York City. The festival was founded in the spring of 1998 by Robert LaDuca and Chad Hutchinson, with the first event occurring in 1999. NEARfest quickly grew to become "the most prestigious progressive music festival in the world."
On October 17, 2011, founders Hutchinson and LaDuca, and production manager Kevin Feeley announced that the final edition of the festival, entitled NEARfest Apocalypse, would take place on the weekend of June 22, 23, and 24, 2012 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.[1] The lineup for NEARfest Apocalypse was announced live on the long-running Gagliarchives Radio Program on Saturday, October 29, 2011.[2] On May 24, 2012, it was announced[3] that Eloy had to cancel due to medical issues. On May 29, 2012, it was revealed that U.K. would take their place as the Sunday night headliner.
The May 2008 issue of SPIN Magazine listed NEARfest as one of the top 72 festivals in the United States.
NEARfest was operated as a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. The name "NEARfest" is a registered trademark held by co-founder Chad Hutchinson.
NEARfest was held in Baker Hall, at the Zoellner Arts Center which is located on the campus of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania (2000–2001, 2004–2012). Baker Hall has a capacity of 1,002 seats in acoustically superior conditions. However, in its inaugural year, NEARfest was held in Foy Hall at Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania which has a capacity of 428 seats. In 2002 and 2003, NEARfest was held in Trenton, New Jersey at the Patriots Theater in the Trenton War Memorial, which has a capacity of 1,850 seats. All NEARfests were complete sellouts, outside of the 2011 cancellation.
In 2008, the festival celebrated its 10th anniversary with NEARfest X and marked the last event organized by Hutchinson and LaDuca. NEARfest and New Jersey ProgHouse veterans Jim Robinson, Ray Loboda and Kevin Feeley were their successors.
On March 25, 2011, due to insufficient ticket sales, the management announced that 2011 edition had been cancelled.
On October 13, 2011, Hutchinson and LaDuca returned to the helm and, along with Feeley, announced that NEARfest would return in 2012.[4] Additionally, on October 17, 2011, a subsequent announcement indicated that NEARfest Apocalypse, held the weekend of June 22, 23, and 24th, 2012, would be the final edition of the festival.
NEARfest Apocalypse (2012)
Day 0: Aranis, Van der Graaf Generator
Day 1: Helmet of Gnats, Twelfth Night, Änglagård, Renaissance
Day 2: Gösta Berlings Saga, Il Tempio delle Clessidre, Mike Keneally Band, U.K.
NEARfest 2011
(cancelled)
NEARfest 2010
Day 0: Riverside, Steve Hackett
Day 1: Astra, Forgas Band Phenomena, Iona, Three Friends
Day 2: Moraine, Pineapple Thief, The Enid, Eddie Jobson's Ultimate Zero Project
NEARfest 2009
Day 0: Van der Graaf Generator, Steve Hillage Band
Day 1: Cabezas de Cera, Oblivion Sun, D.F.A., Gong
Day 2: Quantum Fantay, Beardfish, Trettioåriga Kriget, PFM
NEARfest X (2008)
Day 0: Synergy, Fish
Day 1: Koenji Hyakkei, Discipline, Peter Hammill, Liquid Tension Experiment
Day 2: Mörglbl, Radio Massacre International, echolyn, Banco del Mutuo Soccorso
NEARfest 2007
Day 1: IZZ, NeBeLNeST, Bob Drake, Magenta, Hawkwind
Day 2: Indukti, La Maschera di Cera, Robert Rich, Pure Reason Revolution, Magma
Progressive Arts Preshow: Allan Holdsworth, Secret Oyster, One Shot
NEARfest 2006
Day 1: KBB, Riverside, Richard Leo Johnson, FM, Ozric Tentacles
Day 2: Guapo, Michael Manring, Ange, Niacin, Keith Emerson
Progressive Arts Preshow: Hatfield and the North, The Tony Levin Band
NEARfest 2005
Day 1: Wobbler, Frogg Cafe, Steve Roach, Present, IQ
Day 2: Knight Area, The Muffins, Matthew Parmenter, Kenso, Le Orme
Progressive Arts Preshow: PFM, Proto-Kaw
NEARfest 2004
Day 1: Yezda Urfa, Pallas, Richard Pinhas, Mike Keneally Band, Univers Zero
Day 2: Hidria Spacefolk, Metamorfosi, Sean Malone, Planet X, Strawbs
Progressive Arts Preshow: The Musical Box
NEARfest 2003
Day 1: High Wheel, Alamaailman Vasarat, Tunnels, The Flower Kings, Magma
Day 2: Sleepytime Gorilla Museum, Glass Hammer, Kraan, Änglagård, Camel
The Laser's Edge/Cuneiform Records Preshow: Miriodor, Woodenhead, IZZ
NEARfest 2002
Day 1: La Torre dell'Alchimista, Miriodor, Isildurs Bane, echolyn, Nektar
Day 2: Spaced Out, Gerard, Enchant, Caravan, Steve Hackett
The Laser's Edge/Cuneiform Records Preshow: McGill/Manring/Stevens, Doctor Nerve, Dysrhythmia
NEARfest 2001
Day 1: Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, Under the Sun, White Willow, Deus Ex Machina, Porcupine Tree
Day 2: The Underground Railroad, Djam Karet, California Guitar Trio with Tony Levin, After Crying, Banco del Mutuo Soccorso
Independent pre-show: Land of Chocolate, The Red Masque, Electric Sheepdog, Wine of Nails
NEARfest 2000
Day 1: North Star, D.F.A., Iluvatar, Anekdoten, Happy the Man
Day 2: Nexus, Thinking Plague, Il Balletto di Bronzo, Pär Lindh Project, Transatlantic
Official pre-show: echolyn, Priam
NEARfest 1999
Day 1: Alaska, Scott McGill's Hand Farm, Larry Fast, Mastermind, IQ
Day 2: Nathan Mahl, Ice Age, Crucible, Solaris, Spock's Beard
(Setlists and personnel can be found on the NEARfest Facebook page.)
From 2001 to 2008, the ever-changing festival logo was designed by British artist Roger Dean, famous for his work with Yes and Asia. Starting in 2009, Mark Wilkinson (Marillion and Fish album covers) took over the logo duties for the show. For the final edition of the festival in 2012, NEARfest Apocalypse, both Roger Dean and Mark Wilkinson provided artwork. Both artists also attended the show.
Prior to Roger's and Mark's involvement, there were two other logos for the show. The NEARfest 2000 logo was designed by Paul Whitehead, who is known for his album artwork for Van der Graaf Generator, Genesis, and Italian prog-rock band Le Orme. The inaugural NEARfest logo was designed by co-founder Chad Hutchinson in 1999.
In addition to Roger Dean and Mark Wilkinson, Annie Haslam of Renaissance has attended several NEARfests to display her oil paintings. Annie was in attendance at NEARfest 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2012.
NEARfest Records was launched in 2003 to release select live performances from NEARfest. The one and only compilation DVD, "NEARfest 2005: Rising to the Surface," was released on April 10, 2007. Other releases include live CDs of Steve Hackett, Djam Karet, Nathan Mahl, Thinking Plague, Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, Glass Hammer, Steve Roach, Pure Reason Revolution (out of print) and Hidria Spacefolk (out of print). NEARfest Records officially ceased operations in January 2017.
A number of artists have officially released their NEARfest performances on CD and/or DVD. Below is a comprehensive list by festival year. Availability may vary.
NEARfest 1999
NEARfest 2000
NEARfest 2001
NEARfest 2002
NEARfest 2003
NEARfest 2004
NEARfest 2005
NEARfest 2006
NEARfest 2007
NEARfest X (2008)
NEARfest 2009
NEARfest 2010
NEARfest Apocalypse (2012)