Rise Festival Explained

Rise was a free anti-racism music festival held in London, England, from 1996 to 2008. Originally organised as an anti-racism festival by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), it was revived as such by the former mayor of London, Ken Livingstone.[1] In June 2008, the Greater London Authority, under newly elected mayor Boris Johnson, removed the anti-racist message of the festival.[2] Subsequently, the trade unions UNISON and Unite the Union withdrew their festival funding,[3] [4] and Johnson cancelled the festival in April 2009, blaming lack of sponsorship.[5]

When, in 1996, the festival was set up, it was originally called "Respect". While primarily a music festival, it also worked to encourage trade unions, voluntary groups, charities and community organisations to highlight their work and ideas concerning equality and the promotion of anti-racism.

The original event took part in Finsbury Park and featured artists Chumbawamba, Fun-Da-Mental, Asian Dub Foundation and Incognito. In 1997, the featured musicians were Luciano, Audioweb, the Fun Lovin' Criminals and Dreadzone and the event took place in Victoria Park, Hackney.There was no event between 1998 and 2000, but in May 2000 Ken Livingstone was elected mayor with a manifesto pledge to organise that the anti-racist festival become a yearly event.

The first festival, dubbed "Respect", under Livingstone's tenure, took place in 2001 and attracted around 60,000 people. Since then attendances have been reached around 100,000.[6] After the launch of the political party also called Respect, the festival changed its name to Rise for 2005. After the 7 July 2005 London bombings it was renamed London United, but changed back to just Rise in 2008.

The 2008 festival saw headliner Jimmy Cliff cut off during his set when it overran past the 8:30 pm curfew time, with the sound system switched off halfway through a performance of "Rivers of Babylon", causing him and the band to leave the stage in silence.[7]

In 2010, Rise was given new life as a people's festival named UpRise with the venue again in Finsbury Park, supported by unions such as SERTUC, UNISON, NUT and Unite the Union among others.[8]

List of festivals

External links

References

  1. Web site: 2009-04-08. Boris Johnson scraps multicultural music festival Rise. 2021-04-21. the Guardian. en.
  2. http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/politics/2008/06/i_learned_on_sunday_that.html How the Boris Johnson anti-racist festival row unfolded
  3. http://www.unison.org.uk/asppresspack/pressrelease_view.asp?id=1188 UNISON Withdraws Rise Festival Funding
  4. https://archive.today/20130423201740/http://www.unitetheunion.org.uk/news-article.php?iNewsId=477 Unite to Cease Funding Rise Stage after Mayor's Political Censorship
  5. http://londonist.com/2009/04/rise_festival_falls_to_funding_fail.php Rise Festival Falls To Funding Failure
  6. Web site: UpRise – Festival rises to fill the gap left by Boris. 2021-04-21. Islington Tribune. en-gb.
  7. http://www.virtualfestivals.com/latest/news/5031 Jimmy Cliff was left performing in silence as his headline set ran over the curfew at this year's Rise Festival
  8. Web site: Bartholomew. Emma. 2011-09-27. Rebranded UpRise festival could become a permanent Hackney fixture. 2021-04-21. Hackney Gazette. en-UK.