Montag, 19. Juli 2010
Fluff Fest 2010...
Expect updates
Fluff Fest 2009 Report
We left early for Fluff, Rokycany Chech Republic, on Saturday, 25th of July 2009. We
couldnʼt be there on friday, which was very sad because I missed some of the bands I
wanted to check out: Dead Vows, To Kill, Kingdom, just to name a few. And we also
missed the Karaoke night, that wouldʼve been fun too. So nevertheless we left early, at
about 8-9 am, but rather too, too late as it turned out. We couldnʼt anticipate that on the
same day, the whole german population will decide to go on vacation. And bring their cars
along with them... Every highway, every direction, everywhere: jammed. We just drove and
listened to the traffic jam reports: “5 km,14 km here, 27 km there...” Ridiculous.. . Since I
was driving blindly, following my little navigation friend, I didnʼt know when exactly weʼll be
stuck in one of those, so we just hoped for the best. Occasionally we drove through some
smaller ones, 2-3 km, stop and goʼs, but right before Chech, some 150km away from the
border, we knew that the next one will be a big one. And indeed it was. In a desperate last
minute move, I drove out of the highway into some secondary roads and hoped for the
best. The best wasnʼt exactly THE Best, because we lost even more time (or we gained
some, canʼt exactly tell) but nevertheless. So yeah, a long story short, after 7 hours drive
we arrived at 4 p.m. at the location. The fest started at 1 p.m. on saturday. The minute we
got out of the car it began to rain and we had hoped it will not. We brought the rain with us,
because it was the first time it rained this weekend. Oh boy, it was going to rain some
more - we didnʼt know that yet.
Prior to Fluff I kept in touch with my hungarian friends Gabi and Lacy, the twin brothers of
evil from Rivers Run Dry (Hun) , and they told me they were going to be at Fluff this year
with their fellow countryman (they havenʼt missed a Fluff since the beginning). The first
thing to do was to call them and see if they kept their promise and reserved us a spot for
our tent. True friends never let you down, and they didnʼt.
This was my first time at Fluff, 2009 was the 10th year anniversary. The first time I heard
about Fluff, I was about 18-19 years old. This was back in 2000, 2001. Ever since then I
had this urge to visit it, but never had the chance to - It always came down to me not
having the opportunity (too young and without money, courage etc.) or the time (studying
makes it pretty hard to go to festivals in foreign countries at the end of july, the exam time).
Or maybe I didnʼt have the will, maybe I was not determined enough. This year I
was...Well not quite, unfortunately, because we still had to miss the friday show, but I am
going to make up for that next year. And that is a promise.
So it rained and we waited in the car for the rain to stop.
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At the time we arrived Wait in Vain were already playing. It was really shitty that I had to
miss yet another band I wanted to see, but thatʼs it how it goes. I think another good band
was playing their last show in the party ten: Dakhma from Chech. We had to put up our
tent first and find a place to park, because people were rushing into the festivals location.
So the minute the rain stopped we pulled our tent out and started preparing the spot for it.
And the same exact minute it started to rain again, only this time much heavier than
before. We had to be fast because the tent was half ready and the rain was pouring inside.
When we finished we waited in the car for the rain to stop, which was another 5-10
minutes and then decided to check out the location. Wait in Vain had just finished playing
and a crowd of muddy people were coming from the stage area. Probably to change their
soak wet clothes or bring some umbrellas or whatnot. Well the weather was good on us
and this was the last time it rained this night, but it was pretty muddy. Fluff didnʼt become
the Woodstock of the 2009, but it wasnʼt very pleasant nevertheless.
Ok let me explain how the Fest looks like. So you drive to this city, Rokycany (Czech
pronunciation:[ʻrokitsaniʼ], German: Rokitzan), which is near the german border, near the
town of Pilsen and drive up this hill. The city itself is pretty small, Wikipedia says its 15000
people, looked even smaller than that. I always love open air hardcore festivals near small
cities on Weekends, because you always end up seeing all those tattooed weirdos walking
around, buying food, sight seeing or just doing regular stupid stuff and bringing live to
otherwise forsaken places. But Iʼll get to that later. So on that hill there are some
construction workers doing stuff and you can hardly see that there is a detour to the fest
on the left side unless youʼre smart and decide to just follow the same tattooed weirdos we
saw earlier, who will eventually show you the way. There is a small parking space prior to
the fest location and from then on its only mud and tents and toilets and unfortunately
garbage, more on that later. This is actually a working airfield for small private aircrafts so
there is a big hangar right behind the main stage and a huge herbage field. Actually there
are only two stages, the open air stage and the small party tent stage, which holds up to
500-600 people, but I can swear that for some of the bands there were even more inside.
It was ridiculous. The party tent was fun, but there are tons of other stuff that were also
interesting, besides the bands. The first thing to notice is the huge army tent where the
independent movies were shown. They had a schedule with the movies they were showing
on each day, most of which I had already seen, but it was still fun to see them again after
all those years. Then there were the Distros, Merch and Zines. Huge, huge variety of
distros selling everything that you can think of, Vinyls, CDs, Zines, Books, Buttons, TShirts,
Cloth Bags (very popular, dunno why...) just about everything one can imagine to
find at a hardcore show. I think the biggest sell out were those D.I.Y. cloth bags with bands
logos and drawings. Almost every girl had one, and a good amount of the guys too. As far
as I understood, the space at the far back opposite the main stage was deserved for the
merch of the bands that played on the day and the other area was for the Distros. There
was a great amount of Distros and D.I.Y Shops outside the fences, right in front the
entrance and on the sides of the main festival area. The fences kept everything closed and
served as a checkpoint. To summarize it, it was huge for a d.i.y. hardcore fest. Someone
will argue that it is too much, but I am far too old to get into this subject or demurs about
sell outs and such. The distros and shops were always part of the hardcore subculture and
theyʼre doing a good amount of work and devoting a huge amount of their time to this,
traveling all the different places so you have to give them credit for that and there is
absolutely nothing wrong with doing what you love, even for living. There are two things I
forgot to mention. The first is the free books and zines library, which is pretty much a small
tent with tons of zines, which you can borrow, read and then give back. That simple. There
were 2-3 huge piles of those and I read a couple of zines in between bands. I promised I
would send a copy of my zine Sunrise & Sunsets for Fluff next year. This is also the place where I met a friend
of mine from Bulgaria, whom I didnʼt know was going to be at fluff. Actually we met on
stage before Trial, but thats another story altogether. And last but not least, the huge
catering service. All vegan, or if I missed something, at least vegetarian. Besides the
meals, there were pancakes and ice and cakes and beverages and tea and coffee, and
beer, and, and... I think at least about a dozen of things one can choose from. And when I
think of all the restless people cooking for us hungry festival goers, all the people pouring
in beverages, I really felt sorry for them the whole time, especially for the guy on the vegan
soy BBQ.
Food was delicious, the huge queues on the other hand, not! You had to wait for about 30
minutes for the simplest of meals which meant you had to sacrifice a band, or part of their
set, to do so. Pretty shitty and I sure hope they can do something about it as the fest gets
even bigger and bigger. An estimated 2000 attended this yearʼs one and I guess there will
be even more next year. But even though 2000 sounds like a huge number for a hardcore
fest, it really had this familiar feel to it. Everyone was very friendly and cheerful and you
really felt that youʼre amongst a bunch of friends and family even though you only knew a
dozen of them. And even though you had these different types of people gathered
together, sxe, old school youth crew whatever, drunks, punks, crusties, moshers with the
ʻcoolʼ baseball hats etc. it was still very friendly. I always recall something Jim from
Champion and I discussed during the interview I did with them back in 2005. Even if youʼre
on the other side of the world and you meet a guy in a hardcore shirt you could just go to
him/her and say “Hey, I really like that band, whatʼs your name” and itʼs like you were
friends forever. This is what kept me in the hardcore scene for so long and even the fact
that it changed so much over the years is still the predominant feel inside the scene. This
is how I got to know Gabi and Lacy. In the beginning we were just exchanging emails (very
rarely actually) and zines, me doing the old zine and they doing xResistancex, so after
about 5 years of back and fort communication, Trial, Bane Comeback Kid and FC Five
were all going to play in Budapest on the same week so he, without even meeting me
even once, organized a place for me to stay for the whole week. So this is how true
friendships in this scene arise.
Food drinks and distros are cool, but that is not the main point of the fest (to me it isnʼt),
this is just the spice and the main dish are the bands. I will try to recall all the bands we
saw and explain what type of music they play as good as possible, but donʼt get crazy if I
miss some of them. The first band we managed to see was CELESTE from France on the
main stage. They play this chaotic, metalic dark hardcore type of music. Since they are on
Denovali, a german label, you can pretty much get the idea of their music if you know the
label. To check them out go to http://www.myspace.com/unhiverdeplus. They were not bad
live, but I guess nothing special, or it was just too early and we were too hyped of all the
other stuff at the fest. I like their music, donʼt get me wrong, but probably not so much their
live performance. I saw them a couple of months later at Fall of Efrafaʼs last Euro show,
and boy, did they put one hell of a laser-smoke show that night. You can hit it up on
youtube, it was insane. I guess this is a typical non-festival-small show-no-stage type of
band so maybe this is the reason I didn't quite like them at Fluff. So we decided to check
out Outrage from US in the party tent. It was pretty full, as I already explained earlier. A
little too full. There were some circle pits and sing a longs. They play this fast paced “post
old-school straight edge”, I dunno what to call it, style. I never was that good at giving
names and shapes to music, but I guess you got the idea. Angry singing, circle pits, singa-
longs, up-tempo riffs. They come from Massachusetts and I guess this type of hardcore
must be pretty dominant with Bane, Have Heart, Verse etc. being the big names in that
small state. You can check them out here: http://www.myspace.com/outragenb I can
imagine them getting even bigger in the coming years. Next on the main stage were
ZANN, never heard of them, although they came from Germany, probably never played in
my area. I really liked their performance. They are really dark, emotional,melodic, chaotic
at points, with growling singing. Very nice mix and great on stage, I was very positively
surprised. From what I understood they have anarchist background and sing in german.
What was also noticeable was the huge crowd behind the band and on the sides of the
stage. I knew that from the videos on youtube and old fluff videos I had on my computer,
but it was the first time I saw it live. Why were all those people on stage? Well I guess
everybody has their own reasons, being close to the band, show support, friends,
photographers etc. What made this possible is more important. There were no bouncers or
security whatsoever, none, zero, null. Only the organizers and volunteers were helping
keeping the amount of people on stage reasonable, everybody was welcome. Something
which was not always as easy, reference: Trial and Have Heart, more on that later. So
anyways, ZANN were really good, check them out here http://www.myspace.com/zann.
Next, Fall of Efrafa from the UK. A very nice band, with amazing lyrics based on the
fantasy novel Watership Down by Richard Adams, which pretty much tells the story of
a bunch of anthropomorphized rabbits. Efrafa, a warren in the book, is taken by the
band as a metaphor for mankind and modern society in general. A really dark,
misanthropic music. They disbanded in the winter 2009 after releasing their 3rd album
of their trilogy. I must say I was one of the lucky few who attended one of their final
sold out shows and had the opportunity to see them once again live. Fluff is a good
place to try and be on stage and see the band as close as you can so I decided to try
my luck and get on and see if I can shoot some nice pictures and also experience their
live performance up-close. So I did, got some stills that turned out not so bad, but
unfortunately the ISO on the film was too low for the lighting. Shot with a fisheye.
Their performance is very emotional, from what I saw live, they start their sets slow
and use some of the intros from the cds. Great performance, Fall of Efrafa was for
many one of the highlight on saturday. For more info go to http://www.myspace.com/
fallofefrafa or http://www.fallofefrafa.com and check a great video of one of their live
performances. Next were Victims from Sweden, but I didn’t like them at all, although i
used to like this trashy kind of music. That said, I think they had very nice support
from the crowd and probably split the crowd, half of fluff were dancing and the other
half hiding from the rain. They win the contest for the hugest circle pit on a hardcore
show, hands down. There was no one playing in the party tent, we decided to try our
luck and get some food, after all we left at about 8-9 a.m. and it was already 8.30
p.m. The queue was not the longest one, but it still took about 25 minutes if not more
for our turn to come. I can’t remember what we ate, I think something with soy and a
veggie burger, but we ate fast and had little time to line up in front for Trial, the final
band on Saturday. I even tried to get on stage, and although I was too late and there
was a huge crowd gathered there I found a small spot. I just wanted to take some
pictures and get the hell out of there, I don’t like to be on stage that much, prefer to
be down and feel the vibe. There were some people trying to keep the crowd on stage
from demolishing everything but they didn’t quite succeed. The first and last time I
saw Trial was at their epic reunion show in the winter of 2005. It was an amazing
festival, amazing week I spent in Hungary which I will never forget. I really hoped
that their performance will be at least as good and they didn’t disappoint me at all.
They began their set with the Intro from “Are these our lives?” LP, which is always
very powerful to hear live. It is also cool to see people stage-diving to classical music.
The Intro is about minute and a half long and it usually slides into “Reflections”. That
is where all hell brakes lose. People going nuts, stage-diving, singing along, piling up.
I think for the first minutes of the song Greg didn’t get to sing a single word and at
some point even lost his mic in the crowd. Next song was “One Step Away” and the
madness continued. I must admit I am getting pretty old for the intense stage-divings
and just watched the show on the side. One thing that always accompanied Trial’s live
performances were Greg’s speeches and although they were not that long as in
Budapest, and he obviously didn’t prepare them as much as on the reunion shows, he
still used some of the time between songs to address issues. One of the things that
really stroke a chord was when he mentioned a hotline helping raped and abused
women or people in need that some people in USA started sometime ago and asked
the crowd if such thing existed in Chech, and urged them to start one if there wasn’t
any. The words “If there is none, start one” really made me think. We love to talk
about all those things that are wrong, write about them and even if we’re aware of the
problems we sometimes forget that what the world really needs is direct actions.
Direct actions in everything we do. I know that personal choice is also a direct action,
but sometimes there has to be something more to be done... He also addressed the
people that got robbed the night before saturday, something ZANN talked about
earlier that day, something I was not aware of at the moment. Apparently some tents
got robbed and there was an attempt at stealing a car. I am not quite sure if it was
the locals or the people at the fest, I really can’t and don’t want to imagine if it’s the
later, but that was not nice at all, especially, because on the next night a tent of our
friends from hungary, some 5 meters away from ours, also got robbed. If someone
from the organizers reads this, I would suggest that they fence the whole place and
not only the stage area and make some checkpoints as exits, so if next year someone
gets robbed, then we can surely do the math and see that it was someone from the
fest doing it. I can’t imagine people going over fences without notice, although a
possibility. But at least a fence would slow them down and make them think twice,
before trying it. Either way if it turns out that hardcore kids are stealing from other
hardcore kids at a festival like Fluff, I would surely have to reconsider the foundations
in the scene I talked about earlier. So anyways, Trial’s show was very nice, only
problem was the constantly torn up cable. They had to change 3 microphone cables,
because shit was too intense and people were ripping them all the time. At some point
the sound guy, obviously very angry, told Greg, that he gives him one last spare
cable. Trial asked for no encores as they had only this set prepared and suggested
that we all go to the D.I.S.C.O. tent right after the show instead. And so we did. I
think they played War By Other Means last and as expected it was 200 people on
stage. If you don’t believe me, go hit youtube and check it out for yourselves. A truly
passionate performance.
We went at the party tent right after Trial, but I guess it was too early and there were
hardly people inside. We were too exhausted from the long drive and the whole
tension so we decided to go to bed and save our strengths for the second day. There
was an OPEN AIR CINEMA scheduled a little later, and even some bands playing the
arty tent, but we missed that. I am not even sure if it took place at all, because it
started to rain or rather pour again. It’s really sad that we missed so much of
saturday, but we were too damn tired and couldn’t stand up anymore
I woke up pretty early on sunday, about 7-8 am and I don’t know why. I really
wanted to sleep some more, but that routine I was in has set my biological clock to 8
am. That wasn’t all too bad because I found time to read Evasion, a book I bought the
day before. I remember reading it a long time ago, along with the other CrimethInc.
stuff like Days of War, Nights of Love and Inside Front, but never got to the end of it. It
was fun to read it once again after all those years. I remember how i read that book
in my late teenage years and thinking and questioning the topics of the book. I really
admired CrimethInc. for what they were doing at that time, and I guess I still am
today. I loved Catharsis and when I first saw them live it was an amazing experience.
This was one of the first foreign bands to come and play to Bulgaria, and such an
influential band it was. At that time, the dawn of the new millennium, mostly bands
like Endstand, Catharsis, Children of Fall and the likes came and dared to play in our
god forsaken place. No borders, no authorities stopped them from doing so. Truly
great bands, musically, lyrically and inspirationally. So I took the time and read
through the book. A book that makes me think of how my life could’ve turned out,
and why it turned out to be the way it is now. Little by little did all the hungarian
friends started getting up and getting ready to go to the artificial lake, aka swimming
pool in Rokycany. This was also the time when some of them found out that they got
robbed, only money taken: cameras, ipods and other stuff left untouched. Pretty
weird. But before that, all the kids had to go and eat something. And this is when the
weird factor comes into place. Imagine this little ghost village like town, filled up with
all those 2000 hungry tattooed weirdos I told you about earlier? Now imagine that
same bunch going on a crusade for food, in their thousands. Amazing! Everywhere
you went, a shop, a supermarket, a restaurant, every place filled up. The funny thing
was, this 15000 people small town had at least about 5-6 big, major foreign , mostly
german, supermarkets. All opened on sundays. And mostly all of them gathered at
about 50 m from each other. Insane! I don’t know if this is normal on all sundays, but
on this particular sunday you could hardly see any locals, or at least we didn’t see
any. In front of all the supermarkets there were huge crowds of people hanging out,
eating, chatting, whatever-hanging-out and there were no shops opened. No
restaurants opened, except for one, which was, yes, full to the top. Imagine the
opportunity those locals missed, when they decided that 2000 tourists was not
enough to have their shops opened on a single sunday in the year. The next funny
thing was that the cash machines in the centre began to go flat broke. We could
hardly find one with cash in it for a while. So we went to the supermarket and bought
some food with the small amounts of Korunas that we had and had breakfast with the
other hungarian guys. After that, they went to the lake. As it turned out later, most of
the people from the fest did that too. There are some videos on the tube, fluff fest
invading the Lake of Rokycany. Well, I come from a city situated on a sea, so small
artificial lakes don’t mean that much to me, so we decided to spend our time more
reasonably and have some sightseeing around Rokycany and see what the town looks
like. The only place I’ve been to in Chech was Prague, so I wanted to see how a little
province town looks like. Well, I must say it was pretty neat, I liked some of the
architecture, the church, the small chapel and some of the buildings on the main
square and the town hall. The city is a pretty mix of Aristocratic Baroque like (in a
way) buildings, small village houses, which reminded me awful lot the village houses
that we have back in Bulgaria. They looked almost the same, but I must say a little
preppier, nice and neat. I think that the people of Rokycany are not exactly the
richest ones, from my impressions, but they kept their houses very orderly. Well,
there was also a part of the city where you can see that Chech, or rather
Chechoslovakia, was under a Communist regime for a while, the 1970’s style houses,
the old rusty railway station, which was probably built by the same guy that did the
hotel on the main square. This is something that also reminded me of Bulgaria, but at
least the Chechs kept some of their architecture intact.
Rokycany was pretty small, so after finding no restaurants and sightseeing
everything that was to be sightsee-ed, we decided to check out Plzeň. Plzeň, as you
can surely read on wikipedia, is a city in western Bohemia, very near to the german border,
the fourth most populous city in Chech with about 170 000 people. Not that much, but still
the fourth in Chech. It is about 20km west of Rokycany. I didnʼt know what to expect. I
have heard of Pilsener, the beer, I knew that Skoda had factories there, but that pretty
much was it. I was surprised when we pulled out and walked onto the main square. Pilsen
started to remind me a little of Prague, it was a really nice city and if I didnʼt know I was in
Pilsen and the city had only under 200 000 people population, I surely couldʼve mistaken it
for Prague or at least wouldʼve thought that it is much bigger than that. I was really
impressed by the architecture and the buildings and how everything was organized. We
didnʼt have much time for Pilsen, as we had to go back to Rokycany for the show, but it
was very relaxing to check out the city and even relax in the sun. Yes, the weather was
merciful on us and it was a lovely afternoon to walk in a foreign place and explore.
Something I always loved.
We rushed to go back to Fluff, because saturday was great, but sunday had some great
bands lined up waiting for us. I was really excited about Have Heart. Theyʼre a truly
amazing band and whatʼs best, they are very honest in what they do. I had the chance to
see them twice already and do an interview with Pat Flynn, their singer, which you can
read here (soon). I am sure that, when you read those lines, you will see what I have meant by
honest and amazing. I think we got there just on time to see Shipwreck A.D. As it turned
out they were on tour with Have Heart and Rise and Fall. So other interesting thing is the
singer mentions the fact that this is their last show in Europe and that they are disbanding.
I am not a huge fan of theirs, but they play nice. They play fast and hard, have a
somewhat similar style with Have Heart, being from Boston is normal I guess. They have
some mosh and down beat parts and some really well thought out lyrics as well. There
werenʼt many people in front of the stage, but the band gave everything on their last
european tour and show. What I was just wondering the whole time is how the guitarist,
wearing a hat and a jacket and long jeans, was not sweating like an animal in the
afternoon heat, but hey, who am I to judge other people...So next thing they mention is that
this is going to be Have Hearts last show in Europe also. I didnʼt see that coming. I am not
quite sure when they decided that, couldʼve been right on that tour, but they never
mentioned it anywhere or I missed it. I wasnʼt aware and this came as a big surprise. I
really liked the band, because it brought something fresh into the scene. I donʼt know what
the other kids found in it, but to me, it was always about their sincerity. I am 28 years old
now, and as I kid I never thought I would see a band grow in the scene, a band which I will
come to like very much and then disband in the same lifespan. I first noticed the band
around 2004 after their debut EP “What Counts”, but I got into them when their full-length
“The Things We Carry” came out. Their brake up was a real blow and another reason for
me to await their performance even more eagerly. I have to mention that I noticed they
didnʼt have merch table, but I thought it was because they had sold out everything. I guess
it was because they didnʼt want to be out, probably knowing what will happen when kids
start asking questions etc. Either way, they didnʼt have merch and this was kind of
surprising, as they were sort of headlining on sunday, but that also gives a perspective
about the band and their emotions and motivations for being a band.
Shipwreck A.D. finished their set and it was time for Death is Not Glamourous from Oslo,
Norway on the main stage and Mondo Gecko from Israel inside the small tent. We
checked out both bands, but they were not exactly what I expected so we hang out at the
Distros and the Library area. We met with Mitko once again, asked him about his long and
exhausting journey from Bulgaria. He told us that he used some trains and buses and that
it was a pretty long ride. It reminded me how I used to travel for 40-50 hours just to see
some bands, because unfortunately a European tour for most of them, or their booking
agencies back then, excluded anything east of Hungary. But that is another story all
together. He also told us he and some other people were preparing a fluff 2009 zine, in
which everybody could contribute with something: a poem, column, anything, and then be
printed out and given for free at the end of the fest, which was a cool idea.
We went to check out the other bands, and as far as I can remember, next on the main
stage were Rise and Fall from Belgium. I really liked them from the first time I saw them
few years ago. I think it was on their tour with Bane, and I have seen them 2-3 times ever
since. I enjoyed their performance, but they are really great when in a small club. I kind of
missed that feeling seeing them on a huge open air stage. But theyʼre always an amazing
band live. The next two bands were An Albatross from the States and Ratos de Porao from
Brazil. An Albatross is a pretty wacky bunch of, from what they seemed on stage, total
lunatics. There are 5 of them: guitar, bass drums, vocals and some organ synthesizers.
Music is total, grind chaos, the singer makes the most ridiculous Jim Morrison meets Brian
D (Catharsis) poses, climbs everywhere he can find and makes even more ridiculous
poses at the same time. All in a fun matter I guess. Ratos de Porao is an old trash,
crossover band from Brazil. They have been around for about 30 years, but have never
caught my attention. I didnʼt like them at all so we went to check out and meet with Gabi,
Lacy and the other Hungarians. They were all hanging out in the distro area. We talked
about the fest, how we saw fluff in those two days and he told me how this is his 10 year in
a row. He has been there since the beginning, each and every year. From what I
understood, it used to be a pretty small fest, 150-200 people the most, so there were
complains about it getting too huge and mainstream. I canʼt disagree more. I mean, I donʼt
know how that fest used to be, but what I saw was a very well organized festival, with
some positive and cheerfully tempered people. Gabi also told me a funny Fluff story, about
him and his brother who used to share the same veggie burger, because they were flat
broke and hitchhiked just to be at the festival. Which we of course kind of laughed about,
but I guess it wasnʼt very funny at that time. Those were the times:)
Since I had to be back home early on the next morning and we had another 700 km of
driving ahead of us, we had to leave right after the last band so we took the chance to say
goodbye to each other, and line up for Have Heart. I was very eager to see them for the
last time. I donʼt know what this band meant to those kids that sing along so passionately,
but I sure know what this band meant to me. To me this band was a breath of fresh air in a
scene that was suffocating of bullshit, of dishonest bands coming off the conveyer line,
sounding the same and donʼt meaning a word they write about. Have Heart, and their
singer, meant every line, because it was all personal. Wether it will be about the scene,
sxe, or family, love relations, you could just see that it strikes a chord every time he sings
each line. It was and still is pretty strange to see a man stand up on that stage and sing
words so personal to him, about him, about his father and see the crowd singing back. Is
it really meaning something to them, and are they portraying themselves into these songs,
or are they just singing along for the sake of it? Did this band make them open up their
hearts and those lines theyʼre singing along so passionately, makes them free some
feelings that were being deeply hidden inside of them? This is one of the main topics in
that very interview with Have Heart, so if you have a moment check it out.
Have Heart were playing their last show in Europe ever and they were about to make a
mark of it. As far as I can remember they started their set with “The Same Son” and
“Bostons”, songs reflecting on the topics I just mentioned. The crowd went absolutely
insane and I must admit, there were stage dives from left to right, from back to front and I
think it was even more intense than the night before, when Trial hit the stage at the same
time. In between songs, Pat was reflecting on the past, thanking bands like Bane and Rise
and Fall, Shipwreck A.D. Verse, for being with them and helping them become what they
are now, pushing it to the limits of their ability. He also expressed his feelings about being
in the band for the last 7 years, touring the world twice and you could really feel how
sincere he was about all of this. When you think about it, this is the best time to call it quits.
I mean what more can a hardcore band want - they toured the whole world, twice! At some
point or another theyʼre bound to start repeating themselves and the best time for breaking
up is when youʼre on the top. Few bands caught the right moment, but I guess Have Heart
were dead-on. They asked for no encores and promised to be making no reunions,
something only time will tell. “Watch me Rise” was their final song in Europe and again
hundreds of bodies stormed the stage and built a huge pile-on. As the song goes, “Iʼd
rather die on my feet than live on my knees”, an amazing end to an amazing band, playing
their last show on the (US?) Edge Day, 18 October 2009.
We had to leave right after so we missed the Goodbye afterparty. We didn’t leave with
mixed feelings though, it was a very nice fest and although there were things I
disliked (the garbage and the robbery part) Fluff was an amazing fest. I can really
compare it to the Louvre or the great night of museums in Amsterdam (n8.nl). So what has
Fluff, a small hardcore fest in Europe so common with the “Grand Louvre”, the worlds most
popular national museum, you might ask? Or with some museums in Amsterdam for that
matter? Well itʼs simple, imagine you only have a sunday morning to check all of the louvre
and you must check everything at the same time, with thousands of tourists getting in your
way on the first sunday of the month, when admission is free. Forget it, it is impossible!
You need at least a day just to walk this place without stopping. Or imagine you have
about 7 hours to check out 42 museums and their special, amazing, one of a time, only to
see once in a year, scheduled programs with tens of thousands other museum lovers in a
crazy city like Amsterdam? No chance! The same it is with Fluff, because there are so
much things going on at the same time, so many people there, so many friends, you just
canʼt have enough of it, but you really want to. Should I see this band, or should I see that
one, should I watch a movie, should I read a book, a zine, check out the distros, the merch
tables, should I eat a delicious veggie burger with ice cream and a pancake, but sacrifice a
band because there are 100 people on the queue? There is always something going on at
fluff and there is always something that you might miss. But that is what makes it so
special. Of course the garbage that people leave behind them is nothing special and I
really canʼt understand where those idiots come from. I thought that hardcore thought them
something, but I guess I was wrong and even on a fest like this you can find such idiots. I
am not worshipping the festival, I am just saying that Fluff had this history of being political
and still is and people spreading different messages like environmentalists, anarchists,
anti-nazis etc. and yet, at the same time a huge pile of garbage is left over. People
smoking and throwing their cigarette leftovers on the ground, just makes me wonder what
theyʼre doing there in the first place. So if we assume that nothing is perfect in this world,
Fluff Fest is as perfect as it can be and I am looking forward to being there next year,
Fluff Fest 2010 here we come. It will be a blast, for sure!


