Both Veld & FVDED Mark Change For Canada's Dance Music Festival Circuit

By Ryan Hayes

With the recent release of the Veld's 2020 lineup an official shift has begun within the Canadian festival landscape. This year Veld will be helmed by four powerhouse dance music artists; Armin Van Buuren, Illenium, Marshmello, & Martin Garrix. This slate of headliners marks the first time that Veld has not had a major rap act gracing the top of their roster since 2015 when the festival was still, for all intents and purposes, a dedicated EDM festival; the 2015 lineup did present patrons with two rap acts, A$AP Rocky and I Love Makonnen.

In the four years that followed (2016-2019) Veld became a full on hybrid festival riding the wave of rap and hip-hops integration in to the world of dance music, in an attempt to feel fresh and relevant. During this time period festival headliners included;  Travis Scott, Future, Migos, and most recently Cardi B.

However, it takes more than a few big names to make a festival a true hybrid. 2020 marks Veld's lowest percentage of rap/hip-hop acts since 2016; over a 10% drop in non-EDM performers when compared to the 2019 iteration. Currently under 20% of the festivals scheduled talent is drawn from outside of the realm of EDM.

Outside of Veld, in the Canadian festival circuit as a whole, there has been a reshuffling of dance music talent.  House music leaning acts continue to increase their presence while EDM artists who focus more heavily on integrating rap in to their sets have begun to wane.  This shift can be seen on top of the diminishing power of rap and hip-hop artists, both as a result, and a contributing factor, to the continued evolution of the festival landscape.

The major question now is, will the 2020 festival season be more successful than 2019—and if it is, does that mark the end of the major push for hybrid festivals?

Coupled with the evolution away from rap integration is the deconstruction of the headliners reign of power. This year lineups are bigger than ever—Veld's 2020 lineup is, by far, it's largest offering to date in terms of pure numbers. Within the festival circuit there is a trend away from spending all your money on headliners, and through these means focusing on a really flushed out middle tier of talented dance music artists.

Nowhere is the shift away from rap and towards an EDM heavy mid tier more apparent than BC's FVDED in the Park.  This year FVDED's  heavy hitters (outside of their three headliners) include; Alison Wonderland, Alesso, Black Tiger Sex Machine, Dave, and Gorgon City. Four of the aforementioned acts are EDM artists, and that is a major shift compared to 2019 when three out of five of the festivals largest second tier artists were rappers, and one of two EDM artists had strong hip-hop underpinnings; Tory Lanez, French Montana, Louis The Child, RL Grime, 6lack.

FVDED also supports Veld's move away from a hybrid focused event. Although FVDED has roughly the same amount of rap/hip-hop acts as it always has, the 2020 iteration marks the events most EDM artists since 2017; and the first time the festival has had a dance music headliner on each night since Jack U and Zedd headlined in 2016.

Both Veld and FVDED stand as strong evidence that 2020 marks a turning point. As EDM continues to drift out of the pop-culture ethos the fans who have stuck with the genre are evolving, and finding their own particular niche soundscape. Where this road will ultimately lead is unclear—however—this year seems to be proving pivotal in the shift towards more dance music centric events. Escapade, the dance music diehard, sold out in days, Veld dropped it's rap headliners, and FVDED refocused it's budget on dance music.

Escapade proves itself again with record sell out

By Ryan Hayes

In 2019 Escapade tapped in to something that Canadian dance music festivals had been striving for, to avail, for years—especially during the rap hybrid era. The festival managed to curate a diverse, generation spanning, top tier lineup packed with nothing but pure dance music.

In a April 2019 article entitled, Who Reigns Supreme in the Canadian Dance Festival Circuit, we had this to say about Escapade:

“...it is impossible to ignore the power and diversity of Escapade's lineup—easily the closest a Canadian dance music event can come to achieving those Ultra/EDC feels.”

The above statement speaks to the only thing that should matter to a true dance music fan—the lineup.

With curated stages (Deadbeats, House Party, & Ferry Corsten's Unity), unique back-to-back sets (Felix Cartal B2B Frank Walker, & Chris Lorenzo B2B Jack Beats), and artists spanning the full spectrum of dance music; Escapade embodied a complete experience that few festivals can achieve within Canada's comparatively smaller market.

Building on the good will they created last year during their tenth anniversary, Escapade has returned for it's eleventh year with a record setting sell out—and a modern forward thinking lineup that builds off of 2019's legacy.

We reached out to Escapade for comment, and Alex Primeau—one of the events talent buyer's—had this to say about their forty eight hour sell out;

“After last year's ten year anniversary sell out we knew we had to follow that up with a bang! We really focused on producing a lineup that would put the spotlight on Escapade and on the city of Ottawa...and we believe we achieved that. Even with a 25% increase in capacity, Escapade sold out in record time; less than two days after we announced our lineup. And we are very excited and proud of that"

This year continues to build off of last year's success by focusing on an absolutely stacked lineup of supporting acts. Dance music has evolved to the point that an entire mainstream festival can no longer be held up by the might of a single mammoth headliner. Luckily for Escapade fans their lineup offers a vast array of talented artists all with die-hard followings and the ability to hold down headlining slots in larger markets—GRiZ, Don Diablo, Gareth Emery, NGHTMRE, & Seven Lions...all represent the pinnacle of their respective genres. And that barely scratches the surface; as the volatile festival landscape continues to shift within Canada Escapade now represents pure dance music—and fans have taken notice.

Congratulations Escapade!