Saturday, May 15, 2010

Selectman Seeks Sylvan Setting For New Music Festival

 
John Bangert (left) and Ed McManus stand under the giant copper beech tree that guards the entry to the natural amphitheater.  ALAN POLLOCK PHOTO

Selectman Seeks Sylvan Setting For New Music Festival 
by Alan Pollock
            
HARWICH — As part of an effort to get the event back to its hometown roots—and back to nature—this year's Harwich Cranberry Festival will include a new Harwich Music Festival to be held in the natural amphitheater in the woods behind Brooks Park.

 “I was driving by and one day I looked down there,” Selectman Ed McManus said.  To discourage littering and other problems, the highway department had cleared away the thick brush from the area, revealing the natural bowl-shaped clearing just east of Brooks Park.  McManus, the president of the cranberry festival committee, had been working with other volunteers to find a way to introduce a homegrown musical component to the event.  Before long, the pieces started to come together.      
 
McManus was approached by Bob Weiser, a radio host and event producer with the Provincetown-based public radio station WOMR-FM, who was looking for a venue for a musical event.  Weiser, a Harwich resident, said WOMR was looking for an event to coincide with the station's launch of a satellite transmitter in Brewster, which will help expand its market to the rest of Cape Cod.  McManus suggested the Brooks Park site, and they gave it a careful look.
What they found was a natural performance space with great acoustics, close to parking lots, rest rooms, the bike trail and a playground.  The two met with the recreation and youth commission, which has jurisdiction over the site, and police and fire officials.  There are several obstacles to using the site for a public performance space, “nothing insurmountable,” McManus said, but a sizeable electrical service will need to be brought in, and some provision will need to be made for handicap access.  Public safety officials and the rec and youth commission have given preliminary approval, McManus said.

WOMR will pay to erect a stage and a dance floor for its free concert on Sept. 18, and will make the stage available for the new Harwich Music Festival on the following day.  Thanks to WOMR, “We're not using any taxpayer money,” co-organizer John Bangert said.  During its event, the radio station will raise money from the proceeds of a beer and wine bar, which will have professional bartenders and a fenced-in area where the alcohol will be consumed.
The radio station's event will be an excellent test of the amphitheater's suitability for crowds, McManus said.  “We can get a sense of how it works,” he noted.  If the test is successful, the town can consider making more permanent improvements, like installing a wheelchair ramp, but not much else, Bangert said.

 “We want to keep it natural, not overdeveloped,” he said.  The natural space is guarded by a giant copper beech tree, whose trunk bears generations of initials from young adventurers and lovers.  It's a fitting centerpiece of the music festival, McManus said. “It's got its roots in the community,” he said.
           

In the short term, a vehicle will be used to provide wheelchair access to the amphitheater, and people will be encouraged to bring beach blankets or lawn chairs for seating.  The festival committee will also need to obtain the necessary permits for food and beverages to be served there.  

It's a logical step to begin migrating festival activities to Brooks Park, away from the high school site, McManus said.  The town is likely to be building a replacement high school in the years ahead, probably utilizing much of the existing front lawn, where the craft fair is usually held.  

 “It makes sense to build the future of the festival around here,” he said.

The new natural performance space is in keeping with the back-to-basics thrust of this year's cranberry festival, Bangert said.  “It's about more culture, less carnival,” he said.  The professional craft show, which drew dozens of crafters and merchants from a wide geographic area, will be replaced by a show with more local artists and craftsmen.  

“Our goal is to take the 'starving' out of 'starving artists,'” Bangert said.  A strong core of local artists has already emerged, including Paul Lagg, who designed an impressive logo for the event.  Lagg's full-time job is as the GIS coordinator for the town of Chatham.

Even the food concessions will be encouraged to find and use local produce in their offerings, Bangert said. Likewise, the music festival will feature home-grown performers like Paul Pena, Greg Greenway, Carol Chichetto, Sarah Burrill, Kris Larson and David Roth.  The event will also feature The Fireman's Daughter, a Nashville-based folk duo co-starring Catie Flynn of Harwich; Annie Lynch of Annie and the Beekeepers, Emma Dubner of the Ticks, The Elbows, JO & CO and other groups.  It's an opportunity for popular, established performers, as well as up-and-coming local acts, Bangert said.

Details on the Harwich Cranberry Festival's plans will be firmed up over the summer, and information will be posted at  





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