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Langford All Ways Home music fest marks first time back on stage for many acts

MUSIC What: All Ways Home music festival, featuring Jesse Roper, Current Swell, Carmanah, Bedouin Soundclash, Snotty Nose Rez Kids and more Where: Starlight Stadium, 1089 Langford Parkway When: Saturday Sept. 4 and Sunday Sept.

MUSIC

What: All Ways Home music festival, featuring Jesse Roper, Current Swell, Carmanah, Bedouin Soundclash, Snotty Nose Rez Kids and more
Where: Starlight Stadium, 1089 Langford Parkway
When: Saturday Sept. 4 and Sunday Sept. 5
Tickets: from $69 per day to $155 for a weekend pass with field access from

While other large events have become casualties of the pandemic, a local duo is going ahead with a music festival this weekend that will mark the first time on stage in more than a year for many of the performers.

The All Ways Home festival, featuring local and national acts, is headlined by locals Jesse Roper and Current Swell as well as Snotty Nose Rez Kids and Bedouin Soundclash. The two-day event at Langford鈥檚 Starlight Stadium will be the first music festival in the region since the pandemic began.

Stephen Franke, who organized the festival with business partner Morgan Brooker, said the acts are thrilled to perform in front of a live audience again.

鈥淚f the place had a roof, it would blow off. Everyone鈥檚 just incredibly excited,鈥 Franke said.

The festival was inspired by talks with the City of Langford about having Metchosin鈥檚 Jesse Roper play a show. It grew into a weekend event with 13 acts and up to 4,000 people in the audience, said Franke, who with Brooker manages several of the local groups in the lineup through their management company, Blue Heron.

As they started thinking about putting on a show for Roper鈥檚 fans, they realized they could pull off something bigger, if COVID restrictions allowed. The conversation started more than a year ago, when many expected the pandemic would end relatively quickly and live music would soon return, Franke said.

The province鈥檚 announcement that outdoor events of up to 5,000 people would be allowed as of July 1 gave the pair the green light to start planning.

鈥淲e just realized that we had the time, we have the capacity, and it鈥檚 something that people want, so we decided we should pull the trigger and take on this ginormous challenge,鈥 Franke said.

They鈥檙e limiting capacity to ensure enough space for the audience to be distanced, with up to 2,500 people allowed in the field around the stage, and the rest in the bleachers.

Pandemic restrictions limit outdoor events to 5,000 people or 50 per cent of normal operating capacity. The stadium can hold up to 9,000 people between the bleachers and the field, Franke said.

Other events have been cancelled or indefinitely postponed recently after B.C. delayed a move to Step 4 of the reopening plan due to rising COVID-19 case numbers. Franke said he鈥檚 aware there鈥檚 some worry about attending large events, but he said people should feel safe attending the festival, given the amount of space at the stadium.

鈥淧utting on an event to 4,000 people when we are using the field and all the grounds, we think there鈥檚 plenty of room for people to stay apart. No different than going downtown to a patio or something, because there鈥檚 so much room there,鈥 he said.

Masks won鈥檛 be mandatory in the outdoor venue, except in the washrooms, which are indoors. Free masks and sanitation stations will be available throughout the stadium.

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