Feature / Music
Fest 10th anniversary: Fests 7-9 remembered

Words: Loren • October 25, 2011

Fest 10th anniversary: Fests 7-9 remembered
Fest 10th anniversary: Fests 7-9 remembered

We could find alumni to talk up Fest all they want, but that point of view relies on a sense of familiarity with the city of Gainesville, the layout of the venues, and the local restaurants and hotels.

Consider it a bonus feature, but we've also gotten our hands on the DVD documentary Fested 7.  Here, we offer the perspective of a fan who has yet to make the Gainesville pilgrimmage.

fested_header.jpg

Fested: A Journey to Fest 7 – Directed by Reese Lester
Blue Elephant Media, 2011

I've been wanting to attend The Fest for years now, but I haven't managed to make it out there. Just about any band I can think of that I'd want to see perform plays The Fest nearly every year, with Fest 10 having shaped up to be the best line-up yet. Lets step back to Fest 7 though. Director Reese Lester set out for The Fest's seventh annual blowout with Spanish Gamble (known then as “Dirty Money”) back in 2008 and documented it, with some live footage contributed by National Underground. Fested is less of a “journey to Fest 7,” and more of a stumble through it.

Ultimately there are two different elements to this documentary. There's the the interviews with random people or bands and candid moments. Then there are live performances. We'll talk about the live footage later. First lets touch on the documentation. Going in, I didn't exactly get what I was expecting and that's my fault. I guess I expected there to be more narrative, but most of the off moments are people getting drunk or already drunk. At times it comes off more as a compilation of YouTube videos than a documentary. Fested gains more focus when the bands are interviewed. You get their perception of The Fest, what they love about it, and hearing their stories about past Fests. From the fans' perspective, it gets more of The Fest experience across with things like “Tent City,” where a group of attendants set up tents and camp out rather than pay the price for hotel rooms. It's the kind of thing I was hoping to hear more about and what makes the weekend festival more appealing and fun to me.

The other main focus of the documentary are the bands and their performances. We're not talking about just the primary shows in established venues, but the warehouse and parking lot shows. Most of the recordings look great and feature live footage from Paint It Black, The Lawrence Arms, Dirty Money, The Flatliners, and many more. The sound isn't always great though. Sometimes it sounds too muffled, but it's watching the crowd of sweaty people singing and dancing their hearts out that makes all the footage worth watching. Like Paint it Black's show in a parking lot playing out of their U-Haul. All you can hear are the crowd and the drums until the cops come in and break up the show. That doesn't stop the crowd as they all begin to chant the closing lyrics to the band's track, “Memorial Day” though. Then there's the packed warehouse with OK Pilot, New Mexican Disaster Squad, None More Black, and The Flatliners. They give you this yearning to be apart of it. Like you belong there and nowhere else.

Fested: A Journey to Fest 7, is far from a perfect documentary, but it's at the very least entertaining. It's definitely worth watching for the shows alone. If you feel like watching people get drunk or act foolish, then this is right up your alley. If you get the DVD, you get some extras like a drinking game to play as you watch, a “Stagedives of Fest 7” little featurette, and subtitles so you can sing-along if you don't know the songs already. I'm sure for people who went to Fest 7, this would be perfect to jog their memory and talk about the great time they had. For others who have never been to the festival, it's probably a decent representation of what they'd expect it to be like.

7 out of 10

 

__

Words: Aaron

 

Skip to page View as a single page

Loren • October 25, 2011

Fest 10th anniversary: Fests 7-9 remembered
Fest 10th anniversary: Fests 7-9 remembered

Pages in this feature

  1. Opening page
  2. Fest 7: Graeme Philliskirk of Leatherface
  3. Fest 8: Jason Lubrano of Iron Chic
  4. Fest 9: Mikey Erg
  5. Fest 7 bonus: review of Fested DVD

Related features

Bitters and Distractions

One Question Interviews • July 1, 2026

Travis (Bitters and Distractions – guitar / backup vocals) SPB: It seems you’re mostly releasing singles, as compared to EP/LP. Is there a personal preference or deeper reason why? Travis: You’re correct that we’ve released a significant number of singles over the years. To be more specific, we’ve put out … Read more

Whiplass Records

One Question Interviews • June 30, 2026

Monet (Whiplass Records) SPB: I imagine you’d been thinking about starting this label for a while before it happened. What was the final push or aha! moment that turned it from idea into reality? Monet: Our origin was actually a series of events: The wheels started turning when I decided … Read more

De Kleine Opstand

One Question Interviews • June 29, 2026

Marco (De Kleine Opstand – bass) SPB: A lot of Dutch bands opt to sing in English, you go against the grain by choosing for the Dutch language. What are the pros and cons for this decision? Marco: It just occurred to me that we never actually decided to sing … Read more

Golden Shitters

Music Education

Interviews / Don't Quit Your Day Job • June 23, 2026

There are a lot of misconceptions about the life of a musician. Most musicians have day jobs – and not just to pay the bills. Jobs provide new challenges, personal fulfillment and, yes, some rent or gas money. How an artist spends their time by day will influence the creative … Read more

Punk Under The Sun

Interviews • June 22, 2026

Punk Under the Sun – Interview with Joey Seeman and Chris Potash Some music scenes become legendary — New York, London, Los Angeles — but others almost vanish without a trace. South Florida’s early punk underground is one of those nearly forgotten worlds: sweaty, chaotic clubs that appeared and disappeared … Read more

More from this section

Demos You Want To Check #3

Music / New Kids On The Block • May 8, 2026

The musical landscape is ever changing. New genres are popping up, new hypes burst out of nowhere and die out and new bands present themselves to the world. How on earth are you expected to keep up, right? Well, it never hurts to help! So here we are, your humble … Read more

Guest List: War On Women

Music / The Set List • April 24, 2026

It feels like a lifetime ago when Mitt Romney referenced a "war on women" during the 2012 presidential cycle. A lot has changed, a lot has stayed the same -- but a new politically-charged band formed in the aftermath of that comment, calling themselves War On Women. Now, roughly 14 … Read more

The New York Dolls: Reflections and Legacy

Music • March 30, 2026

I first discovered the New York Dolls in the mid-to-late 1980s, just as I was beginning to stretch the boundaries of my musical journey. Up until then, my exposure to music had mostly come through my parents, aunts, and uncles. They planted the initial seeds, and those seeds quickly grew, … Read more