A look back on 20 years of performances, artists, and behind-the-scenes stories that shaped the music festival.A look back on 20 years of performances, artists, and behind-the-scenes stories that shaped the music festival.A look back on 20 years of performances, artists, and behind-the-scenes stories that shaped the music festival.
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Arcade Fire
- Themselves
- (archive footage)
Frank Black
- Self
- (archive footage)
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Did you know
- TriviaCoachella: 20 Years in the Desert was compiled from over 1.5 petabytes of RAW footage collected since 1999, including several 35mm film scans from the early years of the festival.
Featured review
Fun look back at 20 years of Coachella
"Coachella: 20 Years In the Desert" (2020 release; 103 min.) is a documentary about the history (to date) of one of the earliest and most influential major music festivals in the US, namely Coachella. The movie opens with the 2 1/2 min. whirlwind of big moments that also serves as the movie's trailer. We then go to "Chapter One Origins" as we get to know the guys behind Goldenvoice, the festival's organizers. Goldenvoice got its start in the 80s with mostly punk shows in SoCal. Pearl Jam's 1993 battle with Ticketmaster led them to a polo ground in Indio, CA and Goldenvoice had Pearl Jam and 25,000 fans there in what turned out to be an a-ha moment. After several more years of planning, Coachella opened in 1999, and lost a lot of money ($850K). We then go to Chapter Two The Early Years... At this point we are 15 min. into the film.
Couple of comments: This is the latest documentary from writer-producer-director Chris Perkel, who earlier brought us "Clive Davis: The Soundtrack Of Our Lives". Here , with the full cooperation of the team behind the Coachella festival, he dives into the history of Coachella. "It wasn't obvious that this could work", comments Moby (who performed at the very first Coachella), and that would be the understatement of the year. Located 2 hours east of LA, in the desert (literally), but blessed with picture-perfect weather (unlike many European festivals after which Coachella was patterned). The movie is divided in 5 chapters (the other three being Chapter Three Rise of the Robots, Chapter Four The New Beats, and Chapter Five The Next Generation) and is more or less sequenced chronologically. As the titles of the later chapters indicate, the festival gas evolved quite a bit over the year, from the heydays of indie rock and alternative rock to EDM to hip hip to even outright pop. Perkel does a good job to keep things moving forward, and we get treated to a smorgasbord of classic Coachella moments (including Madonna in the Sahara Tent in 2006 and, even better, Daft Punk's set that same year ("nothing was ever the same after that, and it truly marked the birth of EDM", comments a DJ). Little or no attention is given what impact the ever-growing festival (from 25-30,000 attendants a day in the early years to 50,000 in the late 00s to nowadays about 100,000 EACH DAY) has had on the "fan experience". But in the end, the movie is a good reflection of where Coachella has come from and what now has become. (Of course the 2020 Edition of Coachella has been moved to October as a result of the coronavirus.)
I attended Coachella 5 straight years (2006 through 2010) and while I very much enjoyed my time there, I could also see the signs that (i) indie rock wasn't the future (I really don't care all that much for EDM or hip hop), and (ii) the crowds kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger each year. Even just the difference between 2006 and 2010 was absolutely astounding. Thank you Chris Perkel for this enjoyable look back. Those were indeed the days!
Couple of comments: This is the latest documentary from writer-producer-director Chris Perkel, who earlier brought us "Clive Davis: The Soundtrack Of Our Lives". Here , with the full cooperation of the team behind the Coachella festival, he dives into the history of Coachella. "It wasn't obvious that this could work", comments Moby (who performed at the very first Coachella), and that would be the understatement of the year. Located 2 hours east of LA, in the desert (literally), but blessed with picture-perfect weather (unlike many European festivals after which Coachella was patterned). The movie is divided in 5 chapters (the other three being Chapter Three Rise of the Robots, Chapter Four The New Beats, and Chapter Five The Next Generation) and is more or less sequenced chronologically. As the titles of the later chapters indicate, the festival gas evolved quite a bit over the year, from the heydays of indie rock and alternative rock to EDM to hip hip to even outright pop. Perkel does a good job to keep things moving forward, and we get treated to a smorgasbord of classic Coachella moments (including Madonna in the Sahara Tent in 2006 and, even better, Daft Punk's set that same year ("nothing was ever the same after that, and it truly marked the birth of EDM", comments a DJ). Little or no attention is given what impact the ever-growing festival (from 25-30,000 attendants a day in the early years to 50,000 in the late 00s to nowadays about 100,000 EACH DAY) has had on the "fan experience". But in the end, the movie is a good reflection of where Coachella has come from and what now has become. (Of course the 2020 Edition of Coachella has been moved to October as a result of the coronavirus.)
I attended Coachella 5 straight years (2006 through 2010) and while I very much enjoyed my time there, I could also see the signs that (i) indie rock wasn't the future (I really don't care all that much for EDM or hip hop), and (ii) the crowds kept getting bigger and bigger and bigger each year. Even just the difference between 2006 and 2010 was absolutely astounding. Thank you Chris Perkel for this enjoyable look back. Those were indeed the days!
helpful•21
- paul-allaer
- Apr 10, 2020
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By what name was Coachella: 20 Years in the Desert (2020) officially released in Canada in English?
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