Lowestoft to see in Midsummer Day’s first light with arts festival

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"Lowestoft Celebrates Midsummer Day with First Light Arts Festival"

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Lowestoft, a seaside town in Suffolk, is set to celebrate Midsummer Day with the First Light festival, a vibrant arts event that has grown in popularity over the past five years. This year, the festival is expected to draw around 40,000 attendees who will engage in a variety of activities designed to celebrate the summer solstice. The festival will kick off with a night of dancing in the picturesque sand dunes, culminating in the communal experience of witnessing the dawn as the sun rises over the horizon. The lineup includes musical performances from headliners such as Nubiyan Twist, alongside spoken-word sessions featuring poet Jackie Kay. Attendees can also look forward to unique experiences like silent discos and soothing sound baths, creating a diverse atmosphere that caters to different tastes. As night falls, the festivities will shift indoors, offering a club night hosted by Horse Meat Disco, along with more serene musical offerings in a local church, ensuring that the celebration continues throughout the night and into the following day.

The First Light festival emerged from a regeneration initiative aimed at revitalizing Lowestoft and its community. Wayne Hemingway, a designer and co-founder of Red or Dead, played a pivotal role in this project. He recalls a conversation that sparked the idea for the festival, where someone expressed the special feeling of being in the most easterly town in Britain at dawn on Midsummer Day. This sentiment resonated deeply, prompting the decision to host a large celebration on the town's expansive beaches. Engaging the local community has been a crucial aspect of the festival's success, with participation from local musicians, schools, and choirs. Initially, the town's youth were skeptical of the festival's musical direction, but over the years, they have embraced the experience, leading to a growing sense of community involvement. As the festival continues to evolve, it fosters connections among residents and visitors alike, celebrating the unique charm of Lowestoft on this significant day of the year.

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What better way could there be to mark midsummer than staying up all night dancing in the sand dunes and greeting the sun at dawn in Britain’s most easterly town?

This is how locals and visitors to Lowestoft in Suffolk will be spending the solstice atFirst Light, a free arts festival now in its fifth year, which runs for just over 24 hours, with a few brief breaks in the programming for sleep.

About 40,000 people are expected at the event, which will feature an eclectic array of attractions, from the musical headliners Nubiyan Twist and spoken-word events with the poetJackie Kayto silent discos and sound baths dotted around the sands. As night falls, the action will transfer indoors with a hedonistic club night fromHorse Meat Discoand more ambient musical offerings in a church.

The solstice festival came out of a regeneration project aiming to revive the fortunes of the seaside town, led by the designer and Red or Dead co-founder Wayne Hemingway.

Hemingway recalls a meeting in which “someone said their favourite thing was to go down to the beach on Midsummer Day and be there at around 3.50am for the first light in the morning”.

“We said: ‘That sounds lovely but why does it mean so much here?’ The person responded: ‘It’s Britain’s most easterly town. So that means I’m getting the first light to hit Britain on Midsummer Day, and it feels mystical and like something special is happening to me,’” Hemingway said.

Throwing a big party on the town’s vast, sandy beaches seemed the ideal way to celebrate this, and for Hemingway one of the most important elements has been engaging the community, with local musicians, schools and choirs all performing.

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The town’s teenagers were initially dubious of the festival’s Balearic vibe. “They were a bit disruptive,” says Hemingway, “because they’d not heard this kind of music – they were more into house [music]. The next year, the same lot came back and said: ‘Actually, we like this music, we’ve got into it … can we help you clear up after?’ Every year they come back and help. They’re about 18 now and one of them is DJing.”

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Source: The Guardian