Sziget was born under the motto „we need a week of being together” and it
did last seven full days back before some deaf old lady in the 13th district
complained that the Main Stage induced ratttling of her china kept her up all
those scorching nights. So it was chopped down to five, to the great dismay of
the general public, then buffed up with days -1 and 0, to the bewilderment of
said public.
These days are basically Sziget gearing into speed, revellers moving in,
some venues still in the final stages of construction, concerts held only in
two-three select locations. Mostly they are tributes to local acts, guaranteed
to attract a crowd that would otherwise not show itself on Sziget. The whole
atmosphere has a bit of a close encounters of the third kind feeling, with the
two species, the sziget-dweller and the alien attentively studying the rites of
the other. „Look ma, grown up men in monkey pajamas sailing an invisible
boat!”.
The concerts are a delight to those who come especially to see them, but
might be a bit befuddling for the foreign scenesters, who tend to slouch in
spritzer bars instead. The four hour long Republic tribute was the archetypal
„minus day” concert- the lead singer of the legendary Hungarian band having
passed away recently, his band colleagues and friends played tribute songs and
paid their respects to Cipő.
I have to admit being bewildered myself at the length- I would assume any
band, even one with an illustrious back catalogue, would find it hard to keep
it interesting for so long, though of course the whole show was helped by the
presence of several Hungarian music greats. The number of those who attended
(very well illustrated by the gigantic queue slitheting its way to public
transport at midnight) should however prove the organisers right and die hard
fans were definitely touched by the moment- several people even bursting into
tears, which is not classic Sziget behaviour for sure but was perfectly
understandable on the night.
Meanwhile in the other areas the atmosphere was somewhat low key but
business as usual, Brits in animal costumes, a few jam packed party spots,
lounging around Africa village, the French beginning their drunken raids around
thier „ghetto” (clearly marked out by an Eiffel tower made of beer cans).
What did shock a few people was the lack of the usual Sziget magazine made
in collaboration with Pesti Esti- the new version looks like a passport and is
a fun idea overall, but no separate daily schedules will leave quite a few
hipsters grumpy. Time to get those fancy pencils out and draw daily schedules
of your own, which might be a beautiful trip down memory lane, though maybe not
in a tent. In 40 degrees. With the Irish next door singing drinking songs.
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