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Informative Press Releases for Travel
Press Release information you can use!
The following information is provided by the travel supplier or its public relations representative. The Traveler's Journal can accept no responsibility for the accuracy or validity of any material in this section.
by Sue Kernaghan
“It’s magic. You walk through the gates and you feel like you’ve stepped into a different time and place – a mini-city of people, food and music from around the world that appears for three days, and then it’s gone, destined to reappear a year later. We call it Brigadoon.”
That’s how Barbara Chirinos, Managing Director of the Vancouver Folk Music Festival, describes the enduring appeal of one of BC’s best-loved summer festivals.
Now drawing its third generation of fans and volunteers to
Named one of the top 10 outdoor events in
The Vancouver Folk Music Festival is just one of a galaxy of events and celebrations taking place in BC this summer. Leading the buzz is July’s inaugural Pemberton Festival, with headliners Coldplay, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Nine Inch Nails, the Tragically Hip, and several dozen other rockers playing in a mountain-fringed meadow just north of Whistler.
Sure to be a hot ticket (snap those tickets up sooner than later), this new event, already fielding comparisons to the Glastonbury Festival, will host 50 bands on two stages; fans can camp on site or hop a festival shuttle to one of Whistler’s boutique hotels.
Big stars, remote mountains…no problem. The folks behind the Merritt Mountain Music Festival have been mixing celebrities and scenery for 16 years. This summer, thousands of country fans will once again flock to this ranching community in BC’s Thompson Okanagan region to hear, among others, a reunited Wynonna and Naomi Judd, Hank Williams Jr., Sugarland, Sara Evans and more.
BC is also a major stop on the summer jazz circuit, with two big urban fests -- the TD Canada Trust Vancouver International Jazz Festival and
These big festivals are the stuff of summer memories, but so too are the dozens of smaller events filling BC’s summer nights. From Aboriginal festivals in the north to Okanagan harvest celebrations, these mini-fests -- almost always in scenic settings -- typically offer homemade food, kids’ entertainment, on-site camping, a mix of touring musicians and local acts. A cross-section of unique offerings span the province including
A festival tour could start in
Also in July, the annual Crabfest in the remote Nisga'a
Vancouver Island has its share of music festivals, starting in mid-July with
In August, music fans move inland to the Kootenay Rockies, where a floating stage, mountain backdrop and small town vibe helped the Kaslo Jazz Etc. Summer Music Festival make the USA Today top ten events list. Blues fans can wind up their summer in the
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