COLORBEARER OF ATHENS, GEORGIA LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1987
September 30, 2019

Photo Gallery: Five Things We Loved at Wildwood Revival 2019

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Build all the amphitheatres, Athens. But the perfect outdoor venue already exists off Wolfskin Road, at Cloverleaf Farm, a painstakingly preserved pristine Southern property now in its third century of usefulness.

How can you improve upon 27 acres of dance party barns, immaculately maintained gardens, a for-real antebellum mansion and the cozy stage nestled in a pecan grove? Grab your biggest blanket, some glow sticks and post up on the hill. Wildwood Revival, now in its fourth year, produces a flawless event celebrating American roots music, glamorous camping and craft everything.

The weekend was a series of magical moments in an idyllic, Instagrammable wonderland featuring an endless supply of cold Topo Chico and Creature Comforts brews and both Maepole and Café Racer on-site feeding the masses. So, yeah, absolute heaven. Here are five things Flagpole will never forget:

Late Friday night, festival organizers interrupted the Rebirth Brass Band set with a missing child announcement. The somber and scary moment lasted less than three seconds. Ten-year-old Joel and his FC Barcelona jersey were found by the band, in the front row. He wasn’t lost—he was partying. The New Orleans-based, Grammy award winning eight-piece saved the day.

Alt-country founding father Jay Farrar remained stoic, sweating through his cowboy shirt, while his band Son Volt chugged through heavy and humid rock songs peppered with lead guitarist Chris Frame’s effortless licks and utilityman Mark Spencer’s bending notes. They closed the mid-afternoon set in the most perfect professional manner with the certified hit (“Drown”) followed by the ultra-exceptional road trip mixtape ballad (“Windfall”) and a totally badass Rolling Stones cover (“Monkey Man”). The three-song sequence was exactly how to reward an appreciative audience, baking in the sun.

Songwriter Josh Rifkind is a longtime Atlanta music scene stalwart and the executive director of the Songs for Kids Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to connecting children suffering from serious illness with opportunities to be creative through music. He took the stage Saturday afternoon to raise awareness for the cause and perform “Ring of Fire” with young Avery, a student at the Songs for Kids Center in Atlanta. The duo brought down the house. Here’s hoping for a longer time slot next year. Also, you should go online and donate so much money to this amazing movement right now.

Shovels & Rope are everything. “Mississippi Nuthin,” from the 2019 EP I’m Coming Out, is the fuzzed-out, deep-fried, dark af Springsteen-y anthem you didn’t know you were waiting for. Having it blasted at you from the piecemealed wall of lost and found, totally miscellaneous amplifiers that envelope the duo—at dusk in a dusty meadow—is highly recommended.

With apologies to the living institution that is Lucinda Williams, her primal intensity and amazing bandmates and the way they made tiny hairs on every neck tingle when they marched through “Righteously” and stomped through an intense one-song encore (“Joy”): You were amazing, Lucinda, but we’ll never forget the woman Saturday afternoon who, with genuine concern marked with a dash of dismay, asked aloud to no one in particular, “Is this really the line for curly fries?”

Photos, courtesy of Caitlin Webb:

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