Addressing the UK issue, ESNS head of programme and booker, Robert Meijerink, says he and his team have pivoted to spread their attention outside of England when looking at acts from the UK. “Brexit is a fact of life, but we decided two years ago to strengthen our cooperation with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and that is now paying off thanks to our existing partnerships with PRS For Music and the BBC,” says Meijerink.
Indeed, far from considering fewer British acts for the January event, Meijerink reveals that there were 700 UK applications for showcase slots at next year’s Eurosonic. “We’re going to have about 300 acts performing live during Eurosonic, with about 18 from across the United Kingdom,” he adds. “That compares with 16 from Germany, 13 from France – we are still booking – and 13 acts from Poland, which is our focus country partner. It’s shaping up to be another great year with lots of exciting new talent from everywhere across Europe.”
With such wide-reaching aspirations to find a new generation of headliners, the ESNS database makes for fascinating reading. Thanks to the team who compiles the statistics for ESNS Radar, this year’s results tracked every booking across a network of about 130 festivals around the world, meaning more than 11,400 performance slots can now be analysed, post-festival season.
Delving further into that vast information resource, ESNS Radar also splits out artist bookings outside of their home territories, giving observers at-a-glimpse access to identify the acts who are breaking across borders – another invaluable bonus for festival booking teams.