Heavy Montréal
This article needs to be updated.(March 2018) |
Heavy Montréal | |
---|---|
Dates | 27 & 28 July (2019 dates) |
Location(s) | Parc Jean-Drapeau, Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Years active | 2008, 2010–2016, 2018-2019 |
Website | Official website |
Heavy Montréal (stylized as Heavy MONTRÉAL, formerly known as Heavy MTL) is a two-day, summer heavy metal and hard rock music festival held annually at Parc Jean-Drapeau in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It also includes various other events at different venues across the city. The "MTL" in the former name, Heavy MTL, served as both an abbreviation for "Montreal" and "Metal." In 2014, the festival was officially renamed as "Heavy Montréal".[1]
History
Since the festival's first edition in 2008, Heavy Montréal, known until 2014 as "Heavy MTL," has seen some of the world's most successful heavy metal acts, such as Iron Maiden, Mötley Crüe, Disturbed, Dethklok, Rob Zombie, Korn, Avenged Sevenfold, Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth, Alice Cooper, KISS, Motörhead, Godsmack, In Flames, Slipknot, Marilyn Manson, Deftones, System of a Down, Five Finger Death Punch, Children of Bodom and BABYMETAL.
In 2011, a sister event, Heavy T.O., was created for Downsview Park in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Both events were held during the same weekends, with most bands playing one day in Montreal and the other in Toronto. Despite the Toronto event's popularity, however, promoters ceased operations there after the festival's 2012 incarnation.
For the 2014 festival, Heavy MTL was officially rebranded as "Heavy Montréal". This was done as an "evolution" of the festival, with efforts made to include a wide array of styles in its programming.
The festival took a one-year hiatus in 2017, citing the renovations taking place that year in Parc Jean-Drapeau and the increase in other cultural events due to Montreal celebrating its 375th anniversary .[2] In November 2019, event promotions company Evenko announced that Heavy Montreal would not occur in 2020, in part due to "the number of non-festival metal/rock concerts that will be announced over the next few months", said Evenko chief operating officer Jacques Aubé .[3]
Past editions
2019
The lineup included:[4]
Stage Heavy | Stage de l'Apocalypse | Stage de la Foret | Stage du Jardin |
---|---|---|---|
Fever 333 |
Galactic Empire |
Harm's Way |
Brand of Sacrifice |
Stage Heavy | Stage de l'Apocalypse | Stage de la Foret | Stage du Jardin |
---|---|---|---|
Knocked Loose |
Mountain Dust |
Dopethrone |
Junkowl |
2018
Heavy Montreal returned in 2018 after a one year hiatus.
The lineup included:[5]
Stage Heavy | Stage de l'Apocalypse | Stage de la Foret | Stage du Jardin |
---|---|---|---|
Pallbearer |
Born of Osiris |
Veil of Maya |
Jungle Rot |
Stage Heavy | Stage de l'Apocalypse | Stage de la Foret | Stage du Jardin |
---|---|---|---|
Helix |
Blind Witness |
Nonhuman Era |
- Replaced Avenged Sevenfold[6]
2016
The 2016 edition of Heavy Montréal took place on 6–7 August 2016.[7] For 2016 the festival was held on a new site in Parc Jean-Drapeau, la Plaine des Jeux.
The lineup included:[8]
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Blabbermouth.NET Stage |
---|---|---|
Pop Evil |
USA Out of Vietnam |
Inquisition |
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Blabbermouth.NET Stage |
---|---|---|
I Prevail |
We Came as Romans |
Mantar |
2015
The 2015 edition of Heavy Montréal took place over three days from 7 to 9 August 2015.[7]
The lineup included:[9]
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Apocalypse Stage | Forest Stage |
---|---|---|---|
Brothers of the Sonic Cloth |
toyGuitar |
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Apocalypse Stage | Forest Stage |
---|---|---|---|
Slaves on Dope |
The Brains |
Mass Murder Messiah |
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Apocalypse Stage | Forest Stage |
---|---|---|---|
Fozzy |
Motionless in White |
|
Exes for Eyes |
2014
The lineup included:[10]
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Apocalypse Stage | Forest Stage |
---|---|---|---|
Monster Truck |
Eagle Tears |
Kublai Khan |
Molson Canadian Stage | Heavy Stage | Apocalypse Stage | Forest Stage |
---|---|---|---|
Bat Sabbath |
La Corriveau |
Beheading of a King |
- Replaced Dirty Rotten Imbeciles
2013
For the 2013 edition, Heavy MTL also featured a live pro wrestling event showcasing men and women of the Montreal independent wrestling scene.
Molson Canadian stage | Jägermeister stage | Galaxy stage | Ring Heavy Mania |
---|---|---|---|
Obey the Brave |
Device |
Death Lullaby |
Wall of Death – Battle Royal |
Molson Canadian stage | Jägermeister stage | Galaxy stage | Ring Heavy Mania |
---|---|---|---|
Huntress |
Augury |
Of Temples |
Wall of Death – Battle Royal |
2012
Heavy MTL stage | Jägermeister stage | Apocalypse stage |
---|---|---|
Diemonds |
Job for a Cowboy |
Bookakee |
Heavy MTL stage | Jägermeister stage | Apocalypse stage |
---|---|---|
Dance Laury Dance |
Blind Witness |
Hollow |
- Replaced Dethklok
- Replaced Lamb of God
- Replaced High on Fire
2011
Heavy MTL stage | Jägermeister stage | Budweiser stage |
---|---|---|
Slaves on Dope |
Dead and Divine |
Mass Murder Messiah |
Heavy MTL stage | Jägermeister stage | Budweiser stage |
---|---|---|
Lazarus A.D. |
Endast |
Les Guenilles |
- Replaced The Sword
2010
Heavy MTL stage | Jägermeister stage |
---|---|
Skeletonwitch |
36 Crazyfists |
Rockstar Mayhem Festival stage | Jägermeister stage | Silver Star stage |
---|---|---|
Hail the Villain |
Beneath the Massacre |
Deadly Apples |
2009
Due to the high number of metal live shows performed in Montreal during the year (Metallica, AC/DC, KISS, Dream Theater, Marilyn Manson, Motörhead and many more) it was announced that the festival would not take place in 2009 and return in 2010.[11]
2008
Black stage | Red stage |
---|---|
Lauren Harris |
Unexpect |
Black stage | Red stage |
---|---|
Death Boat |
Your Favorite Enemies |
See also
- Osheaga Festival, another music festival at Parc Jean-Drapeau
References
- Citations
- ^ Heavy MTL Becomes Heavy Montréal
- ^ Slingerland, Calum (7 December 2016). "Heavy Montreal Will Not Return in 2017". Exclaim!. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Olivier, Annabelle (21 November 2019). "Heavy Montreal hits pause on 2020 metal music festival". Global News. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Heavy Montreal 2019 lineup". consequenceofsound.net. 12 February 2019. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
- ^ "Heavy Montreal 2018 daily schedules revealed". metalnerd.net. 22 July 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
- ^ "Avenged Sevenfold to cancel their performance at HEAVY MONTRÉAL ; Limp Bizkit to take over". canadianbeats.ca. 24 July 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
- ^ a b "Heavy Montréal: Destination nord-américaine par excellence". heavymontreal.com. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ "Heavy Montreal 2016 daily lineup revealed". metalnerd.net. 7 July 2016. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
- ^ "And the Lineup for Heavy Montreal 2015 is..." metalsucks.net. 9 March 2015. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ^ Lineup
- ^ "Heavy MTL 2009 Cancelled". montrealgazette.com. 21 April 2009. Retrieved 31 January 2017.