SnoCore Tour
SnoCore Tour | |
---|---|
Genre | Alternative rock, alternative metal |
Dates | January - April |
Location(s) | United States |
Years active | 1996 to present |
Website | http://www.snocore.com/ |
The SnoCore Tour, occasionally typeset as Sno-Core, is an annual festival tour of the United States. It features performances by some of the most popular groups largely of the alternative rock and metal spectrum. With the exception of 2008, the event has taken place every year since its 1996 inception and is marketed towards the winter sports culture.
History
John Boyle and Rick Bonde established SnoCore as an entertainment opportunity for fans during the year's slow point in live music, the winter season. It would also serve as an excuse for bands to perform for Western mountain resort towns and go snowboarding. SnoCore originally focused predominately on punk and ska groups and routed through ski communities.[1] But as it became a national tour, SnoCore aimed toward hard rock and heavy metal and engaged larger, more traditional concert venues.[2] In late 1997, ARTISTdirect principals Marc Geiger and Don Muller, the former having also co-founded Lollapalooza, purchased the tour from Boyle. They still make a point to schedule dates in a number of resort towns despite having strayed somewhat from its original concept.
Corresponding with its name, SnoCore features large video screens playing footage of freestyle snowboarding and skiing between performances. Local shops have set up at concerts and local resorts have tied in with them. However, SnoCore does not feature sideshows as showcased at the Warped Tour and remains strictly a musical festival. The tour commonly hosts a sponsor; examples include Airwalk in 1997, Levi's in 1999, and Winterfresh in 2005.
On March 10, 1998, Foil Records released the Sno-Core Compilation which features various bands that have partaken in the festival. In 2001, SnoCore split into two tours: the funk/jam based SnoCore Icicle Ball and the hard rock/heavy metal based SnoCore Rock. This carried on once more the following year.
During the 2006 tour, stomach flu ran its course through all participating bands. Most severely affected was Seether frontman Shaun Morgan who, rather than cancel altogether, opted to perform acoustic sets for their last few shows. This alternative met with high approval from fans and influenced the group to release their first acoustic album, One Cold Night.[3]
Saliva was scheduled to co-headline the 2009 tour but frontman Josey Scott needed more time to recover from a recent ulcer surgery. As a result, the band intended to cancel the first two weeks and substitute Scott with Walt Lafty of Silvertide beginning April 17.[4][5] Ultimately, they decided in the interest of the fans to drop out entirely.[6] This made the 2009 band lineup the leanest in SnoCore history.
Jägermeister sponsored the first Canadian SnoCore tour in 2010. The schedule ran just under two weeks and included cities such as Calgary, Edmonton, Toronto, and Vancouver.[7]
Tour lineups
1996
(The Line)
1997
1998
1999
- Everclear
- Soul Coughing
- Redman (first-half of tour)
- The Black Eyed Peas (second-half of tour)
- DJ Spooky
2000
2001
Rock
Icicle Ball
2002
Rock
Icicle Ball
2003
2004
2005
- Chevelle
- Helmet
- Crossfade
- Future Leaders of the World
- Strata
- Tripside (a local unsigned band from Huntington, Long Island, NY) opened the March 4th date at Starland Ballroom[11]
2006
2007
2009
Saliva was originally scheduled to co-headline but canceled due to Josey Scott's prolonged recovery from ulcer surgery.[6]
2010
- Protest the Hero
- Hawthorne Heights (dropped off in March)[12]
- Theset
- Elias
- Abandon All Ships (select dates)
- Doll (select dates)
2014 (cancelled)[13]
2015
- Flyleaf
- Adelitas Way
- Framing Hanley
- Fit for Rivals
- Romantic Rebel (select dates)
- Lullwater (select dates)
References
- ^ Lounges, Tom SnoCore's twin tours hit with a blizzard of modern rock nwitimes.com (January 2001)
- ^ Barrera, Sandra SnoCore Icicle Ball with Galactic, Les Claypool's Frog Brigade, Lake Trout TheFreeLibrary.com (January 2001). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ Harris, Chris Seether Lose Guitarist; Frontman Credits Stomach With Acoustic Night MTV.com (June 16, 2006). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ SALIVA Frontman JOSEY SCOTT Recovering From Emergency Ulcer Surgery Blabbermouth.net (March 21. 2009). Retrieved on 7-15-11.
- ^ SALIVA Recruits Replacement While Singer Recovers (April 14, 2009). Retrieved on 7-15-11.
- ^ a b Smith, Jay Saliva Off Sno-Core Pollstar (April 21, 2009). Retrieved on 7-15-11.
- ^ Hawthorne Heights, Protest the Hero on Snocore 2010. LoudTrax.com (March 22, 2010). Retrieved on 7-15-11.
- ^ Simon, Richard B. and VanHorn, Teri Dual SnoCore Tours Raging, Jamming Across North America MTV.com (January 23, 2001). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ D'Angelo, Joe Alien Ant Farm, Fenix TX At Heart Of SnoCore Tour MTV.com (January 14, 2002). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ Moss, Corey and D'Angelo, Joe SnoCore Gig Will Keep Trapt Trapped In Their Tour Bus MTV.com (January 28, 2004). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ MTV News staff For The Record: Quick News On Jay-Z, Chevelle, Jessica Simpson, Sublime, The Killers, Mick Jagger & More MTV.com (December 20, 2004). Retrieved on 1-13-08.
- ^ LIVE ‘N LOUD MEETS PROTEST THE HERO Live 'N Loud Magazine (March 29, 2010). Retrieved on 7-15-11.
- ^ https://www.facebook.com/Snocore/posts/348935858578090?stream_ref=10