Festival d'été de Québec

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FEQ
FEQ18 logo-acro vertic coul MOS-fr.png
GenrePop music, folk music, rock music, electronic dance music, punk, hip hop, classical music, francophone music, world music
DatesJuly 7 to 17 (2022)
Location(s)Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
Years active1968–2019, 2021–
Attendance1,800,000 (2017, 11 days total)[1][2]
Capacity138,000 (all stages combined)
Websitewww.feq.ca/en/

Festival d'été de Québec (FEQ) is the biggest outdoor musical event in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The event was held since 1968, the 11-day festival takes place every year in July. FEQ's eclectic programming includes the biggest international stars and emerging artists from around the globe. Its main stage is the biggest self-supporting stage in North America. The biggest crowd in the history of the FEQ is the Rolling Stones in 2015 with 103,000 at The Bell Stage (Plains of Abraham stage).

History[]

The festival has been taking place annually since 1968. The first editions were organized by a group of businesspersons and artists of Quebec City in order to show the artistic, economic, and tourist potential of the region. During the 1970s and 1980s, the festival specialized in musicians from the Francophonie and world music.

The festival grew substantially during the last decade after its decision to diversify its music offering and go after international headliners from genres across the board, including rock music, punk, hip-hop, classical music, world music and electronic dance music.

The festival reached the million spectators mark for the first time in 2007 and sold-out passes for the first time in 2010.

This festival went on hiatus in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic with the 53rd edition being deferred to 2021.

Setting[]

The Bell Stage

The outdoor venues :

  • The Bell Stage on the Plains of Abraham (Capacity 100,000)
  • Parc Grande Allée (Capacity 25,000; two stages in alternation with no waiting time between sets)[3]
    • The Loto-Quebec Stage at Place George-V ( South Side )
    • The SiriusXM Stage at Parc de la Francophonie ( North Side )
  • The Hydro-Quebec Stage at Place d'Youville (Capacity 10,000)
  • The Bell Fibe Stage at Place de L'Assemblée-Nationale (Capacity 2,000)


The indoor venue :

  • The Quebec City Armoury ( Manege Militaire in French ) (for all Extra-FEQ concerts starting around midnight) (Capacity 1,000)


A site called the "Place de la famille" (Family Place) hosts animation and events for children.
Street performers are a staple of the FEQ. They can be found all over the winding streets of Old Quebec during the festival.

Main bands since 2011[]

  • 2011: Elton John, Metallica, Avenged Sevenfold, The Black Keys, Dropkick Murphys, John Fogerty, Ben Harper, Simple Plan, Hollywood Undead.
  • 2012: Bon Jovi, Aerosmith, Lionel Richie, LMFAO, The Offspring, Our Lady Peace, Sarah McLachlan, Skrillex, Metric, Mastodon, City and Colour.
  • 2013: Def Leppard, Guns N' Roses, Bruno Mars, Wu-Tang Clan, Weezer, Rush, Stevie Wonder, Foreigner, The Black Keys, Tiësto, Ellie Goulding.
  • 2014: Lady Gaga, Billy Joel, Journey, Bryan Adams, The Killers, Soundgarden, Snoop Dogg, Queens Of The Stone Age, Deadmau5, Cypress Hill.
  • 2015: The Rolling Stones, Foo Fighters, Boston, Megadeth, Keith Urban, Deep Purple, The Doobie Brothers, Jack Ü, Iggy Azalea, Milky Chance.
  • 2016: Rammstein, Sting, Peter Gabriel, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Duran Duran, Selena Gomez, Ice Cube, Brad Paisley, The Lumineers, The Cult.
  • 2017: Muse, The Who, Metallica, P!nk, Gorillaz, Kendrick Lamar, The Backstreet Boys, Lady Antebellum, Flume, Melissa Etheridge, Migos, DNCE.
  • 2018: The Weeknd, Foo Fighters, Neil Young, Shawn Mendes, Beck, Lorde, Future, Dave Matthews Band, The Chainsmokers, Jethro Tull, Sum 41.
  • 2019: Twenty One Pilots, Mariah Carey, Slipknot, Imagine Dragons, Blink-182, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Kygo, Logic, Alt-J, Corey Hart, The Offspring, Live.
  • 2020: All the concerts cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • 2021: International concerts cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • 2022: Rage Against the Machine, .....Full schedule on March 2022.

References[]

  1. ^ "Achalandage record en 2017 au FEQ", Le Soleil, Quebec City, February 21, 2018.
  2. ^ "Historique du FEQ", Festival d'été de Québec (Official website)
  3. ^ "Création du parc Grande Allée au FEQ", Festival d'été de Québec (Press Release), Quebec City, February 12, 2020.

External links[]

Coordinates: 46°48′06″N 71°13′16″W / 46.8017°N 71.2211°W / 46.8017; -71.2211

Retrieved from ""