East Yorkshire NewsNEWS

THIS FEELING BY THE SEA FESTIVAL TO TAKE PLACE IN BRIDLINGTON THIS WEEKEND

Quickly becoming one of the highlights of the summer festival circuit, This Feeling By The Sea at Bridlington Spa shows support for the UK’s grassroots live music scene.

Every artist on the line-up has come through with the help of This Feeling’s support, often landing their first proper gig with small local club shows in their hometowns.

This Feeling By The Sea’s headliners have both scaled new peaks this year which set them up for arena-ready futures, with The Royston Club’s current single ‘The Patch Where Nothing Grows’ accelerating the success achieved with their Top 20 debut album, and The K’s shooting into the album charts at number three with their debut record earlier this year.

The likes of Seb Lowe, Pastel, The Clause and The Rosadocs are all primed to reach a similar level, while the rest of the bill is packed wall-to-wall with next up contenders.

This Feeling’s passion for grassroots can be underlined by the statistics. Each year they host a total of 300 shows in 70 grassroots venues, covering 40 cities and towns across the UK, and not just the big cities, but also in smaller towns where there’s often little or nothing else on offer in terms of live music. 

Two hundred and twenty of those events are club shows, often with a popular local band playing their first big headline show, with support coming from a selection of promising unknown artists having their first opportunity to play to a proper crowd.

They also present another 80 headline shows a year at venues with capacities going all the way from 100 to 2,500 people.

Over the course of a year, This Feeling’s grassroots gigs host a total of over 1,000 artists, performing in front of a combined audience of 40,000 fans.

This Feeling is also a platform which offers meritocracy in the music industry. If a local band impresses as support at a club show, they’ll have the potential to later headline that same venue.

If their headline show goes off, they have every chance of featuring at one of This Feeling’s curated festival stages at the likes of the Isle of WightTruck and Y NOT?

And the wider This Feeling community opens up so many more opportunities from fans, fellow bands, influential DJs, media and more. 

This Feeling By The Sea also runs an Apply To Play scheme, which gives two unknown bands the chance to perform at the festival, judged by DJs John Kennedy (Radio X) and Jericho Keys (BBC Introducing).

Noel Gallagher, Carl Barât and Serge Pizzorno are all admirers of This Feeling, and their support is matched with a fresh wave of enthusiasm as By The Sea approaches.

“This Feeling bring massive passion and expertise to the grassroots sector, supporting countless artists right at the start when it matters most and filling venues all over the UK,” said Mark Davyd, CEO, Music Venue Trust.

“They’ve booked household names such as Gerry Cinnamon, Catfish and the Bottlemen, Blossoms and many more, way before they achieved mainstream success, so if you’re out to find the next big band, get down This Feeling.”

Details of This Feeling By The Sea’s acoustic stage have been announced. Friday headliner Finn Forster has a huge future ahead of him, earning comparisons to Paulo Nutini and landing a deal with Ed Sheeran’s agent.

That day will also highlight sets from Sunbeam and Beth Pilling. And Saturday’s bill will be topped by The Serotones, who recently made a big impression as openers at Shed Seven’s special 30th anniversary show at York Museum Gardens.

Saturday’s line-up also introduces Frankie Dobson and Mae Armstrong.

Limited remaining tickets for This Feeling By The Sea are available, priced at £60 for the weekend, £35 for day tickets, and £10 for those under the age of 12.

Related Articles

Back to top button

Adblock Detected

Please allow ads on our site Ads help pay for our website and content. Switch off your ad-blocker and enjoy.