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The FREAKIN’ WEEKEND is back the weekend of March 4th, 5th, and 6th and it’s gonna rule! Click down there to get the whole scoop Click down there to get the whole scoop Continue Reading. Cheers to the freakin weekend I drink to that, yeah yeah Oh let the jameson sink in I drink to that, yeah yeah Don't let the bastards get ya down Turn it around with another round There's a party at the bar everybody putcha glasses up and I drink to that I drink to thaaaaaaaat. Life's too short to be sittin' round miserable.
Photo: Lance ConzettLet’s not beat around the bush. Freakin’ Weekend VIII — the last hurrah for local blog and label Nashville’s Dead’s annual pre-SXSW celebration of parochial punk gone national — was pretty weird. And that had a lot more to do with a situation that brewed outside The End (which hosted FW shows Thursday and Friday) and Exit/In (which hosted Saturday night’s closer) in the days running up to the three-night mini-fest than it did with what went down on either club’s stages.
Here’s what we know. In recent weeks, rumors started circulating in whispers, and eventually on social media, that somebody had leveled a serious accusation against Freakin’ Weekend co-founder Cy Barkley. The rumors dogged the festival in its final days. And that’s all we know.
We don’t know any details of the allegation. We don’t know when the allegation was lodged.
We don’t even know if an allegation actually has been lodged. Everything we know is second-, third- or fourth-hand, from people close to the festival.
And none of them seem to know any more than we do. We’re not saying nothing happened. We’re saying that our best efforts to find a legitimate source for the allegation have thus far been fruitless.
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Freakin Weekend Country Song
Combine this with a social-media backlash against the festival for its white-male-dominated lineups, and the heat got to be too much for some bands. On the eve of the festival, Freakin’ big draws like Mom and Dad and Pujol, the latter of which was due to headline Friday, were dropping off the bill. That sent organizers into triage mode.
On Wednesday, stressing the festival’s dedication to fostering a safe, inclusive environment. The statement also mentioned that ND had “seen some changes in our organization,” noting that “Cy Barkley is no longer associated with the Freakin’ Weekend and Nashville’s Dead.” Oof. Reached by the Scene, Barkley and a rep for Nashville’s Dead both declined further comment. The missive begged more questions than it answered, and more internet drama ensued. By Thursday, enough bands had pulled out that the two day shows — a hallmark of previous Freakin’ Weekends — planned for Fort Houston had been scrapped. Music Band Photo: Lance Conzett For years, Freakin’ Weekend was a festival that brimmed with wide-eyed joy over local kids coming of age amid the power of uninhibited rock ’n’ roll.
Freakin Weekend Country Song 2018
It was where bands that formed in high school got out the basements and onto actual club stages. It was the brainchild of Nashville’s Dead co-founder Ben Todd, a local musician, advocate and tastemaker who was the linchpin for all things Freakin’ Weekend, until he took his life in 2013. Todd lived for being the ringleader at great rock shows where everybody was always stoked, and he asked little of people in return. We all thought that’s because he was just a nice guy, and he was. A month after Todd’s death, JEFF the Brotherhood closed Freakin’ Weekend IV surrounded by dozens of kids in their early 20s, banging their heads and crying their eyes out, making for a moment on the Exit/In stage that was worthy of the Ryman.