Leon Bridges sings out Sunday.
Ray Ewing

Legends and Locals Rock At Beach Road Weekend

More than 20 bands took the stage at Beach Road Weekend music festival this weekend. The three-day event brought high-profile acts to the Island and introduced Vineyard groups to the masses.

More than 20 bands took the stage at Beach Road Weekend music festival this weekend. The three-day event brought high-profile acts to the Island and introduced Vineyard groups to the masses.

Thousands of people packed Veterans Memorial Park in Tisbury for the festival, which started Friday and ran through Sunday night.

Bon Iver, Mumford and Sons, and Leon Bridges were the headliners. Island musicians Mike Benjamin, Phil daRosa and Willy Mason also graced the stage. 

Crowds pack the sunny Saturday.
Jonathan Fleischmann
Crowds pack the sunny Saturday.
Jonathan Fleischmann

The festival got off to a wet start Friday. Ponchos rippled in the breeze and rain muddied the ground as thousands of devoted music lovers made their way to the downtown park.

Though clearly smaller than the 12,000 daily attendance cap, Friday’s audience punched well above its weight in loyalty and enthusiasm, all but ignoring the light rain that fell throughout much of the day.

Opening the festival just after noon, singer Maggie Rose and her band delivered a high-energy set of pop-rock infused with country, soul and gospel as listeners cheered and danced in front of the stage.

Kevin Morby followed Ms. Rose with his band to play a brooding set of lyrical, often impassioned rock that called to mind a more volatile Velvet Underground in its textured use of acoustic and electric instruments.

An engaging solo performance by singer-songwriter John Hiatt gave fans the chance to hear both music and stories from a founding father of Americana music.

“You are a folk singer’s audience, and don’t let anyone tell you any different,” said Mr. Hiatt, who chatted amiably from the stage between songs and accompanied himself on acoustic guitar as he played beloved originals such as Have a Little Faith in Me, Memphis in the Meantime and Thing Called Love, which became a hit for Bonnie Raitt in 1989.

Following Mr. Hiatt, the trio Caamp turned up the volume for a powerful set of rock influenced by both folk and noise music, with banjo as well as electric guitar.

By the time Patti Smith and Her Band took the stage at 4:15 p.m., the audience had swelled by several times its size at noon and thronging fans pressed together against the rail in front of the stage, eager to see their rock and roll icon.

Ms. Smith gave full measure, performing for more than an hour with guitarists Lenny Kaye and Jackson Smith, drummer Jay Dee Daugherty and bassist-keyboardist Tony Shanahan.

From the first notes of her anthem People Have the Power, Ms. Smith and the band rocked the increasingly delirious audience, which sang and clapped along en masse at her command and cheered wildly at every opportunity.

A poet since long before she became a pathbreaking musician and public intellectual, Ms. Smith introduced her song Waiting Underground with a dedication to the late Allen Ginsberg.

“When we’re feeling low and we feel disconnected, there are people all through history [and] the sense of them is still with us,” she said.

“He was a great teacher, a great poet who was anti-war [and] put himself on the line for human rights over and over,” Ms. Smith said.

That sense of transcendence and endurance emerged again as Ms. Smith’s talked about her late husband, former MC5 guitarist Fred (Sonic) Smith, who died in 1994 after the couple had been married for less than 15 years.

“He’s still my boyfriend,” she said, introducing a love song she wrote for him: Because the Night, which became her biggest hit after Bruce Springsteen declined to release his version in 1978.

Ms. Smith and the band also paid tribute to guitarist Tom Verlaine, who died early this year, by playing his song Guiding Light from the 1977 Television album Marquee Moon. Other songs that kept the festival audience singing and cheering included Ms. Smith’s postmodernized Gloria, from Horses; her Dancing Barefoot, from the 1979 album Wave and Neil Young’s aching 1974 elegy After the Gold Rush, with the updated chorus “Look at Mother Nature on the run in the 21st century.”

Throughout the set, Ms. Smith took time to wave at fans from the stage and urged her listeners to become activists for a better world.

“Feel your … power!” she shouted. “We are the future and the future is now!”

Bon Iver, an independent folk-rock act that combines ethereal, sampled vocals and sound sequences with live instrumentalist, closed out Friday. Spearheaded by Justin Vernon since 2007, the group has gained a fervent following for its hard-to-classify sounds, which can swerve from experimental noise to long lyrics with dreamy harmonies.

While most ticket holders trudged off in the rain to catch a ferry or ride shuttle buses to where their cars were parked, a couple of hundred music-lovers stayed on the festival grounds to hear Mike Benjamin and 10 fellow musicians play an hour-long local set.

Mr. Benjamin took his Beach Road booking as an opportunity to showcase some of his favorite fellow Island musicians, including  saxophonists Steve Tully and Scott Shetler, singers Jody Treloar, Joanna Cassidy and Darby Patterson and fellow guitarist Jon Zeeman.

Saturday seemed to draw a larger crowd.

“We’ve had much stronger, earlier attendance and I definitely think the weather turning around had a lot to do with that,” Rica Brodo, an account executive at MVY Radio, said while manning the station’s promo booth.

The station plays a major role at Beach Road Weekend, supporting after-show concerts and one of the festival’s two stages.

Marcus Mumford closes out the second day of the festival.
Jonathan Fleischmann
Marcus Mumford closes out the second day of the festival.
Jonathan Fleischmann

At the booth, the station was handing out paper fans, selling bandanas and encouraging people to download the station’s mobile app. The fans became a hot commodity throughout the day — the station handed them out to the first 2,000 attendees at the park on Saturday, but had more at its booth as temperatures rose throughout the day.

“We have a few extra on hand today,” Ms. Brodo said. “Because we definitely have some people melting out here.”

Kate Mellinger, the founder of Sojourn Pottery, said the festival was working wonders for her Miami-based business, which launched in May of this year.

Sojourn is a female-founded ceramics company based in Miami. Beach Road Weekend was Sojourn’s first big event, and the company’s mix-and-match pottery was selling well as the day went on.

“This has been huge for us,” Ms. Mellinger said. “It’s given us a lot of exposure to the Island scene.”

Also coming to the festival from off-Island, festival-goers Tara Glidden and Jen Schlitt of Nova Scotia, bought tickets after Ms. Glidden saw the festival’s lineup posted on Instagram.

“I started following a lot of the bands we like and keeping track of shows in New England and Canada, and this festival ticked a lot of the boxes,” Ms. Glidden said, adding she was most excited to see Caamp and The Head and the Heart, who both played on Friday.

Donning a Mumford and Sons T-shirt, Ms. Schlitt said it was the band she was most looking forward to seeing on Saturday. Out of the whole weekend’s lineup, she was most excited to see Bon Iver and Leon Bridges.

Patti Smith wows the audience on a rainy night.
Jeanna Shepard
Patti Smith wows the audience on a rainy night.
Jeanna Shepard

Over the soulful music of St. Paul and The Broken Bones’ early-afternoon set, Beach Road’s publicist Joe Chambers said all of Saturday’s artists were ready to play and the day was going fantastically.

“Sammy Rae even jumped on stage earlier with Cory Wong,” he said. “We’re all making music together and having a great day.”

After their headlining show on Saturdays, Mr. Chambers reported that folk band Mumford and Sons celebrated with a dinner at Nancy’s in Oak Bluffs.

“They ordered nearly everything on the menu,” he laughed.

Falmouth-based rock group Crooked Coast kicked off the festival’s third day with a bang, combining punk, rock, reggae and pop with infectious, crowd-rallying energy.

The streets of Vineyard Haven, by contrast, were unusually quiet for a summer weekend afternoon. Three Tisbury police officers were stationed at the Five Corners intersection to steer traffic around the event at Veterans Park.

Tisbury fire chief Greg Leland said the event had gone smoothly so far with no major incidents, medical or otherwise.

“It’s been an eventful, well-run, tastefully-done event,” he said. “Friday was a nightmare but it was a nightmare because it was raining, and Tisbury is a nightmare every time it rains.”

Gregory Porter took the stage at 1 p.m. to deliver upbeat, jazzy blues just as the afternoon sun began to beat down.
 
As more concert-goers trickled in for the afternoon, the crowd soon became a sea of bucket hats and loudly patterned shirts. Alvvays kept up the momentum with high-energy indie pop as frontwoman Molly Rankin's ephemeral vocals rang across Veterans Park. Dinosaur Jr. raged with a ferocity that can only be cultivated after over thirty years of punk rocking.

“I was told Larry David would be here,” Ms. Rankin told the crowd during the Alvvays set. “Show yourself, Larry.”

Singer-songwriter Regina Spektor followed with a sparse, piano-only set, a welcome reprieve from the grizzly synths and guitars that had preceded her. Clouds gathered to cool down festival-goers right as the set began, as if in deference to the twee icon.

The clouds parted in time for a spirited opening by Japanese Breakfast, playing the title track of Jubilee, their latest album. The band’s lead singer Michelle Zauner pranced around the stage with a mallet, pausing only to hit a flower-covered gong. As the indie pop-rock group cycled through its repertoire, Ms. Zauner revealed that she, like many other acts that weekend, had never been to the Island before.

“Even though I've never been here this is a very special place to me,” she continued. “My now-husband was on a boat here when I proposed to him.”

Leon Bridges capped off the weekend with a one and a half-hour tour through soul, rock and R&B. Dressed in all-white and a pair of Ciara Gina sunglasses, Mr. Bridges drew perhaps the largest crowd of the entire weekend. Audience members hung on every word, whispering the titles of songs to each other as the first few notes rang out.

Mr. Bridges pulled out an acoustic guitar for a grittier rendition of Texas Sun, and later slid across the stage in full popstar fashion for the more upbeat B-Side.

Although MVY executive director PJ Finn said he was most excited to see Mr. Bridges, he had his own personal connection to singer-songwriter John Hiatt who performed Friday.

“I was supposed to see John Hiatt 23 years ago but I skipped it to interview for a position at a radio station on Martha’s Vineyard, a place I had never been to before,” Mr. Finn said.

He ended up getting the job at MVY Radio and 23 years later, he saw Mr. Hiatt for the first time this weekend.

“Was it worth the wait?” Mr. Finn said. “Oh yeah.”

More pictures.

John Hiatt strums his guitar.
Jeanna Shepard
John Hiatt strums his guitar.
Jeanna Shepard
Japanese Breakfast lead singer Michelle Zauner said it was her first trip to the Vineyard.
Ray Ewing
Japanese Breakfast lead singer Michelle Zauner said it was her first trip to the Vineyard.
Ray Ewing
Thousands of people packed Veterans Memorial Park for the festival.
Jonathan Fleischmann
Thousands of people packed Veterans Memorial Park for the festival.
Jonathan Fleischmann
Local musicians Mike Benjamin, Phil daRosa and Willy Mason all played during the three-day festival.
Ray Ewing
Local musicians Mike Benjamin, Phil daRosa and Willy Mason all played during the three-day festival.
Ray Ewing

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 12:26

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Joanne Routenberg Behind The Bookstore

Three days of dancing and music. Such a great way to enjoy the last days of summer. The line up was awesome. Enjoyed getting to know some new bands as well as getting another chance to see Patti Smith and John Hiatt. Enjoyed the rainy days as much as the other days. Looking forward to next year!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 12:30

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John Edg

What a great festival! The music was amazing, the crowd was friendly, and the festival staff and security were all very professional. Good job on the recycling this year and reducing the sound volume while increasing the quality. We saw MVRHS kids we knew working the stage crew, lots of Edg 8th graders picking up trash and recycling to raise money for their school trip and lots of young kids with their families. We can't wait till next year!!! Thank you Adam!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 13:12

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Albert Gosnold

What a wonderful event.
The drawing together of the entire Island to celebrate music.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 13:34

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Ginny Jones WT

Let us get to the hard facts...what is the real bottom line -- how much income didthisactually net for islanders and island businesses and how much passed through through island accounts on its way to an off island destination? All well and good that a Miami based women's based pottery company prospered but was that the point of the event? I support the arts in every way possible but not sure that this is positive for our island economy....

Now is the time to carefully review the financials to see what the very obvious costs and benefits are as well as those that are very subtle. We also should qualify and quantify the feel good factors for attendees as well as for resident, and for Mr. Epstein of course.

Thanks.

Dan

Hey Ginny-
The locals did make money. VH was packed.
Local establishments and people were everywhere.
It was very professional, very clean, and very fun.
Our fire, police and EMS were outstanding in every way.
The security, details, bathrooms and water were perfect.
Restaurants in town had lines out the door for dinner.
Stop and Shop and Cumbees probably had record sales.

It's time to accept this festival as a success and move on.
Did people try to qualify and quantify the "no nukes festival" in 1978 with Carly and James, held at Allen farm?
MV is founded on large music gatherings. It's part of the 1970s and 1980s culture.
This event will become an institution for the island to come.
Join in the fun.
It's a great time.

Laura

Our island company had a booth and we did very, very well - not only was it worth it financially it was a nice ending of a very busy summer for our employees to have some fun while working all three days - I was born and raised here and now my kids are growing up here & events like this if local companies want to and can be involved it benefits us to continue to be able to raise our families here

Abbe Burt Vineyard Haven

Thank you Ginny for bringing up the important questions amidst the understandable euphoria of those locals who attended the festival. The important question is - Is the Beach Road Festival good for the resident and taxpayers of Tisbury? The answer is no. The town of Tisbury does not benefit financially at all. The $40,000 that BRF is required to give the town of Tisbury per their contract does not even begin to cover the cost of time spent by the paid employees of the town over the year. And since per the financial return of BRF submitted to the town has never shown a net profit, there is no further cash amount due to the town, or due to any non profits. The condition of Veterans Park has never been restored properly. And perhaps most importantly, the quality of life for Tisbury residents for the last three weeks in August is painfully and immeasurably reduced - from the loss of use of the park, Lagoon Pond Road, access to the post office, three days of constant base thumping noise from the concert itself, and three days of constant school bus traffic on Skiff Avenue to name a few - .
This is quite simply the wrong location for this event. 2024 should be the last year it is held in the middle of the heart of Vineyard Haven.

Robert MV = Tisbury

Abbe - I beg to differ. The event is perfectly located. Access to Steampship docks in VH and OB and walking distance for many others, including myself. I wouldn't have it anywhere else.

Vasha Brunelle Vineyard Haven

Abbe, I strongly agree with everything you say here, and there are many others who do. In addition, if Tisbury is to go Green, the BRC only hinders that plan.

drew kelly vineyard haven

Too bad the voters of Tisbury were not fully informed of your absolute opposition to BRW in its current form before we voted for selectperson. Or at least I wasn't and I feel awful about that. But since you seem to be inclined to voice your opinions, and opinions they are, on both Facebook and in the MV Times comment section at least we have something to fact check. I suppose the work for BRW24 (and beyond!) begins today. Chicken Alley appears to have changed their mind about the festival, perhaps you might as well.

Elisha Wiesner Chilmark

It makes me sad when a large cultural event happens, enjoyed by thousands of people, and someones first though is capitalism. There are many ways to measure success that don't come down to the bottom line.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 14:51

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Rick Vineyard Haven

In my humble opinion—The Beach Road Festival was just great! Thanks to all the people who make it happen, from the bus drivers, the sponsors, the far away & local help, the vendors, the police, the road crew, & everybody who worked or donated time, money, or resouces to this event! Thanks to people who don’t even like the festival, for allowing it! I just love it! I can walk from my house, and I really feel it puts the 2023 Vineyard Haven on the map! So proud of Vineyard Haven & the promoters efforts—United, we shared our love of live music together! Good vibes, one love, rock on, and all that! Respect.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 08/28/2023 - 20:54

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Rebecca Vineyard Haven

Great event. Great spirit. Yes, it makes things busier for a few days but seems well worth it. I believe the organizers have been respectful and accommodating to the town. Most concert festival venues go well into the night! VH was hopping, which was fun for a few days. I loved that local musicians were involved in addition to the big names. Thank you to all that made this happen. I didn’t attend but enjoyed seeing the enthusiastic concert-goers and hearing the music from afar.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 08:07

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LAURA ROSE Vineyard Haven

It was an amazing 3 days and I hope this can become our end of Summer ritual in Vineyard Haven!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 10:19

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Alice June Thompson Vineyard Haven

Congratulation Adam Epstein, sponsors, et al, on all the energy you put into bringing yet another outstanding Beach Road Weekend music festival to the Vineyard! Although I recognize Patti Smith, I am unfamiliar with the other musicians. However, hearing the roar of the crowd from my dwelling place, warmed my heart and I am so happy for the festival goers. You and your team really know how to put on a memorable concert experience and I'm looking forward to the 2024 lineup. (A grateful elderly year round resident.)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 13:49

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Sue Tonry 5 corners VH

Please take time to read the towns Concert Contract. It doesn't say anything about the two weeks prior to set up.It was one week originally
It also says nothing about the VOLUME we would have to put up with starting at 8 am blasting out ear drums. There was NO one controlling it. ( I requested a test but no one came).They were suppose to end their event at 8 pm but Epstein added even more time on until 9:30 pm both nights plus fireworks. It never ended at 7pm as reported. If he really cared about Island musicians he should of given them prime time every day and not time when droves
of people were leaving to catch the boats. Every year he spreads out his use of our town and island. His empty off island busses were driving out to Edgartown and West Tisbury all day adding to the already congested roads. Why can't he use Island buses...oh yeah we know why.How much is hidden from the the town on the profits and losses side of the event?
This event should never have happened here...take it out of town. Our Selectmen need to remember their jobs are not permanent. I'm glad the concert goers were so happy with the event but let's get real. Local taxpayers should not have to suffer so you can have fun.

Adam Epstein Vineyard Hsven

Please research the facts before you make unfounded allegations as you have.

First, regarding the island school buses. We have proposed using them more than once so that those funds would benefit a needy island school system, and have been rejected by the school committee each occasion. It has been covered extensively in island newspapers. A simple search is all you need to do.

Secondly, we did not shoot fireworks. I don't know who did. It was over the Lagoon, n9t at the Park. Check with TPD. They sent officers out. They know it was not us.

Third, we did send audio monitors out to areas around your address and have the data to prove it. At no time did the decibel levels exceed state of municipal limits and rarely registered above ambient levels for the same periods of time for a summer weekend. you could have easily done what we did, and measured for yourself. The app was free and available to anyone.

Fourth, as with each Beach Road Weekend before it, traffic congestion actually decreases during the festival because we pay TPD to provide traffic control at Five Corners and because people find other ways to get where they want to go.

Sixth, ask any island musician how many opportunities I have provided to the community as part of the concert series, at the Loft or at the festival. I do not think any would say that our support is small. How much have you done for local artists?

And lastly, as a local taxpayer and resident of Tisbury, I know for a fact that ancillary income from the fees the festival paid to the Town, hotel and short term rental and hotel taxes, increased embarkation fees, and the festivals food and beverage taxes all contribute greatly to the Town of Tisbury, reducing the need for individual residents to pay for Town services in their annual budget.

If only Tisbury embraced these opportunities more frequently it wouldn't have the highest taxes on the island and could serve it's residents with more resilience and maintenance.

Maybe it could even afford to actually have an annual maintenance plan with professional grade equipment for veterans park to serve it's residents, Islanders and guests with more diverse and broad opportunities.

For too long, a certain segment of the Town population has rejected any opportunity to embrace and manage it's growth, pretending they could stop time. Pushing opportunities like this away, and the State funding for the new school only end up costing us all dearly in the end.

I am sorry if you do not like the festival. But I cannot apologize for the real tangible benefit I know it provides, while yes, inconveniencing a few. Furthermore, I reject the idea that building a wall and trying to stop our community's growth is an effective way to serve all of it's residents.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 15:57

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Amy Edgartown

Amazing event! Appreciated the improvement with recycling. Would like more shade options.

IMHO it’s the perfect location, walk to the ferry, walk to town, locals use park and ride; total win for VH and MV as a whole.

Each down-island town has an annual “major event” that draws thousands of people, suck it up VH and rock on.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 16:02

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Ginny Jones WT

Thinking positively -- if the festival continues in that location next year and if the wind blows from the north west-north east sector, I'll be able to hear the music [at no cost] at home -- it might almost be heard in Aquinnah....this would also help with the traffic issues! I would miss out on the food but if I never heard of the musicians, I could always play my own choices At a very respectful decibel level of course.

WOW! What a deal.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/29/2023 - 20:45

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Zoni OB

Music festivals are great for those of us who love them. I worked at last year’s BRW and it was a blast. But one year later, I am older, more compassionate and wiser. That being said, I can’t get over the blatant disregard to our fellow islanders. What is it like to experience non-stop music (not to mention bass lines, etc.) for pretty much three full days? I’m no Debbie Downer. But I can’t stand that the consensus seems to be: They have to deal with it. It’s only three days. I call Bulls—t. I can’t think of any other outdoor music festival that takes place in such a densely populated residential community. Mr. Epstein: I completely understand why you want a music festival on MV. We all know how magical it is here. And I appreciate your commitment to having the least amount of impact to the island, putting people to work and donating the proceeds to local organizations. But, it means nothing if people (and I bet their pets) SUFFER. I want to think you’re a nice guy. But, I can’t help but wonder if this a self serving vanity project and that maybe you’re not such a nice guy after all. My heart goes out to the residents who live within earshot of the park.

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