![breakfast](/files/siteimages/bridge.jpg)
Soles4Souls, a nonprofit that provides shoes for those in need, collected pile upon pile of new and used footwear from the generous attendees. There was also a benefit raffle with really cool prizes like paintings from Crazy Redbeard and Kamil Nawratil as well as CD's and t-shirts donated by the bands. There were also Community and Band paintings awarded to the winners, in first-chosen-first-pick fashion.
The Cove Campground is 3500 acres of dusty, bumpy trails that wind over and around shady hills and spring-fed lakes. Having one way in lead to a long wait in traffic for some of the patrons who tried to come in on Thursday, but from what I heard everyone made the most of it by getting to know the other folks in line. And, judging by how juiced-up everyone was when they made it in, there was a lot of partying on that dirt road.
![breakfast](../../files/siteimages/breakfast.jpg)
I felt a pang of pity for the bands with afternoon sets. Everyone was asleep from raging all night or hiding in the shade to escape the heat. There were a few hoots and hollers from the Hill People (campers who were close to the concert field) whenever a band really rocked out, but the field stayed empty until sundown.
![breakfast](/files/siteimages/fire.jpg)
Some of the bands stayed all weekend and had multiple sets. I didn't mind that until a couple of the band's played the exact same set. A word of advice - if you don't have enough songs, learn to jam. Particularly if you're an unknown regional band playing a festival that could expose your music to people from all over the country. My breakout favorite, Jazzam, could have played one more set and nobody would have complained.
We had a lot of fun with some people who weren't able to handle whatever they had ingested. One sweaty fellow was on one of those "am I real, does any of this matter" trips and seasoned as I am at getting into someone else's reality and flipping the script, there was nothing we could do but have security take him somewhere to chill out. I could have probably indulged him a little longer if he hadn't made crude comments to my female friends and started his circular rants over from the beginning whenever I posed a question that blew whatever circuits were still firing in his brain.
![jbb](/files/siteimages/jbb.jpg)
On the subject of madness U-Melt, known for their onstage antics, played to an impromptu wrestling match that fooled a lot of onlookers into believing it was all a set-up. I wasn't about to spoil their fun by telling them any different, but I'll tell you all now it was not planned. Another overindulgent fellow decided that he just HAD to be onstage, and Security was having a hard time convincing him otherwise. After the third time he started really fighting back and they pinned him down. He went over the barricade and a would-be vigilante in a gold cape swooped in and tackled him. They rolled around a bit, the cape flapping, then stood up and hugged, much to the confusion of everyone in the crowd.
![crowd](/files/siteimages/crowd.jpg)
You may have noticed by now I've abandoned my usual day-by-day show review format. If you want to know about the bands that played go to the Camp Barefoot website and look them up. Half of them you won't hear from again and the rest already have recordings of their shows from this festival posted somewhere in the ether. This was a you-shoulda'- been- there event and I'm not just saying that because Home Grown Music Network sponsored one of the main stages. Or just because I'm lazy and copping out on reviewing the bands. To tell the truth it's a little bit of all those things.
After a summer of corporate-sponsored mega-fests an intentionally intimate affair like this is always a breath of fresh air, even if they did experience a few growing pains. This festival has a lot going for it and I hope they can keep it going while ironing out the bugs and keeping it small enough to manage. I am greatly appreciative of all their hard work and the VIP treatment we received.
- Review & Photos by "Super Larry" Martin
View a gallery of pro-photos at the Camp Barefoot Gallery.