Junction 1 expected as Britians biggest Christian music festival
WHAT PROMISES to be Britain's biggest Christian music festival has
been announced. Junction 1 has the backing of Word Music, Alliance
Music and leading Christian retailer Wesley Owen, and will take place
on August bank holiday weekend, at Hillingdon, West London. The Oasis
Trust and Evangelical Alliance are partnering with the Christian
record companies for the 25-28 August event, and many of the biggest
names in Christian music including Michael W Smith, the Newsboys,
Rebecca St James, the World Wide Message Tribe, All Star United, Jars
Of Clay and Phatfish are currently in discussion with Junction 1. As
well as an international music programme, other activities on site
will include bungee jumping, dry ski slope skiing, a resources
superstore and a backstage zone for everyone. Said Duncan Banks,
programme director for Junction 1, "Jl is a pure music festival. Wall
to wall tunes, bands, dance and trax. Its aim is clear - to help
disciple young people through the medium of contemporary Christian
music. I don't think the Christian music scene has ever been so
exciting as it is now, and this festival will be a showcase of the
very best on the planet."
Sense, a music-based discipleship
programme, will form an integral part of Junction 1. Sense uses music
and multimedia "to help a generation who have grown up with the Spice
Girls, Loaded magazine, South Park and TFI Friday to make life work."
Nigel Saunders for Junction 1 commented, "The festival is aimed at
young Christians and youth group leaders throughout the UK. The style
will be eclectic to reflect the ever changing face of contemporary
Christian music, incorporating pop, gospel, jazz, R&B, rock, dance
and just about every other genre you hear on radio and TV
everyday."
A wave of criticism about the dates chosen for
Junction 1 has been made by supporters of Britain's longest running
Christian arts festival Greenbelt, which has long established the
August bank holiday event as the time of its event. Said Greenbelt's
administrator Andy Thornton, "When we heard about the dates we wrote
to Junction l's organisers asking them not to put on the event the
same weekend as Greenbelt. But they refused, saying that they believed
that this event had a distinctly different constituency from
Greenbelt. We obviously don't believe that and we find the decision
quite sad. It feels like quite a divisive move. We made big efforts,
like our link with Spring Harvest, to build with the evangelical
Church, but this decision is transparently competitive and in terms of
Church unity we find it intensely discouraging. I believe Greenbelt
will continue but the decision to run Junction 1 on that weekend shows
that the evangelical Church can still be very separatist."