Music festival in California
Desert Daze The neon Desert Daze entry sign from the 2018 festival at the Lake Perris State Recreation Area
Genre Years active 2012-2019, 2021-2022 Most recent Sep 30, 2022 – Oct 2, 2022 Attendance 10,000 Website desertdaze .org
Desert Daze is a music festival held at the Lake Perris Recreation Area in Moreno Valley, California .[ 1] Festival founder Phil Pirrone, formerly of post-hardcore band, A Static Lullaby , and of JJUUJJUU, had "...always wanted to do an extended festival, and all these people being in the desert for an extended amount of time presented a perfect opportunity to make that happen".[ 2] The current format of the festival is no longer extended, spanning a more traditional three days. Described as "sort of an anti-festival festival",[ 3] the festival grounds often showcase abstract and psychedelic art installations, thematically aligned with the artists primarily from the neo-psychedelia , desert rock , experimental , dream pop , art pop , hip-hop , lo-fi , and noise genres.[ 4] Notable headliners include King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard , Iggy Pop , Tame Impala , Stereolab , Devo , Wu-Tang Clan , Beach House , and My Bloody Valentine .[ 5] In 2022, the festival drew an estimated crowd of 10,000 attendees.[ 6]
History
Pirrone previously organized the Moon Block Party festival, which evolved into Desert Daze in 2012, where the festival was initially held in Desert Hot Springs, California .[ 2] For the following 3 years, until 2015, the festival took place at the Sunset Ranch Oasis in Mecca , shifting from its previous extended 11 day format.[ 7] In 2016, the festival relocated to the Institute of Mentalphysics in Joshua Tree National Park .[ 8] The most recent iterations of the festival, since 2018, have been in the Lake Perris State Recreation Area with cancellations in 2020, 2023, and 2024.[ 3] [ 9] [ 10]
Lineups
The following lineups include artists that have performed at the Lake Perris State Recreation Area venue including years: 2022,[ 11] [ 12] 2021,[ 13] [ 14] 2019,[ 15] [ 16] and 2018[ 17] [ 18]
2022
2021
2019
2018
See also
References
^ "Desert Daze" . Desert Daze . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ a b Jackson, Nate (2012-02-28). "Desert Daze brings 11-day local festival to the Coachella crowd" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ a b Blueskye, Brian (2018-09-25). "Daze on the Move: Phil Pirrone's Desert Daze Fest Finds Yet Another New Home, This Time at Lake Perris" . Coachella Valley Independent . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Reiss, Sasha; Matthew, Dillon (October 16, 2018). "REVIEW: Desert Daze dazzles with psychedelic visuals, serene setting" .
^ "About" . Desert Daze . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Blueskye, Brian. "Desert Daze 2022: How does the rock festival stack up against Coachella?" . The Desert Sun . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Blueskye, Brian. "10 things to love about Desert Daze 2022, headlining Iggy Pop, Tame Impala, and more" . The Desert Sun . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Barlow, Eve (2016-10-17). "Desert Daze Is a Strange Trip of a Festival, and It Kicks Ass" . Vice . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Alvarado, Holly (2023-07-13). "Desert Daze Festival postpones to 2024, announces new Daze in the City series" . The Press-Enterprise . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ "Desert Daze festival is canceled: 'This is a tough year' " . Los Angeles Times . 2024-08-30. Retrieved 2024-08-30 .
^ "Desert Daze 2022 Setlists" . setlist.fm . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ March, Kim; Mellin, Joshua. "Desert Daze Announces 2022 Lineup feat. Tame Impala, Iggy Pop, Sky Ferreira, and Many More" . Flood Magazine . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ "Desert Daze 2021 Setlists" . setlist.fm . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Deville, Chris (2021-07-21). "Desert Daze Now Back To One Weekend At Lake Perris With The War On Drugs, Toro Y Moi, Kamasi Washington, & More" . Stereogum . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ "Desert Daze 2019 Setlists" . setlist.fm . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Young, Alex (2019-08-06). "Desert Daze Reveals Full 2019 Lineup" . Consequence of Sound . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ "Desert Daze 2018 Setlists" . setlist.fm . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Young, Alex (2018-08-28). "Desert Daze completes its sensational 2018 lineup" . Consequence of Sound . Retrieved 2024-06-19 .
^ Franko, Vanessa (2018) [October 12th, 2018]. "Desert Daze festival's opening day cut short due to lightning, plagued by parking problems" . The Press-Enterprise .
^ Performance interrupted and canceled due to lightning storm.
External links
Subtypes Traveling (italics = ongoing) Culture Related events