Good Things (music festival)
Good Things | |
---|---|
Genre | Heavy metal, metalcore, alternative metal, alternative rock, and punk rock[1] |
Dates | Early December |
Location(s) | Australia Brisbane (2018–2019, 2022–) Sydney (2018–2019, 2022–) Melbourne (2018–2019, 2022–) |
Years active | 2018–2019; 2022–present |
Website | www |
Good Things is a music festival held in major cities around Australia. It features a number of international and Australian music acts, from various genres including rock, metal, punk, and emo.[1]
History
In early-2018, music tour organiser Destroy All Lines announced a new music festival, Good Things. It would become the biggest music festival held in Australia since Soundwave in 2015.[2] The Good Things festival debuted in Melbourne, before playing at Sydney and Brisbane. On 19 November, the New South Wales Police Force issued a statement addressing accusations that they "made it impossible" for the Good Things festival to operate as all-ages in Sydney by imposing "multiple impediments" and charging "exorbitant" policing fees. The next day Destroy All Lines announced that the Sydney festival would no longer be an all-ages event, and it would restricted to 18-and-over. Under-age ticket holders for the Sydney festival were later contacted and given full refunds.[3]
Two weeks before the first festival, Destroy All Lines announced that under-aged ticket holders would have to be accompanied by a responsible adult at the Melbourne festival. The move was met with outrage as festival-goers and parents alike described it as 'unfair'. The Brisbane festival had no restrictions and was an all-ages event.[4] At the Sydney show, during Tonight Alive's set a 46-year-old security guard died due to a suspected heart attack.[5]
Good Things confirmed via their Facebook page that they would be back to host a 2019 festival.[6] On 19 August 2019, organisers announced the dates and venues for Good Things 2019. The Sydney venue was changed to Centennial Park to accommodate more people.[7]
The 2020 festival was cancelled due to the then-ongoing outbreak of COVID-19. Dates were announced for the 2021 festival for 3–5 December in Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane.[8] However the 2021 festival was also cancelled from an outbreak of the then-recent COVID-19 Omicron variant. Dates and the planned lineup still stand for the 2022 festival, which was announced alongside the former's cancellation.[9]
2018
The 2018 Good Things festival was headlined by The Offspring playing their 1994 album Smash in its entirety,[10] and Stone Sour. The festival marked Babymetal's first Australian tour, welcoming one of the biggest crowds of the day.[2]
The 2018 festival was sponsored by Nintendo Switch, Marshall Amplification, Vans, Uppercut Deluxe, Dangerfield, Jack Daniel's, Furphy Ale, Captain Morgan, and Smirnoff.[11]
Locations
- Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne, 7 December 2018
- Parramatta Park, Sydney, 8 December 2018
- Brisbane Showgrounds, Brisbane, 9 December 2018
Lineup
- The Offspring (USA)
- Stone Sour (USA) Festival Exclusive
- All Time Low (USA)
- Dropkick Murphys (USA)
- Bullet for My Valentine (UK) Festival Exclusive
- The Used (USA)
- Babymetal (JPN) Festival Exclusive
- The Smith Street Band
- Dashboard Confessional (USA)
- Mayday Parade (USA)
- La Dispute (USA)
- Northlane
- The Wonder Years (Band) (USA)
- Waterparks (USA)
- Tonight Alive
- Scarlxrd (UK)
- Emmure (USA) Festival Exclusive
- Palaye Royale (CAN/USA)
- Make Them Suffer
- Waax
- Boston Manor (UK)
- Void of Vision
- Ecca Vandal
- Stuck Out (Melbourne only)
- RedHook (Sydney only)
- Stateside (Brisbane only)
2019
Locations
- Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne, 6 December 2019
- Centennial Park, Sydney, 7 December 2019
- Brisbane Showgrounds, Brisbane, 8 December 2019
Lineup
Source:[12]
- Parkway Drive
- A Day to Remember (USA) Festival Exclusive
- Violent Soho
- Simple Plan (CAN)
- Bad Religion (USA) Festival Exclusive
- Trivium (USA)
- Skegss
- Simple Creatures (USA)
- Karnivool
- The Butterfly Effect
- The Veronicas
Coheed And Cambria (USA)[A]- Falling in Reverse (USA) Festival Exclusive
- Enter Shikari (UK)
- Dance Gavin Dance (USA) Festival Exclusive
- Reel Big Fish (USA)
- Poppy (USA)
- Thy Art Is Murder
- Ice Nine Kills (USA)
The Damned Things (USA)[B]- Slowly Slowly
- Man with a Mission (JPN) Festival Exclusive
- The Bennies
- Voyager
- Yours Truly
- Windwaker
- The Beautiful Monument
- Gravemind
Notes
- A^ Coheed and Cambria withdrew from the lineup due to sudden health concerns with drummer Josh Eppard.[13]
- B^ The Damned Things withdrew from the lineup due to scheduling conflicts.[14]
2022
The 2022 Good Things festival was headlined by Bring Me the Horizon and Deftones. The festival marked the reunions of TISM, who performed their first shows since 2004, and Kisschasy, who played their 2005 album United Paper People in full, their first live shows since 2015. NOFX also played their 1994 album Punk in Drublic in full. The festival marked the debut Australian concerts of Electric Callboy, Nova Twins, and Blood Command.
Locations
- Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne, 2 December 2022
- Centennial Park, Sydney, 3 December 2022
- Brisbane Showgrounds, Brisbane, 4 December 2022
Lineup
- Bring Me the Horizon (UK) Festival Exclusive
- Deftones (USA)
- NOFX (USA) Festival Exclusive
- TISM
- The Amity Affliction
- Gojira (FRA)
- One Ok Rock (JPN) Festival Exclusive
- Sabaton (SWE) Festival Exclusive
- Polaris
- Millencolin (SWE)
3OH!3 (USA)[A]- Blood Command (NOR)
- Chasing Ghosts
- Cosmic Psychos
- Electric Callboy (GER)
Fever 333 (USA)[B]- Jinjer (UKR)
Jxdn (USA)[C]- Kisschasy
- Lacuna Coil (ITA)
- Nova Twins (UK)
- Ocean Grove
- Paledusk (JPN)
- RedHook
- Regurgitator
- Sleeping With Sirens (USA)
- Soulfly (USA)
- Teenage Joans
- The Gloom in the Corner
- The Story So Far (USA)
- Thornhill
- Those Who Dream
- To the Grave (Brisbane and Melbourne only)
- You Am I (Melbourne and Sydney only)
Notes
- A^ 3OH!3 withdrew from the lineup due to a dispute with promoters over their allocated set time and were replaced by Ocean Grove.[15]
- B^ Fever 333 withdrew from the lineup due to the sudden departure of several band members.[16]
- C^ Jxdn withdrew from the lineup for unknown reasons and was replaced by Teenage Joans.[15]
2023
The 2023 Good Things festival was headlined by Fall Out Boy, Limp Bizkit and Devo. The 2023 edition marked the debut Australian performances of Hanabie., Magnolia Park, Slaughter to Prevail, and Royal & the Serpent.
Locations
- Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne, 1 December 2023
- Centennial Park, Sydney, 2 December 2023
- Brisbane Showgrounds, Brisbane, 3 December 2023
Lineup
- Fall Out Boy (USA)[A] Festival Exclusive
- Limp Bizkit (USA)
- Devo (USA)
- I Prevail (USA)
- Bullet for My Valentine (UK) Festival Exclusive
- Corey Taylor (USA)
- Pennywise (USA)
- Spiderbait
- Slowly Slowly
- Enter Shikari (UK)
- Behemoth (POL)
- Sepultura (BRA)
- Taking Back Sunday (USA)
- Pvris (USA)[B]
- Bloom
- Boom Crash Opera
- Eskimo Joe
- Frenzal Rhomb
- Hanabie. (JPN)
- Jebediah
- Luca Brasi
- Magnolia Park (USA)
- Make Them Suffer
- Ocean Sleeper
- Royal & the Serpent (USA)
- Short Stack
- Slaughter to Prevail (RUS)
- Stand Atlantic
- Tapestry
- The Plot in You (USA)
- While She Sleeps (UK)
Notes
2024
The 2024 Good Things festival will be headlined by Fall Out Boy, Limp Bizkit and Devo. The 2024 edition marked the debut Australian performances of Hanabie., Magnolia Park, Slaughter to Prevail, and Royal & the Serpent.
Locations
- Flemington Racecourse, Melbourne, 6 December 2024
- Centennial Park, Sydney, 7 December 2024
- Brisbane Showgrounds, Brisbane, 8 December 2024
Lineup
- Korn (USA)
- Sum 41 (USA)
- Violent Femmes (USA)
- Electric Callboy (GER)
- Billy Corgan (USA)
- Mastodon (USA)
- Kerry King (USA
- The Gaslight Anthem
- Jet
- The Living End
- L7 (USA)
- Northlane
- Bowling For Soup (USA)
- Alpha wolf
- Sleeping With Sirens (USA)
- The Butterfly Effect
- 311 (USA)
- Aviva
- Destroy Boys (USA)
- Dragon (NZ)
- Frank Turner (UK)
- From Ashes to New (USA)
- Grandson (USA)
- Highly Suspect (USA)
- Imminence (SWE)
- Killing Heidi
- Loathe (UK)
- Reliqa
- Taylor Acorn (USA)
References
- ^ a b Jenke, Tyler (9 December 2018). "All the highlights from Australia's inaugural Good Things festival". Tone Deaf. Retrieved 12 December 2018
- ^ a b Young, David James (10 December 2018). "The Brilliant, The Bad, And The Babymetal: How Good Things Festival Lived Up To The Hype". Junkee. Retrieved 13 December 2018
- ^ Mack, Emmy (20 November 2018). "NSW Police Issue Statement Following Good Things Festival Accusations". Music Feeds. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ Buttigieg, Melissa (24 November 2018). "Music festival slammed for restricting underage ticket holders". Yahoo7 News. Retrieved 12 December 2018
- ^ "Security Guard Dies Following 'Medical Episode' At Good Things' Sydney Festival". TheMusic.com.au. 10 December 2018. Archived from the original on 31 July 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- ^ "Good Things Festival - Thank you for attending..." Facebook.com. 17 December 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
- ^ Jenke, Tyler (19 August 2019). "Good Things festival announce dates and venues for its 2019 return". Tonedeaf.thebrag.com. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
- ^ Rinaldo, Talia (4 December 2020). "Good Things Festival announces its 2021 return". Beat. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
- ^ Mack, Emmy (14 December 2021). "Punks Rejoice! Good Things Festival Announces 2022 Return With "Biggest Lineup Yet"". Music Feeds. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
- ^ Baxter, Lauren (5 December 2018). "Can't Wait To Hear 'Smash' At Good Things? The Offspring's Noodles Shares The Making Of". TheMusic. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- ^ "Good Things Festival Brisbane". Good Things Festival. Archived from the original on 12 December 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
- ^ Gallagher, Allison (27 August 2019). "The Massive 2019 Good Things Festival Lineup Is Here, Featuring The Veronicas". Music Feeds. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
- ^ Jenke, Tyler (27 October 2019). "Coheed & Cambria cancel tour dates as drummer undergoes heart surgery". Tone Deaf. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
- ^ "The Butterfly Effect Have Joined This Year's Good Things Lineup". Music Feeds. 18 November 2019.
- ^ a b Chriswhatavibe [@chriswhatavibe] (24 November 2022). "Stoked that Ocean Grove & Teenage Joans join the massive lineup! Sad JXDN can't join us but a situation has arisen where he simply can't make the show. 3oh3! threw a tantrum over their playing times we tried everything to make them happy they still threw the toys out of the cot. https://t.co/Ab7lsJ09zc" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 24 November 2022. Retrieved 5 December 2022 – via Twitter.
- ^ Robinson, Ellie (5 November 2022). "Fever 333 cancel all tours until next March "in order to give everyone the best experience possible"". NME. Archived from the original on 5 November 2022. Retrieved 14 November 2022.
- ^ "Freak storm cuts music festival short, halts soccer match in Sydney". www.9news.com.au. 3 December 2023. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- ^ "From PVRIS". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
External links
- Rock festivals in Australia
- 2018 concert tours
- 2019 concert tours
- Heavy metal festivals in Australia
- Summer festivals
- Music festivals established in 2018
- 2018 establishments in Australia
- Music festivals in Melbourne
- Music festivals in Queensland
- Music festivals in New South Wales
- Festivals in Brisbane
- Festivals in Sydney