http://www.thebattlecreekshopper.com BATTLE CREEK SHOPPER NEWS Thursday, July 18, 2024 27
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Audience members listen to music happening on the Fantasy Forest stage
at a prior Leilapalooza at Leila Arboretum. (Shopper News file photo)
Food, drink and craft vendors will
be on hand at the 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Leilapalooza next week in Battle
Creek. (Shopper News file photo)
background and their foray into sing-
ing and songwriting seemed like a
natural progression.
“I just kind of decided ‘I think I
want to make it a little more per-
sonal to me’,” they said, “so I moved
back recently, I released an EP in
April and I’m just working on my
Leilapalooza set right now. That’s
pretty much where I’m at.”
Mars will open on the Oak Stage at
11 a.m.
“I will be singing my originals,”
they said, “and then a bunch of just
fun little songs that people like on
the ukulele.”
Leilapalooza Music Festival
was founded by the Battle Creek
Metropolitan Area Moustache
Society (BCMAMS) 14 years ago as
a fundraiser for the Leila Arboretum
Society (LAS.)
The event committee, led by J.J.
Ramon, is also offering a vendor
row, adult beverages and craft and
food vending.
Proceeds from the parking fee and
beer tent are donated to LAS.
Ramon said he has continued to
organize Leilapalooza because there
is no other music festival in the area
in which all of the entertainers per-
form without pay and where admis-
sion is free.
“This year we’ve got 34 acts,
we’ve got an electronic and dance
stage in the garden area so that will
be nice,” said Ramon. “There will be
something for everybody and I think
that’s what keeps it going. Whether
you like rock, electronic dance, blue-
grass, jazz and just about anything
you can think of, we’ve had it over
the years. You can go to one place
and see what you like.”
Most of the acts hail from Battle
Creek and surrounding areas while
some will attend from out of state.
“We have Truth Untold from
Canada who is stopping by to play
on their way through and we’ve had
bands from Ohio, California, New
York and everywhere in between,”
said Ramon, “but we focus predomi-
nantly on Battle Creek and Michigan
music artists and give them a plat-
form to get their music out there, get
their name out there.”
Ramon said that bands and acts
wanting to perform at Leilapalooza
add up to well over 100 each year
though only about 35 can be accom-
modated.
The performance schedule fills up
by February.
“We’ve gotten new performers
every single year and we like to
bring back the acts that everyone
really likes as well,” said Ramon,
“people who play covers of radio
rock and country favorites.”
The festival also offers live heavy
metal and hard rock later in the day
with “softer, more family friendly
music” earlier in the day, he said.
Returning this year is local favorite
Barefoot Blonde while also perform-
ing is newcomer Hannah Fae.
More acts include Lucid Vibe,
10 Gauge Rage, B Haan, the Ultra
Violets and more.
The event has been scaled back
since the COVID-19 pandemic of
2020.
“In 2016 we 66 acts on six stages
and it was spread out from the pavil-
ion to the bowl where we do the sled
race and out in front,” said Ramon
referring to FebruHairy Festivus.
“Since COVID we’ve tried to keep it
toward the front between the fountain
and Fantasy Forest area where there
is a permanent stage and the Oak
Tree stage across from the Fountain
Stage and now the Native Garden
area triangulates that.”
A small fee for parking benefits the
LAS.
LEILA
Continued from Page 26