MEADVILLE —
The Ignite Festival got it’s start one year ago.
“Yeah,” said Brandon Hough, worship leader at Watson Run Church, the main organizer for the festival, “we were going to consider it a success if we got 500 people.”
Instead, an army of about 5,000 young folks showed up at Hough’s backyard in Vernon Township looking to enjoy a couple of nights of modern Christian music and to hang out with some like-minded souls.
“We were pretty much blown away by last year,” said Hough. “And (the people) came from a pretty big radius, too. I know people that were there from Rochester (N.Y.), Columbus (Ohio).”
The second annual Ignite Festival takes place Sept. 10, 11 and 12, again at Hough’s 40-acre property at 14849 Brown Hill Road, Meadville. And festival organizers are prepared for another big crowd.
“We’re expecting, realistically, 6,000 to 10,000 this year,” said Hough. “I’ve already got youth groups that have called and made commitments from Michigan, Maryland.”
The festival will play host to 13 national music acts, like Bread of Stone from Iowa, Disciple from Tennessee, DecembeRadio from Virgina, and Stellar Kart from Arizona, just to name a few.
The concerts run from 6 to 11 p.m. on Sept. 10. Then on Sept. 11, the music will play all day long — 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. There will also be guest speakers, camping, vendors and a church service on Sunday morning.
And admission is entirely free. The shows, the parking, the camping; all free.
“We felt pretty strongly that this should be something that is free,” said Hough. “Any church can bring its youth group out and camp for the weekend and not worry too much about how much it’s going to cost. Honestly, I think that’s why we had such good attendance last year. No charge.”
So, how is all this paid for?
“Therein lies the trick to all this,” said Hough.
He estimates the festival costs around $30,000 to pull off — 13 bands, the lighting, the sound system, publicity, countless other logistical considerations. The money’s got to come from somewhere.
Well, according to Hough, Watson Run Church picks up a large chunk of the tab. The rest comes from sponsorships by other churches and businesses. A lot of needed items are donated, or offered at discounts. Then there are going to be around 150 volunteers who work at the festival, added to the core group of about a dozen who handle the planning.
“We do a lot of begging and borrowing and trading to get it all put together,” said Hough.
One of the organizers’ key partnerships is with the band Bread of Stone. For five years prior to the Ignite Festival, Watson Run Church put on another festival called Revival, which booked various different genres of music in hopes of attracting a broad range of age groups.
“It never really took off,” said Hough. “The biggest crowd we ever had was 400 people.”
Organizers regrouped and decided to focus on younger people for its next festival, which became Ignite.
Anyway, one of the first bands booked for Revival was Bread of Stone. And over the subsequent years, Bread of Stone built itself a successful production company, bringing along its own lighting and sound gear and renting it out to other bands.
“The first year they played here they had a Chevy Tahoe and a little trailer behind it,” said Hough. “By the fifth year, they had a huge tour bus and huge cargo trailer behind bus. Now they bring semi trucks.”
Because of the relationship that festival organizers have with Bread of Stone, the festival not only gets a popular rock band on it’s bill, it also gets the production equipment at a nice discount.
“We’ve got top-of-the-line sound and lighting,” said Hough. “It’s not something you would expect to find at some farm on the outskirts of Meadville.”
So what’s the motive here? Why go through all this work and spend all that money?
According to Hough, it’s all about reaching the youth.
“I guess the idea behind it is that we want to be a positive alternative to other things that high school and college students can get into,” said Hough. “Our goal is to get kids out there having fun, enjoying the music and the speakers. And we’re also hoping that they’ll get involved in a church or a youth group for the school year as a result of it.”
you can help
Businesses of churches interested can still be a sponsor for next weekend’s Ignite Festival. For more information, call Watson Run Church at 337-2886, or go to theignitefestival.com.
You Can Go
The 2010 Ignite Festival is Sept. 10, 11 and 12 at the Hough Farm, 14849 Brown Hill Road, Meadville. Parking is free. Camping is free. Admission is free.
Gates open at noon on Sept. 10. Shows start at 6 p.m. Featured acts that Friday are Reilly, Wavorly, Philmont and Stellar Kart.
On Sept. 11, music starts at 10 a.m. and lasts all the way until 11 p.m. The bands for that Saturday include Shine Bright Baby, Skyhawk Drive, Willet, The Great Transparency, Satellites and Sirens, Bread of Stone, John Reuben, DecembeRadio and Disciple.
A church service will conclude the festival on Sept. 12 at 10 a.m.
- More information: Visit www.theignitefestival.com.
Pete Chiodo can be reached at 724-6370 ext. 275 or by e-mail at pchiodo@meadvilletribune.com.
Local News
Christian music festival offers 'positive alternative'
- Local News
-
-
Conneaut Lake Park roars into 120th season
Conneaut Lake Park’s 120th season is officially under way with its in-keeping-with-tradition, four-day Memorial Day weekend opening, and the “crowds are coming in,” Jack Moyers said Saturday.
-
Area communities ready to celebrate Memorial Day
Editor’s note: The following Memorial Day events have been reported for publication in The Tribune. All events are Monday, except those in Edinboro and Shermansville, which are planned for Sunday. -
Remembering Civil War Bucktails
A glimpse into daily life of the Civil War era is easy to see in Crawford County.
-
Area Memorial Day events
The following Memorial Day events have been reported for publication in The Tribune. All events are on Monday, except the one at Edinboro that is planned for Sunday.
-
Civil War soldiers highlight Meadville Memorial Day events
A courageous Meadville man — wounded three times but remaining on a Civil War battlefield until he was too weak to continue — is being remembered this Memorial Day as the Meadville Area Memorial Day Committee continues its mission of observing the 150th anniversary of the War Between the States.
-
Police: Locals admit to killing Ohio woman
Two Cochranton women were arrested and jailed on homicide charges early Thursday after allegedly admitting they killed an Ohio woman and buried her body in a shallow grave near their residence recently.
-
Reader 'Faces' are coming in
Mom's car dash, Meadville, PA
Lucy Kedzierski, 12, looks at the face every morning waiting for school bus!
She took this with a cell phone. -
North Street Project sure to be 'very disruptive'
With the preliminary traffic control plan for Pennsylvania Department of Transportation’s North Street Project complete, Meadville City Manager Joe Chriest summed up the anticipated impact of the project, which is expected to span the entire 2013 construction season. “This is going to be very, very disruptive,” he said Wednesday.
-
Boat business booming in warm weather
It’s been a booming business in boats this spring, according to some area boat dealers.
-
City leaders not concerned after financial downgrade
During the past five years, Moody’s Investors Service has assigned three different ratings — all within the range of “upper medium grade” to the City of Meadville’s bonds. In 2007, the city was given a rating of A3, the lowest of the trio. In 2010, the city’s bond rating was raised to A1, the highest ranking in the “upper medium” category. Monday, Moody’s gave the city’s $10,000,000 General Obligation Bonds, Series of 2012, which went on the market Monday, the middle rating of A2.
- More Local News Headlines
-


