Halifax Pop Explosion
The Halifax Pop Explosion was a music festival and conference that occurred every fall, typically two weeks after Thanksgiving, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The term "Halifax Pop Explosion" also came to be adopted in the 1990s as the name of the Halifax alternative rock music scene as a whole, which at that time was dominated by power pop acts such as Sloan, Jale, The Super Friendz, and Thrush Hermit.
History
Founded in 1993, the Halifax Pop Explosion was three different events that are now remembered as one long-standing event. The original Halifax Pop Explosion, which was operated as a private business from 1993–1995, was created as a platform to celebrate Halifax's newfound fame as the "Seattle of the North" and home of Canadian grunge, as well as to promote local bands such as Sloan, The Inbreds, Jale, The Super Friendz, and Thrush Hermit.The company that organized the festival went out of business and a new organization launched the "Halifax On Music Festival", which ran successfully but not profitably for four years. The festival did not take place in 2000. In 2001, Waye Mason, a past owner of the Halifax On Music Festival, created the not-for-profit Halifax Pop Explosion Association to operate the festival for the good of the music community, regardless of long term profitability. The festival name returned to the Halifax Pop Explosion and the event doubled in size. The festival expanded its programming to support other genres within the independent music community, as well as the power pop for which it was best known for. By 2006, it was featuring acts from hip hop and electronica, to folk rock and alt-country, to punk and hardcore. With 180 plus bands in 20 venues over five days, the festival exhibited considerable breadth in presenting new music.
In recent years, the music festival has been plagued with funding issues and allegations of systemic racism after Halifax Pop Explosion#2017 [Lido Pimienta incident|an incident] at the show of Colombian Canadian musician Lido Pimienta in 2017. The 2020 Halifax Pop Explosion resulted in a deficit amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and since 2021, a new edition of the festival has not been held.
Venues
Music venues that have hosted the Halifax Pop Explosion include:- The Seahorse Tavern
- The Marquee Ballroom
- Gus' Pub
- CKDU Lobby
- The Carleton
- Rebecca Cohn Auditorium
- Bus Stop Theatre
- The Khyber
- The Pavilion