Movin' the Love
August 25, 2007The Love Parade turns 18 this year. And like a self-respecting adult, it's moving away from home. It will look for a new start in the Ruhr region, Germany's industrial center in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
The Saturday parade in Essen is the centerpiece of a four-day "Love Weekend" that includes more than 1,000 hours of music, 700 performers and 100 parties. Last year's parade in Berlin attracted one million visitors who grooved to the music of 230 DJs from 17 countries. Ravers gyrate to electronic dance music booming from sound trucks and fixed stages manned by internationally known DJs.
Leaving Berlin
Organizers of this year's show wouldn't say how many fans they expect to turn up in Essen. But the party will go on, with a parade of 27 floats planned. The Love Parade will remain in the Ruhr region for five years, but will lead a nomadic existence. Essen will be followed by the cities of Dortmund, Bochum, Duisburg and Gelsenkirchen.
The company that operates the event decided to move from Berlin after failing to agree on terms with the capital's administrators on a future concept for the parade.
The Love Parade was first held in 1989 as a private business venture. In the subsequent years, it's been exported all over the world, taking place in cities such as Tel Aviv, San Francisco, Sydney and Mexico City. Yet the German parade has faced problems finding sponsors and was cancelled in 2004 and 2005.
The events' trademarks are scantily clad dancers, intoxication and summer sun. Its appeal extends far beyond fans of techno music.
"We will beat Berlin in a number of factors," said Rainer Schaller, managing director of Loveparade GmbH, the company which operates the event.
The parade must go on
Schaller said the Love Weekend from August 23-26 will be the "longest Love Parade in history" in terms of duration.
A former center of Germany's coal and steel industries, Essen is now home to big corporations like ThyssenKrupp, a German industrial conglomerate and one of the world's largest steel producers.
A press release on the city of Essen's Web site promised that the Love Parade "is staying true to its principles" and will retain its urban character.
"The parade is a child of the big city and will remain an urban phenomenon," according to the press release.