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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

Puddleplatz: Debby does Musikfest; a downer for 2024 attendance

The biggest headliner at Musikfest 2024 was Debby.

Even so, though overall attendance was down, concert headliners records were set.

The weather system formerly known as Hurricane Debby was still a super-soaker by the time it got to the Lehigh Valley, with wind-whipped rain falling in sheets Aug. 7, 8 and 9 and precipitation Aug. 2 and Aug. 6.

Debby was a downer nearly from the start of Musikfest, which postponed opening ceremonies Aug. 2 out of an abundance of caution because of inclement weather.

The Monocacy Creek area in the Colonial Industrial Quarter was flooded as it was in some previous years at Musikfest.

For Musikfest 2024, outdoor events were halted at 7:20 p.m. Aug. 6, including at Famlienplatz and Handwerkplatz, along the Monocacy Creek in the Colonial Industrial Quarter. Handwerkplatz was also closed Aug. 7.

The concert by Old Dominion was moved up to 5 p.m. Aug. 6, but only approximately 40 minutes of the performance took place.

The year 2018 is remembered as among the worst at Musikfest for flooding in the Colonial Industrial Quarter.

“It crested and came over the wall and It flooded right through the whole Volksplatz and Handwerkplatz area of the festival,” Curt Mosel, ArtsQuest Chief Operating Office, told WFMZ TV News in a 2018 interview.

“It took vendor equipment, all of their treasures and what-not, right down with it, all the merchandise out of our merchandise tent. It was crazy,” Mosel said.

For Musikfest 2024, because of rainstorms, overall attendance for Musikfest in its 41st year saw attendance drop to 1,020,000, according to an Aug. 13 press release from ArtsQuest, which owns and operates Musikfest.

That’s a dip of an estimated 300,000 from the 1.3 million attendees at Musikfest 2023, based on ArtsQuest figures.

“Musikfest 2024 was unlike the last few years, weather-wise,” Kassie Hilgert, ArtsQuest President and CEO, said.

“When the weather is great, it’s easy to put on a successful festival,” Hilgert continued in the press release.

“This year brought challenges, and every single member of our Musikfest team of staff and volunteers, along with our law-enforcement community and city officials, came together to support one another in every way possible,” said Hilgert.

Despite the decline in overall attendance, records were broken for some of the Wind Creek Steel Stage headliner concerts.

Four of the 2024 headliners had sold-out concerts: Greta Van Fleet, Aug. 1; Shinedown, Aug. 3; Old Dominion, Aug. 6, and Ludacris, Aug. 10, according to ArtsQuest.

The previous sold-out concerts record was three in one year at Musikfest, that of 2017: Santana, Chicago and Toby Keith.

Also, in 2024, a new record for tickets sold for headliner concerts was set: 54,786, an approximate 8 percent increase from the previous record set in 2011, according to ArtsQuest.

The 11 Wind Creek Steel Stage headliner concerts were Greta Van Fleet, Aug. 1; Sugar Ray, Better Than Ezra, Tonic, Aug. 2; Shinedown, Aug. 3; Jowell & Randy, Aug. 4; SLASH - S.E.R.P.E.N.T. Festival, Aug. 5; Old Dominion, Aug. 6; Lynyrd Skynyrd, Aug. 7; Black Eyed Peas, Aug. 8; Big Time Rush, Aug. 9; Ludacris, Aug. 10, and ZZ Top, Aug. 11.

Musikfest 2024 had 1,044 volunteers, ranging in age from 16 to 85, including 352 new volunteers, according to the ArtsQuest press release.

“It’s that teamwork that helped to make this year’s festival a big success, especially with the records that we set,” said Hilgert.

“This festival brings people from across the country and worldwide to Bethlehem, now a UNESCO World Heritage site,” Hilgert continued.

“We’re excited for them to visit our city and attend not only Musikfest, but also visit the local businesses that thrive here,” Hilgert said.

“As co-chairs of the Capital Campaign, we want to commend the ArtsQuest staff and volunteers for their tireless work to make this year’s Musikfest a success. Forty-one years of supporting the economic and cultural life of the community is what ArtsQuest is all about,” said Gregg and Cindy Feinberg.

Editor’s Note: This article was updated from the Aug. 21 Focus section publication to reference an 2018 interview given to WFMZ TV-News.

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