This February's River Sounds festival - which promotes normalising discussion about mental health - will be the last, organisers say. Photo / River Sounds Festival
Jessica Dine, a co-founder of the not-for-profit Everyone Hurts Foundation, said a surge in sponsorship offers after announcing the closure was enough to put on a final show on February 15.
“We have managed to get enough sponsorship across the line to put it on in the first place. We were a bit worried at one point if we were going to have to call it off. But some of our old sponsors pulled through.”
It had been increasingly difficult to put the festival on, she said, with the amount of work involved becoming difficult to manage, along with cost of living struggles making sponsorship harder to get.
“Things change with sponsors, they’re not set in stone, and it’s been increasingly more difficult to actually get that sponsorship. Obviously there’s a recession and things like that - it makes it quite difficult.”
The festival was started by Dine and Sophie Temperton, after Temperton’s brother Ben lost his life to suicide on their family farm. The music festival, held on that very family farm, was a way to honour him and his love of music, she said.
“It’s been a really special way for her family to heal, as well. Their father, Dave, handcarved a headstone for Ben, which is on the property. And we have a tree of remembrance on the day, so anybody who’s lost somebody to mental health, can put something up to remember them by.”
Temperton is having her first baby after the festival in March, with the due date the same as her brother’s birthday. Dine said it is a “goosebumps” moment, and with those lifestyle changes, she said it was the right time to move on.
“We made the call as a charity, and also the family, as well, themselves.”
She said the festival had raised more than $100,000 over its lifetime for local mental health organisations.
“One of the most special things that blows me away every time is the way Katikati and the wider Bay of Plenty community get behind us, and all support it.”
The festival - involving music, speakers, workshops, and MC’d by comedian Cori Gonzalez-Macuer - has always been a special place, she said, and the project had tried to normalise conversations about mental health in their community.
The foundation will carry on that work in other projects after the final festival.
“That was the idea behind setting up the foundation itself, was to break the stigma and open up the conversation around how can we start normalising some of these words and conversations.
“When I myself was a teenager and through my early 20s, it was very uncommon to hear terms like, even suicide really, self-harm, psychosis and things like that.”
Money raised from the final River Sounds festival is going to Tauranga-based mental health organisation Te Puna Hauora ki Uta ki Tai.
It was expected that between three and four hundred people would be welcomed to the festival in February, with performances from Georgia Lines, Bec Sandridge, and King Kapisi announced.