How Cardiff created a Fringe for the BBC Radio 6 Music festival

Gavin Allen
C-Music
Published in
6 min readMar 30, 2022

Local emerging artists are being given a platform to show their abilities alongside international acts.

WORDS: CRAIG STRACHAN

VIDEOS: TANE ROGERS-EIRUG & ZOSH MELANCZUK

When discussions first began about holding the BBC 6 Music Festival in Cardiff it was hoped the event might be able to leave a lasting impression on the city.

Instead, Cardiff will leave a lasting impression on the festival.

The Welsh capital has ‘Music City’ status and that comes with some bold ambition, so when the idea of the festival’s first Fringe was raised, the city grasped a giant logistical challenge with both hands.

Today, the Fringe is 29 events across 12 venues with more than 150 Welsh artists performing.

Dave Ball, who works with Creative Wales, was one of the main facilitators in bringing the 6 Music festival to Cardiff and creating the Fringe.

“It actually came about back in June when we first met with the 6Music Festival team,” he said.

Dave Ball put in a huge amount of blood, sweat and tears to make the Fringe festival happen

“We were keen to ensure the grassroots Welsh music scene was represented and they [6 Music] suggested we run a Fringe, which they would support but which would be totally owned and organised by our side.”

It was a challenging idea but too good an opportunity to miss out on. Ball set to work organising the mechanics of the Fringe with local venues to produce the line-up and schedule.

“What we’ve ended up with is even bigger than I ever imagined but we’re immensely proud of it,” said Ball, a drummer in his spare time.

Video by Zosh Melanczuk

It has been a major undertaking. The 6 Music Festival began in 2014 in Manchester and has since been hosted by Newcastle, Bristol, Glasgow, Liverpool and London (there was no festival in 2018 or 2021). However, none of those major cities took on the challenge of inaugurating a Fringe festival.

The groundwork for the event started in the Autumn of 2021 when Ball and Cardiff Council first laid out to the BBC 6 Music team in Salford, Manchester, what they hoped to achieve.

The concept was to allow the grassroots venues in Cardiff to book their own shows, for the Cardiff team to provide Fringe branding and to host the entire thing on a webpage for tickets and advertising.

Immersed Festival has joined the Fringe
Big or small: 12 venues have taken the plunge to host events for the Fringe

That approach allowed other events and ideas to bolt onto the main festival, such as Immersed, an annual festival run by the University of South Wales, which spotlights Welsh music and raises money for Teenage Cancer Trust.

“We set out to the venues how we wanted the fringe to showcase the whole spectrum of genres and to be properly representative of the Welsh music scene,” he says.

“This was when we first discussed the additional events like a music journalism talk, Minty’s Gig Guide and the chance for student journalists to be involved in writing about the event.

The first Music Declares Emergency mural not in English has been created in Welsh for the Fringe
BBC 6 Music reporter Matt Everitt (left) is among the guests on a panel discussion music journalism, which is being hosted at Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Culture JOMEC

The Cardiff team worked closely with University of South Wales (USW) on bringing the annual Immersed Festival into the same timeline as the Fringe. Creative Cardiff collaborated with Cardiff University’s School of Journalism, Media and Communications (JOMEC) for the journalism aspects. FOR Cardiff worked with the team behind Minty’s Gig Guide to revamp the city’s much-loved music map. Overarching all of these was the support of Cardiff Council and BBC 6 Music themselves.

“It’s involved a lot of juggling and collaboration but it’s been great to see everyone pulling together and have so much enthusiasm,” said Ball.

Among the artists to benefit is four-piece indie rock band Basic State.

Video by Tane Rogers-Eirug

They performed at Tramshed on Tuesday, March 29, as part of a USW showcase. The Cardiff band have released a few EPs to date and have been playing support slots in and around the city for the last two years. The size of the opportunity the Fringe provides is clearly is not lost on them.

“It’s huge really because we could actually get some coverage from playing what we love,” front man Harvey Sivell told us during a rehearsal session in the lead up to their performance.

“With the BBC being national and international — hopefully it could give us a bit of a push.”

The band played its first gig in The Moon, a venue on the street that has become Cardiff’s musical soul, Womanby Street.

Basic State in rehearsal

They’re all madly excited about seeing acts such Johnny Marr and Pixies because they serve as inspiration for what they can achieve in the long-term because of the opportunities provided by events like the Fringe.

“We’ll stick around Cardiff at least for the next few years but hopefully things like this will let us go and play the Midlands, Manchester or Liverpool more often,” said Billy Saffil, the band’s lead guitarist.

Frontman Harvey says the band know what it wants: “To be able to be in a band and play as many gigs as humanly possible or go deaf trying.

“After lockdown things like this mean the world.”

For Dave Ball, what Harvey says above is a direct illustration of the wider goals of the Fringe.

“Long term I’d love to see some of the amazing emerging artists on the Fringe earn opportunities to take the career onwards and upwards as a result of the extra exposure,” he said.

As well as the artists, Ball sees this as a huge win for the city’s venues too.

“We hope this helps anyone who was a bit reluctant to get back to gigs to go and enjoy a show at one of our grassroots venues.

“They’ve all been hit so hard through the past two years that to see them all close to full for the week would be hugely welcome.”

To find out more about the Fringe festival this year check out the Immersed website or Minty’s Gig Guide.

  • Craig Strachan is an MA Magazine Journalism student at Cardiff University School of Journalism, Media and Culture (JOMEC).
  • Tane Rogers-Eirug is an MA Broadcast Journalism student at Cardiff University School of Journalism, Media and Culture (JOMEC).
  • Zosh Melanczuk is an MA Broadcast Journalism student at Cardiff University School of Journalism, Media and Culture (JOMEC).

*This article has been edited to correct the fact that Cardiff is not the first city to host a Fringe event around the festival.

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Gavin Allen
C-Music
Editor for

Digital Journalism lecturer at Cardiff University. Ex-Associate Editor of Mirror.co.uk and formerly of MailOnline, MSN UK and Wales Online.