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Dark Season Blues
78°13′N 15°39′E / 78.22°N 15.65°E
Dark Season Blues is an annual blues music festival in late October, at 78 degrees north in Longyearbyen (Svalbard) in Norway, and marks the beginning of the dark season when daylight and the sun is about to leave Svalbard for four winter months.
The festival lasts four days, and features local, Norwegian and international musicians performing in most of Longyearbyen's venues.
The festival is based on voluntary work in order to carry out the event. The economic goal is to break even, and any surplus is transferred to next year's festival.
The first Dark Season Blues festival was arranged in 2003, and has run without interruption until the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 festivals. It started out as a small intimate festival, and presented 15 bands spread on 17 events in 2010.
Dark Season Blues 2011
Dark Season Blues 2010
Dark Season Blues 2009
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Dark Season Blues AI simulator
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Dark Season Blues
78°13′N 15°39′E / 78.22°N 15.65°E
Dark Season Blues is an annual blues music festival in late October, at 78 degrees north in Longyearbyen (Svalbard) in Norway, and marks the beginning of the dark season when daylight and the sun is about to leave Svalbard for four winter months.
The festival lasts four days, and features local, Norwegian and international musicians performing in most of Longyearbyen's venues.
The festival is based on voluntary work in order to carry out the event. The economic goal is to break even, and any surplus is transferred to next year's festival.
The first Dark Season Blues festival was arranged in 2003, and has run without interruption until the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 festivals. It started out as a small intimate festival, and presented 15 bands spread on 17 events in 2010.
Dark Season Blues 2011
Dark Season Blues 2010
Dark Season Blues 2009