Birmingham’s Furnace Fest celebrates big milestone and new beginnings

 1666512802 
1759396903

James Coffman, Courtesy of Furnace Fest, Iron Hills Productions

By Alli Patton

Twenty-five years ago, Furnace Fest roared from the belly of Birmingham’s historic Sloss Furnaces for the very first time. In August 2000, the punk, metal, and hardcore event was unlike anything the Magic City had ever experienced.

Johnny Grimes, the owner of Workplay and Iron Hills Productions, the company that has made Furnace Fest possible these last few years, experienced the first iteration of the festival as a fan rather than its promoter. He remembered there being unbridled excitement around the entire affair.

“There had been nothing like it before in this area,” Grimes said.

As a teen, Grimes made the voyage to Nashville, Atlanta, and beyond to attend punk and hardcore shows and congregate within their accompanying scenes. Furnace Fest brought to his backyard what he would travel hundreds of miles to experience. Community, in every sense of the word, would be fostered over the course of those three summer days.

“It really just felt like a family reunion,” he said. “These were friends that you have met over the years going to shows. To be able to put a big event on like that, it really brought everybody together.”

Grimes watched the festival, as well as the one-of-a-kind spirit and community it nurtured, evolve throughout the early 2000s.

“From 2000 to 2003, it really grew into something pretty special for the Southeast,” he said. “It was one of the few actual DIY, do-it-yourself, no-major-sponsors, no-money-really-behind-it music festivals.”

By 2004, however, the annual event was halted due to financial and organizational issues, leaving it to become a source of nostalgia for the next several years. It wouldn’t be until 2021 that Grimes, alongside various partners, would revive the beloved festival.

“The original plan was to do a one-time resurrection of Furnace Fest,” he said. “But as we were planning, as we got closer and closer to the event, it took off. It blew up.”

(James Coffman; Courtesy of Furnace Fest, Iron Hills Productions)

The one-off event turned into an annual affair again, and over the course of the next four years, fans old and new, visitors from all 50 states and 22 different countries, according to Grimes, would get a taste of what Furnace Fest was like in its nascent form. The rich community it originally fostered would experience a resurrection, too.

“Everyone is just as excited to be there as the next person,” Christian Nielsen, Birmingham native and frontman of local act and Furnace Fest staple Meadows, said of the event as it exists today. “That trickles down from all the bands that are playing, all the fans that are there, all the people that are working.”

He added, “It’s almost like the southern hospitality of Birmingham somehow rubs off onto all these people that came into Birmingham. I think everyone understands the special nature of what they’re there to experience.”

During the 2024 event, that sense of community couldn’t have come at a more desperate time for the members of Meadows.

“We had just lost our bass player, Brandon Dabbs, like that same week, tragically, and I could not have had a more cathartic sort of moment,” Nielsen said. “I think it was the perfect timing to have all these people that you could really see and feel like a tangible, visible impact that he left on people through the avenue that hardcore created for us.”

Tough times for festivals

The energy and emotion that is captured during the three-day event every year is something so rare, but the fact that Furnace Fest is back for 2025 is a remarkable feat in and of itself.

“The festival industry, and the music industry in general, is struggling greatly,” Grimes said. “2024 and especially 2025 has been very difficult. Ticket sales are down across the board nationally by over 30% … As of today, there have been 58 music festivals cancelled this year.”

In fact, Iron Hills Productions recently announced the cancellation of what would have been their inaugural country music festival due to rising costs and logistical challenges. 

Ken Spring, an Associate Professor of Media & Entertainment Industries at Belmont University, said there are a number of reasons for the volatility.

“You do have a super saturation of music festivals across the U.S.,” he said. “Post-covid costs have shot everything up. The additional tariffs that have played out have also increased costs … When you have the costs that are increasing at the rate that they are, it makes it incredibly difficult, especially when ticket sales, right off the bat, are not really strong.”

Independent festivals, like Furnace Fest, are taking the biggest hits as consumers have been forced to adapt to this fluctuating economic climate.

“When you get to those much larger festivals, it is far easier because you have a larger profit margin,” Spring said. “But the smaller festivals, because they’re running on such a small profit margin already, it makes it far more difficult for them to survive.”

That is not to say that all hope is lost for these kinds of events, but Spring did have a word of advice for Furnace Fest. 

“Right now, playing up nostalgia, or playing off of nostalgia, works to their benefit,” Spring said.

Since its revival, Furnace Fest has carefully curated such sentimentality. While the lineup will continue to welcome those legacy acts, Johnny Grimes explained how they are planning to pivot, with this year’s event effectively marking a moment of transition.  

“We’ve made some significant changes,” Grimes said. “Not our vision so much but maybe our focus, looking towards younger bands … We do want to look to the future of punk and hardcore and alternative music, so we want to start engaging a much younger audience, so that’s where our shift is starting to focus.”

Grimes is hopeful for the longevity of Furnace Fest in its latest iteration, but he is also aware of the road that lies ahead. Running a music festival will remain challenging, but he thinks, with hard work, the beloved event will still be around in a decade. 

“We are getting as lean as we possibly can,” he said. “We’re staying focused on what makes us different, and I think makes us great, which is focusing on community, but we will have some difficult waters to navigate in the next few years. We’re willing to do it to the best of our ability.”

Whatever the future looks like, the promoter said that what lies at the heart of the festival will remain the same.

“The ethos behind Furnace Fest will never change and it is that community, camaraderie and family atmosphere.” 

 

Trump levies new sanctions on Russian oil giants in a push to end Ukraine war

President Donald Trump's administration announced Wednesday new "massive sanctions" against Russia's oil industry that are aimed at bringing an end to Moscow's brutal war on Ukraine.

Misty Copeland hangs up her pointe shoes after performing at retirement show

Misty Copeland took one last spin on her pointe shoes Wednesday, as she retired after a trailblazing career in which she became an ambassador for diversity in an overwhelmingly white art form.

This nation has the fastest rising rate of cancer cases — and deaths — in the world

According to a new report, cancer rates are skyrocketing in this tiny country. What's causing this to happen? And what steps can be taken to turn the tide?

Iceland reports the presence of mosquitoes for the first time, as climate warms

The discovery of three Culiseta annulata mosquitoes was confirmed this week by the Natural Science Institute of Iceland, which said the mosquitoes likely arrived by freight.

Alabama board seeks to ban books that ‘positively’ depict trans themes from library youth sections

The Alabama Public Library Service Board of Directors is considering a proposed rule change that expands the existing requirement for youth sections to be free of “material deemed inappropriate for children.” The new proposal said that includes any material that “positively depicts transgender procedures, gender ideology, or the concept of more than two biological genders.”

After months of the same songs on the Hot 100, ‘Billboard’ tweaks its rules

Billboard has revised its system of removing songs from the Hot 100 singles chart once they've gotten too old to qualify as contemporary hits.

More Arts and Culture Coverage