Trance Energy was a Dutch trance event featuring trance music DJs from around the world. It was organized by ID&T and was held since 1999 in various venues in the Netherlands. In 2011, ID&T changed the concept and renamed the festival to "Energy", opening the festival to other genres from Trance only.

Trance Energy
Trance Energy Utrecht 2002
GenreElectronic dance music, trance
Location(s)The Netherlands
Years active1999-2010; 2011-2013 (as Energy)
FoundersID&T
WebsiteOfficial site

History

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The event was founded in 1999. Traditionally, there was a "small" edition and a big edition each year. In 2002, the small edition failed to sell out its 20,000-person ticket capacity (only 15,000 tickets were sold) and thereafter, Trance Energy was only held once annually, at the Jaarbeurs convention center in Utrecht, where it has been sold out each year up to 2009. The festival gained "cult" status among trance fans. In 2010, it failed to sell out by slight margins since it was organized on Easter week end and this was problematic for some foreign visitors (especially from Poland).

While audience in the first years was mostly Dutch, there were subsequently many international visitors, mainly from the European Union but sometimes from other areas around the world. This is due to the festival earning worldwide fame thanks to bootlegs of DJ mixes and some official videos of former editions. At the 2010 edition, it has been quoted by ID&T that more than 40% of the audience was not Dutch.

In 2011, ID&T changed the concept and renamed the festival to "Energy", opening the festival to other genres from Trance only. The change was announced in September 2010, and labelled as a simple "name change". However, it wasn't just that and non-trance artists were included in the line-up. This change caused controversy and was very negatively greeted on internet forums. Meanwhile, one ID&T competitor launched a Trance only festival in the Netherlands. As a result, attendance declined steadily with edition 2011 and 2012 being not sold out by large margins (only half of 2012 tickets were sold). In 2013, the event was moved to the Ziggo Dome, a smaller venue in Amsterdam and still it failed to sell out. There was no announcement of a 2014 edition.

In 2017, Trance Energy "returned" as a stage at Tomorrowland, also organized by ID&T. In 2018, Trance Energy was a stage at Tomorrowland and Mysteryland too. Since then, Trance Energy has remained at Mysteryland.

Description of the Event

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Above & Beyond performing during Trance Energy in 2010.

Past 2003 editions of Trance Energy usually focus on three stages located in different halls of the Jaarbeurs convention center and connected by corridors :

  • The "Mainstage" (capacity : 20,000 people) where headliner DJs of the night do their sets. The sets are usually between one and two hours long. Impressive light shows with lasers, lights and fireworks are featured along with some acts (Dancers, Live acts, DJ sets, etc...). The setup is quite typical of a "classic" trance party: Minimal decorations with most of the ambience being created by lights and the structural elements used to rig them. Only the size makes it different.
  • The "Madhouse" (capacity : 5,000 people) which features more house and club music. This stage has sometimes been criticized by some of the visitors who find the music played there too distant from the "trance" theme of the event.[citation needed]
  • An alternate stage whose name changes each year (capacity : 5,000 people) where edgier trance than on the mainstage is played. This stage often features very famous names who are able to take more risks musically speaking than what they would be allowed on the mainstage.[citation needed]

Since 2007, a fourth stage has been added, the "Hard Stage" featuring harder derivatives of Trance Music. In 2009, students of the Utrecht School for the Arts were asked to design the entrance of the festival. They created a multi-disciplinary entrance, where interactivity, game-elements, video, fashion and music came together.

Trance Energy toured Australia in 2009. The tour attracted controversy after police shut down the Melbourne leg early due to 26 overdoses.[1]

History of editions

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Here is the list of Trance Energy editions :

Edition Date Venue Anthem Spectators
1 30-4-1999 Beursgebouw Eindhoven 8 500 (Sold Out)[citation needed]
2 30-10-1999 Statenhal The Hague 10 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
3 (Energy 2000) 31-12-1999 Beursgebouw Eindhoven 8 500 (Sold out)[citation needed]
4 29-4-2000 Beursgebouw Eindhoven 8 500 (Sold out)[citation needed]
5 30-9-2000 Thialf Heerenveen Svenson & Gielen - The Beauty of Silence 20 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
6 17-2-2001 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Push - Strange World 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
7 20-10-2001 Thialf Heerenveen Svenson & Gielen - Twisted 20 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
8 16-2-2002 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Svenson & Gielen - We Know What You Did 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
9 21-9-2002 Thialf Heerenveen Svenson & Gielen - Answer The Question 15 000[citation needed]
10 15-2-2003 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Cygnus X - Positron 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
11 31-1-2004 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Svenson - Sunlight Theory 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
12 12-2-2005 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Rank 1 - Beats@Rank-1 Dotcom 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
13 11-2-2006 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Marcel Woods - Advanced 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
14 3-3-2007 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Joop - The Future 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
15 23-2-2008 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Ernesto vs Bastian - Thrill 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
16 7-3-2009 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Rank 1 - L.E.D. There Be Light 30 000 (Sold out)[citation needed]
17 3-4-2010 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Sander van Doorn - Renegade 27 000[citation needed]
18 (Energy) 19-2-2011 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Jochen Miller - Classified 20 000[citation needed]
19 (Energy) 3-3-2012 Jaarbeurs Utrecht Hardwell - Cobra 15 000[citation needed]
20 (Energy) 2-3-2013 Ziggodome Amsterdam Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano, Jaz Von D - Firefaces 14 000[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Russell, Mark (12 April 2009). "Police decided not to patrol overdose rave". The Age. Retrieved 11 August 2011.
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