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Lollapalooza Chile: The Killers, JaneÂ’s, Kanye, Fatboy

CHICAGO FEST GOES TO SOUTH AMERICA

The Killers

The lineup for the inaugural Lollapalooze Chile has been announced. 50-plus acts will perform on five stages at the two-day festival set to happen Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3 in O’Higgins Park, Santiago, Chile.

“The job we did to gather these artists for 2011 was remarkable,” says fest co-organizer Perry Farrell. “Imagine gathering 60 artists while the contract ink is still wet. We put it together at a record pace as we had four months. We did not want to come to Chile with a lineup that was anything other than world-class, and my partners Marc Geiger of WME and Charles Attal of C3 have been absolutely integral to Lollapalooza Chile launching in 2011. Our selections are very animated, with much diversity. There is Chilean talent in the mix. Now that the lineup is announced here, we are going back to Chile to work on the other aspects of the festival. Our ambition is to plant a very strong seed in Chile, one that will grow over the years, and provide Santiago with an event for the ages.”

Available now for the festival are general two-day passes for $110 presale, $136 then $152; Lolla Lounge two-day VIP passes for $320 presale then $380; And beginning February 11, general admission single day tickets for $72 presale then $84 and VIP passes for $240. All passes can be purchased here.

There are also a variety of travel packages from North America available here and here.

The complete line-up for LOLLAPALOOZA CHILE is:

THE KILLERS
JANE’S ADDICTION
KANYE WEST
30 SECONDS TO MARS
YEAH YEAH YEAHS
DEFTONES
FATBOY SLIM
THE FLAMING LIPS
ARMIN VAN BUUREN
CYPRESS HILL
BEN HARPER
SUBLIME WITH ROME
311
THE NATIONAL
EMPIRE OF THE SUN
COLD WAR KIDS
CSS
LOS BUNKERS
CAT POWER
CHICO TRUJILLO
DEVENDRA BANHART
THE DRUMS
BOYS NOIZE
STEEL PULSE
FISCHERSPOONER
PERRYETTY VS CHRIS COX
MALA RODRIGUEZ
EDWARD SHARPE & THE MAGNETIC ZEROS
DATAROCK
TODOS TUS MUERTOS
BOMBA ESTEREO
GHOSTLAND OBSERVATORY
JOACHIM GARRAUD
FRANCISCA VALENZUELA
ZETA BOSIO
ANITA TIJOUX
QUIQUE NEIRA
LATIN BITMAN
DJ RAFF
TOY SELEKTAH
FRACTAL + JOE VASCONCELLOS
FOTHER MUCKERS
ASTRO
DEVIL PRESLEY
DENVER
COMO ASESINAR A FELIPES
THE GANJAS
MATANZA
ITAL
NEW KIDS ON THE NOISE
MAGICTWINS
LOS PULENTOS
ACHU
CUCHARA
MUNDANO
LOS PLUMABITS


Lollapalooza International: Chile ’11

Lollapalooza
2009 by Vann

Perry Farrell, in conjunction with Chile’s Lotus Producciones, and WME and C3 Presents–the promotional
partners
behind the North American Lollapalooza–will bring his carnival of all things alternative to an exciting new
destination, South America.

For the first time in its history, one of America’s most beloved music festivals lands overseas in Santiago,
Chile on Saturday, April 2 and Sunday, April 3, 2011 at O’Higgins Park as the first Lollapalooza
International
. Line-up details will be available at a later date.

Similar to its Chicago home Grant Park in North America, O’Higgins Park is a gorgeous scenic locale in the middle of
a bustling urban hub. Lollapalooza International promises an eclectic lineup of top
talent from around the world, and will also partake in a “cultural exchange,” by featuring Chilean artists at
this summer’s North American Lollapalooza in Grant Park.

A Q&A with LOLLAPALOOZA’s creator PERRY FARRELL:



What inspired you to bring Lollapalooza to what many might think of as an unlikely location of a city in South
America?

PERRY FARRELL: There are a series of prerequisites when selecting a destination. Number one is space. It must be
open and lovely; scalable up to 100,000 patrons. Second is the proximity to the city. We provide the entertainment.
The city provides the culture, hotels, restaurants and clubs. Then, most important are the people. The people of
Santiago have a passion for contemporary music and lead international lifestyles. Perfect.

We understand you have made a trip to Chile and have seen the park. Can you talk about the beauty of the location?

PF: Yes, O’ Higgins Park has a gentle sloping grass viewing area with the Andes Mountains in the distance. There are
many trees for shade. One of my favorite aspects to the park is a large round discotheque that houses up to 10,000
people. It is attached to an amusement park with a roller coaster and people scream on it all day. Right now you’ll see
families spending time in the park. Little kids roaming all over.

Can music fans expect the same eclectic music that Lollapalooza is known for in America?

PF: Yes, we found that there are so many groups and artists that have never been to Chile. It’s been fun figuring out
with Lotus, C3 and WME, who will be the first to get there.

The promoter in Chile is Sebastian De La Barra of Lotus Producciones. What did you see in him that made him the
right choice to bring Lollapalooza to Chile?

PF: When first meeting Sebastian, I noted that he had a disposition reminiscent of the best promoters I have had the
pleasure to work with. He is smart, relaxed and having fun in the driver’s seat.

We understand that the festival will also feature musicians and bands from Chile. Can you elaborate on that?

PF: Local talent is essential to rounding out the experience of a Lollapalooza. Sebastian has strong opinions on who
will be best. We can not say who just yet. We are also looking to bring some of those artists out to Chicago for a
musical foreign exchange.

As with any festival in its first year, there is always a learning curve.

PF: We are confident a massive music audience is awaiting us in Santiago. What we are very interested to learn is how
widely spread the demographic will be. In Chicago we have hipsters as well as young parents with children in
attendance. It is one of the few places in the world where a generation gap doesn’t exist.


The-Dream Christina Milian Breakup (Producer Now Dating Assistant Melissa Santiago)

Singer Christina Milian’s marriage to hip-hop singer/songwriter/producer The-Dream has gone up in smoke after just 10 months of less than wedded bliss.On Monday, the couple confirmed that they are calling it quits after pictures of The-Dream (real name Terius Nash) snuggling up to a Latina lusty in the Caribbean over the weekend made their way [...]

FM meets with Chilean counterpart

Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić met with his Chilean counterpart Alfredo Moreno Charme during an official visit to Santiago.

Jeremić and Chilean Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Fernando Schmidt Aristia signed an agreement for cooperation between the diplomatic academies of the two ministries.

Jeremić travels to South America

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremić is paying a one-day visit to Chile on Friday, where he will meet with his Chilean counterpart Alfredo Moreno Charme.

According to the Serbian Foreign Ministry, Jeremić and Moreno will in Santiago sign an agreement on cooperation between the diplomatic academies of the two ministries.

Joran van der Sloot Arrested For Murder In Peru

Joran van der Sloot, the suspect in the slaying of a young Peruvian woman and previously considered a suspect in the 2005 disappearance of Alabama teenager Natalee Holloway in Aruba, was aprehended in Santiago, Chile Thursday. Van der Sloot, a 22-year-old Dutch playboy, is the main suspect in the beating/stabbing slaying of 21-year-old Stephany Flores Ramirez. [...]

Nels Cline Singers Tour

HIGH SIERRA, PHILLY, NYC AND WILCO’S OWN FEST ON AGENDA

Nels Cline Singers

The Nels Cline Singers first planned tour dates to support their new release, Initiate (arriving April 13). These dates include the band’s first ever South American tour, an appearance at the High Sierra Music Festival, a full night at New York City’s (le) poisson rouge, a night in Philadelphia at Johnny Brenda’s, the Singers’ first ever Washington, D.C. date at The Black Cat, and finally, an appearance in August in Western Massachusetts at Mass MoCA as part of the Wilco-curated Solid Sound Festival. More tour dates, including a West Coast run will be announced at a later date.

Initiate, the Singers’ fourth release and Cline’s seventh as a leader for Cryptogramophone, approaches the concept of Yin and Yang with a series of firsts for both the group and its intrepid leader, slyly dubbed by JazzTimes as “The World’s Most Dangerous Guitarist.” Initiate, in a beautifully designed, six-panel digipak featuring Simon Norfolk’s gorgeous photographs of the world’s largest machine (the Large Hadron Collider at CERN) is Cline’s first double album, with its second disc culled from a September 2009 performance at Cafe du Nord in San Francisco, the Singers’ first live recording. Nels Cline Singers are Nels Cline (guitar), Scott Amendola (drums, electronics) and Devin Hoff (bass). Guests on the live disc include Yuka Honda (Cibo Matto), Greg Saunier (Deerhoof), John Dieterich (Deerhoof) and Satomi Matsuzaki (Deerhoof).

Nels will also make his Village Vanguard debut as a sideman with his longtime friend and musical associate violinist Jenny Scheinman [a JamBase fave along with Nels and his Singers] with her band Mischief and Mayhem July 13-18.

Nels Cline Singers Tour Dates

06/08 Sao Paolo, Brazil | Bourbon Street Music Club
06/10 Buenos Aires, Argentina | La Trastienda
06/12 Santiago, Chile | Teatro Oriente
07/01 Quincy, CA | High Sierra Music Festival
07/06 New York, NY | (le) poisson rouge
07/07 Philadephia, PA | Johnny Brenda’s
07/08 Washington, DC | Black Cat
08/13-15 North Adams, MA | Mass MoCA – Solid Sound Festival

Nels with Jenny Scheinman
07/13-18 New York, NY | The Village Vanguard

Nels Cline Singers Tour Dates :: Nels Cline Singers News :: Nels Cline Singers Concert Reviews


Metallica Concert Riot In Colombia

Metallica sure knows how to rock a crowd: Nearly 170 people were arrested Wednesday night after hundreds of fans tried to break into a Metallica concert in Bogota, Colombia. Police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse rioting concertgoers. Members of the nation’s military were on standby ahead of the gig following reports that [...]

A shaky start

The challenges ahead for Chile’s new government

SEBATIAN PIŇERA looked shaken, rather than jubilant, as he was sworn in as Chile’s president on Thursday March 11th. Minutes before he was reminded of the scale of the task he faces in rebuilding a large swathe of the country after a massive earthquake on February 27th. The same area was hit by an aftershock that, with a 6.9 magnitude, was only slightly smaller than the quake that devastated Haiti in January.

Three other large tremors followed during the inauguration ceremony in the National Congress in Valparaiso on the coast of central Chile. Outside people started to head for the hills as the national emergency office issued a tsunami warning. The sea, in fact, remained calm but Mr Pinera cancelled a lunch with visiting foreign leaders—some of whom did not look as if they could have eaten much anyway. After sending Rodrigo Hinzpeter, his new interior minister, to the capital, Santiago, to co-ordinate a response to the emergency, the new president boarded a helicopter to the aftershock’s epicentre in the O’Higgins Region, just south of Santiago. …

In need of repair

Chile counts the cost of a devastating earthquake and makes plans for recovery

RELIEF was the initial reaction in Chile to what seemed relatively limited damage given the scale of the earthquake that shook the centre and south of the country in the early hours of Saturday February 27th. That picture has been replaced gradually by dismay as the full extent of the cost begins to emerge. By Sunday evening, the number of confirmed deaths had reached over 700 and is still likely to rise, according to President Michelle Bachelet. This is still a low toll, however, for a quake of 8.8magnitude, one of the largest in the world since 1900.

Felt throughout almost all the country, the quake hit most strongly in six central regions, from the capital, Santiago, and the nearby port of Valparaiso in central Chile to the city of Temuco in the Araucania region of the south. These parts of the country are home to about 60% of Chile’s 17m inhabitants and account for around 70% its GDP. An estimated 1.5m homes are thought to have been damaged and around a third may have to be demolished. …

Massive earthquake, aftershocks hit Chile; over 700 dead


CONCEPCION, Chile, (Reuters) – The death toll from a massive earthquake that struck Chile surged above 700 on Sunday as reports emerged of coastal towns devastated by the tremor and tsunamis that followed.
President Michelle Bachelet said that 708 people were confirmed dead and that the total was likely to rise.
A string of strong aftershocks have rocked the country and strong one rattled buildings in the capital, Santiago, early on Sunday. The quake was one of the worldÂ’s most powerful in a century.
The death toll from SaturdayÂ’s 8.8-magnitude quake had stood at 400 earlier on Sunday, before state television quoted emergency officials as saying that 350 people were killed in the coastal town of Constitucion, which was hit by a tsunami.
Television images from the fishing port about 350km southwest of the capital Santiago showed houses destroyed by the offshore quake and a tsunami, which washed large fishing boats onto land and flipped over cars. There were similar scenes of devastation in Pelluhue, another coastal town, where cars were tossed on top of shattered houses.
People desperate for food and water ransacked stores in some quake-stricken areas, raising speculation that the government would use martial law to crack down on looters.
Hundreds of thousands of homes and some highways across central Chile were seriously damaged by the quake, dealing a heavy blow to infrastructure in the worldÂ’s No 1 copper producer and one of Latin AmericaÂ’s most stable economies.
The quake damaged or destroyed 1.5 million homes, buckled roads and toppled bridges, posing a daunting reconstruction challenge for President-elect Sebastian Pinera, who takes office in two weeks.
Crushed cars, fallen power lines and rubble from wrecked buildings littered the streets of Concepcion, which has about 670,000 inhabitants and lies 115km southwest of the quakeÂ’s epicentre.
A lack of water, food and fuel sharpened the hardship for the hundreds of thousands of people left homeless, and widespread disruption to the power supply threatened to hamper Chilean industryÂ’s recovery.
In the hard-hit city of Concepcion, about 500km south of Santiago, about 60 people were feared to have been crushed to death in a collapsed apartment block where rescuers worked through the night to find survivors.
“We spent the whole night working, smashing through walls to find survivors. The biggest problem is fuel, we need fuel for our machinery and water for our people,” Commander Marcelo Plaza said.
Police used teargas and water cannons to disperse a crowd of looters carrying off food and electrical appliances from a supermarket in Concepcion. Television images showed people stuffing groceries and other goods into shopping trolleys.
“People have gone days without eating,” said Orlando Salazar, one of the looters at the supermarket. “The only option is to come here and get stuff for ourselves.”
Concepcion’s mayor, Jacqueline van Rysselberghe, said the situation was getting “out of control” due to shortages of basic supplies and called for the national government to help.
“We need the army. We can’t have people defending their own possession because it will be the law of the strongest,” she said.
Thousands of shell-shocked Chileans awakened Sunday after an anxious night spent sleeping out-of-doors, gripped with fear that buildings damaged by a massive earthquake could fall on their heads.
“It would be crazy for us to go back inside. This is going to fall at any moment,” Santiago resident Mary, sleeping a few feet from her home alongside her husband and three sons, told AFP on Sunday morning, admitting she slept for only a few hours because of the more than 100 aftershocks rattling the region since the historic quake struck early Saturday.
Makeshift camps sprung up amid the cityÂ’s rubble strewn streets, while with the returning electricity residents gathered around televisions propped up on outdoor patios to hear the latest news reports on the tremor, the seventh largest ever recorded.

No Serbian victims in Chile quake

Serbian ambassador to Argentina Gordana Vidović said that there were no Serbian victims in Saturday’s earthquake in Chile. “There was no way to establish telephone contact with our citizens yesterday, it was only possible electronically. In the afternoon hours, we were able to speak to several, some even called from Santiago. None of our citizens were killed in the catastrophic earthquake,” she said.

Destruction in Chile

A huge earthquake hits Chile but it has fared far better than poverty-stricken Haiti

JUST six weeks after an earthquake killed over 200,000 people in Haiti, another huge tremor has shaken Latin America. Early in the morning on Saturday February 27th, a massive 8.8-magnitude quake—the fifth-largest recorded since 1900—rocked the Pacific coast of central Chile. Lasting for nearly 90 seconds, it knocked out electricity, water, and telephone services in a wide stretch of the country, and damaged the Santiago airport terminal, some 325 kilometres from the epicentre. The resulting tsunami prompted evacuations as far away as Japan, although the waves inflicted little damage outside Chile and the warnings were later cancelled.

At least 76 aftershocks followed. Michelle Bachelet, the country’s president, said it would take three days to produce the first reliable evaluations of the quake’s impact, but she estimated that 1.5m homes were damaged and 2m people were affected by the disaster. Government officials have already confirmed over 700 deaths. …

Massive earthquake strikes Chile

A massive earthquake with a magnitude of 8.8 has struck central Chile, the country’s largest in 25 years. The quake struck about 91km north-east of the city of Concepcion and 317km south-west of the capital, Santiago.

SXSW: Partial Band List/Panels

SOUTH BY SOUTHWEST ANNOUNCES PARTIAL BAND LIST, PANEL INFO, STAGE NEWS

Pretty Lights

The South by Southwest (SXSW) Music Conference and Festival, scheduled to take place March 17-21, 2010 in Austin, Texas, is pleased to announce a few of the bands scheduled to perform, artists that are participating on panels and exciting changes at the SXSW Day Stage.

This year’s SXSW Music Conference will feature some notable artists that will be speaking on panels taking place in the Austin Convention Center. Judy Collins shares her thoughts on Where Goes English Folk Music?, John Doe joins Ian Rogers‘ panel The Cultural Significance of Direct-to-Fan Marketing, DJ Spooky encourages the spread of music into established cultural institutions in Performing Arts: New Frontier for Live Acts, Melissa Auf Der Mar exhibits her photographic side on Image Makers Of Rock and Soul, Suzanne Vega kicks MP3 butt on Music Artists: Getting A Digital Ass-Kicking, Andrew WK dissects rock star myths on What Becomes A Legend Most, Chris Walla highlights his studio work on Producers Adapt & Survive, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth recall early gigs on CBGBs Stories, and Anya Marina talks soundtracks on Case Study: New Moon.

Join these artists and over 350 other speakers for an enlightening look at the past, present and future of the music industry.

The SXSW Day Stage also in the Austin Convention Center, will be partnering with six great radio stations from around the country who will present Day Stage performances on their airwaves. These are KCRW, KEXP, WXPN, The Current, KUT, and Mexico City’s Reactor.

Each station will present a three hour block of music. Highlighting KCRW‘s block on Saturday March 20 will be Rogue Wave, Middle East and Lissie. More artists will be announced soon. SXSW Day Stage performances take place in Ballroom D from 12:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, and 12:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. on Saturday.

SXSW Initial Band List (selected from over 10,000 entries)

!!! (Brooklyn, NY)
Amaral (Madrid, SPAIN)
Anita Tijoux (Santiago, CHILE)
Apoptygma Berzerk (Oslo, NORWAY)
Athlete (London, ENGLAND)
Bajofondo (Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA)
Balkan Beat Box (Tel Aviv, ISRAEL)
Band of Skulls (London, ENGLAND)
Bear In Heaven (Brooklyn, NY)
Black Milk (Detroit, MI)
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Los Angeles, CA)
Bomba Estereo (Bogota, Colombia)
Broken Social Scene (Toronto, CANADA)
Chalie Boy (Hearne, TX)
Chamillionaire & Paul Wall (Houston, TX)
Cymbals Eat Guitars (New York, NY)
Deer Tick (Providence, RI)
Evan Dando (New York, NY)
Frightened Rabbit (Selkirk, SCOTLAND)
Fucked Up (Toronto, CANADA)
Grant Hart (St. Paul, MN)
Hauschka (Dusseldorf, GERMANY)
Here We Go Magic (Brooklyn, NY)
Hudson Mohawke (Glasgow, SCOTLAND)
Invincible (Detroit, MI)
jj (Gothenburg, SWEDEN)
Killer Mike (Atlanta, GA)
LA Riots (Los Angeles, CA)
Les Savy Fav (Brooklyn, NY)
Maldita Vecindad (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Marina & The Diamonds (London, ENGLAND)
Mayer Hawthorne & The County (Ann Arbor, MI)
Midlake (Denton, TX)
Miike Snow (Stockholm, SWEDEN)
Mr Hudson (London, ENGLAND)
Mundo Livre SA (Recife, BRAZIL)
Murs (Los Angeles, CA)
Natalia Lafourcade (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Pretty Lights (Charlottesville, VA)
Rye Rye (Baltimore, MD)
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Brooklyn, NY)
She & Him (Los Angeles, CA)
Shwayze (Malibu, CA)
Spoon (Austin, TX)
Steve Aoki (Los Angeles, CA)
Systema Solar (Taganga, COLOMBIA)
Texas Tornados (San Antonio, TX)
The Drums (Brooklyn, NY)
The Middle East (Townsville, AUSTRALIA)
The Soft Pack (San Diego, CA)
The Very Best (New York, NY)
The xx (London, ENGLAND)
Trae (Houston, TX)
VV Brown (London, ENGLAND)
Wolfgang Gartner (Austin, TX)

This list is subject to change. This is only a portion of the bands that will be performing at the SXSW Music Festival.

For more on SXSW, check out our 2009 coverage here.


Moving Your Money Can Have a Real Effect on Big Banks

People have asked whether moving your money from your giant bank to a small community bank or credit union will have any real affect on the too big to fails, given that most of their profits come from speculative investments instead of normal banking d…

Colombia term rule change closer

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe (13 August 2009)

Colombia’s lower house has approved a bill which paves the way for President Alvaro Uribe to seek a third consecutive term in office.

The controversial bill, passed after more than 12 hours of debate, must now go before the constitutional court before being put to a referendum.

Mr Uribe has not yet said whether he intends to stand in the next election, scheduled to take place in May 2010.

But critics say a regular change in leadership is important for democracy.

Lawmakers in the lower house voted 85-5 in favour of the bill, which was approved by the Senate in May.

"The Congress has fulfilled its duty," said pro-Uribe lawmaker Santiago Castro.

"It’s up to the Colombian people now to define the fate of the re-election at the polls."

But opponents of the bill said its passing could lead to an erosion of democracy in Colombia and that eight years in office should be enough for the president.

Before the debate took place, opposition lawmaker River Franklin Legro warned that "the rules of the game of democracy" were at stake.

The BBC’s Greg Morsbach says Mr Uribe is seen by Washington as the most reliable strategic partner in Latin America.

At home, he has won widespread approval for his uncompromising stance on fighting drug traffickers and leftist rebel groups, our correspondent adds.

But Mr Uribe’s second term has been tainted by a series of scandals including wire-tapping accusations and links between congressmen and right-wing paramilitary death squads.

Mr Uribe has already changed the constitution once to allow for his re-election in 2006 and opinion polls have suggested a high level of public support for him.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Dirty war’ general found guilty

Argentine former general Santiago Omar Riveros (l) - 2001 file photo

A former general who headed a notorious detention centre during Argentina’s military rule has been sentenced to life in prison for human rights abuses.

Santiago Omar Riveros, 86, commanded the Campo de Mayo military barracks on the outskirts of Buenos Aires.

He was found guilty of involvement in the 1976 murder of 15-year-old communist youth member, Floreal Avellaneda, who was tortured to death.

Some 30,000 people disappeared or died in Argentina’s 1976-1983 "Dirty War".

Riveros’s former intelligence chief, Fernando Verplaetsen, was also jailed for 25 years in connection with the boy’s killing.

And four other officers were given jail terms of between eight and 18 years.

Torture tactics

Floreal Avellaneda and his mother were abducted in 1976 by a military squad and tortured to find out the whereabouts of the boy’s father, a Communist Party union leader of the same name.

The mother, Iris Pereyra, described their ordeal to the court: "They applied an electric current to my armpits, breasts, mouth, genitals and did exactly the same to my son."

Mrs Pereyra was released after three years. But her son’s body washed up on the Uruguayan coast, bound hand and foot, and showing signs of beating, the prosecutors said.

Riveros was first convicted in 1985, and pardoned in 1989 by then-President Carlos Menem. In 2007, Argentina’s Supreme Court revoked the pardon, clearing the way for his re-trial.

He is accused of more than 40 crimes against humanity involving victims of the era’s so called "disappeared".

An estimated 5,000 prisoners were held at the Campo de Mayo barracks, one of the largest extermination centres in operation during the dictatorship of a military junta headed by General Leopoldo Galtieri, according to human rights groups.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Easter Island thumped in first official football match

By Gideon Long
BBC News, Santiago, Chile

Football match on Easter Island, 5 Aug

Easter Island, the tiny South Pacific territory administered by Chile, has staged its first ever officially sanctioned football match.

The islanders played their first competitive fixture in the Chilean Cup.

The game ended in a 4-0 defeat at the hands of Colo Colo, the 28-time national champions dubbed the Manchester United of Chilean football.

Fifa – the sport’s governing body – had described the clash as the island’s "match of the century".

It had always promised to be a tough challenge, and sure enough, Colo Colo won with two goals in each half.

Party atmosphere

But this was about more than just football. There was a carnival atmosphere throughout.

The game was played on an atrocious, bumpy pitch just yards from the beach.

Easter Island players perform the "Hoko" war dance on Easter Island

A blustery wind blowing in from the Pacific Ocean made conditions tricky for both sides.

Virtually the entire population of 4,000 islanders turned out to watch.

Many wore traditional Polynesian dress and face paint, and held aloft the island’s distinctive red and white flag.

The match was broadcast live on Chilean TV to viewers over 3,700 km (2,300 miles) away on the mainland.

Before kick-off, the Easter islanders staged a war dance – a native show of bravado designed to intimidate their opponents.

But if Colo Colo were frightened, they did not show it, and it was they who went through to the second round of the Chilean Cup.

For the players of Easter Island – which is famous for its mysterious stone statues – the cup run is over, at least for another year.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.