The Love Parade
Germany’s annual Love Parade was the temporary centre of the world of electronic dance music during its two-decade run. First organized in 1989 in West Berlin by planetcom, a company affiliated with the defunct E-Werk club, the parade was registered with the city as a political demonstration for “peace, joy, and pancakes” and until 1997 was held on the Kurfürstendamm, Berlin’s main shopping street. The first Love Parade consisted of a couple of vans playing techno music for a crowd of about 300 fans, but the event soon grew into a festival that attracted corporate sponsorship, heavy coverage by MTV Europe, and many more spectators; in 1997 estimates of crowd size ranged from 750,000 to 1,500,000 people. Each year, Berlin authorities threatened to ban the Love Parade for environmental or safety reasons, and permits for the event had by 2006 become too difficult to secure, forcing its relocation to the Ruhr region. Although the parade itself got most of the media attention, the real point for the fans was the hundreds of parties in nearby clubs during the weekend, when nearly every major star of the electronic dance music world appeared. Organizers ended the event after a tragic stampede at the 2010 Love Parade in Duisburg killed 21 and injured more than 500.