How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude

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Welcome to Family Fridays, Martyna 💟

Welcome to this week’s instalment of Family Fridays!
This week, we’re shining a spotlight on Ian Johnson, head of music industry partnerships and artist development at Access Creative College, who tells us about nurturing young talent, the John Peel moment that changed his life, and why David Byrne is the only act anyone’s talking about this year.

Plus, we’ve got a fantastic giveaway – win a personal tour of the Latitude family areas with the people behind the scenes that make the magic happen!

Keep reading to get involved…

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
Ian Johnson from Access Creative College, on site at Latitude
As Latitude marks its 20th anniversary this July, it’s worth pausing on a partnership that most festivalgoers walk past without knowing it’s there. Access Creative College, a further education college with seven UK campuses specialising in the creative arts, has been embedded in Latitude for 15 years, running a stage, training crew, and quietly launching careers.

Ian Johnson, the college’s head of music industry partnerships and artist development, has been at the heart of that relationship. He’s also a local. “Latitude is work,” he says. “It’s lovely work. But I never really get to appreciate the acts the way I’d like to.”

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
Finn Doherty (Gossip Queens) at Latitude
Access Creative College, alongside its university-level sister company DBS, focuses primarily on students aged 16 to 19. The Norwich campus is the closest to Henham Park, and it was via a collaboration with a now-defunct local arts organisation, Culture Works East, that the college first got a foothold at Latitude.

“We ran creative workshops to re-engage young people in education,” Johnson explains. “That’s how we crept into Latitude.” What began as workshop delivery evolved into something more substantial. The college ran its own stage at Latitude for a number of years, putting acts on in front of a live audience, but the crew behind it was equally significant. Sound engineers, lighting operators, artist liaison staff, stage managers: many were Access Creative College students, gaining real-world experience in front of tens of thousands of people.

“Doing sound at a festival is very different from doing sound in a little venue. Once they’ve coped with something like that, and many things have gone wrong over the years—obviously we’re in England so weather is quite a big one—they feel confident they can cope with most things.”

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
Arthur Black at Latitude
It’s a solution to one of the music industry’s most stubborn problems: the experience paradox. “You can’t get a job until you’ve got experience, and you can’t get experience until you’ve got a job,” Johnson says. “To rock up somewhere and say you’ve done Latitude, that puts you straight to the top of the list.”

Some of the acts who played the Access Creative College stage have since gone on to perform on Latitude’s bigger stages. Among those who made that leap are Maya Law, Gabby Rivers, Beth McCarthy, Mullally, Bessie Turner and Arthur Black.

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
Ed Sheeran at Latitude

The biggest name is Ed Sheeran. Johnson encountered him well before the Latitude connection, when Sheeran was a teenager submitting a demo CD for a Norwich showcase. “He was incredible for his age,” Johnson recalls. He passed the demo to a management company, Crown, who signed Sheeran almost immediately. His mother was worried about him dropping out of education to move to London, so Johnson brokered a solution: Sheeran enrolled at Access Creative College’s London campus on an artist development scheme. “During that time we would give him shows,” Johnson says, “and one of those was an early Latitude, almost like an open mic.”

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
Lets Eat Grandma at Latitude
The other major Latitude story is Let’s Eat Grandma, Rosa Walton and Jenny Hollingworth, who formed the duo and recorded their debut album in the studios at ACC Norwich. “They came to our Norwich College. They played Latitude for us before they came to the college, when they were still around 15 and at school, they played our stage two years on the trot.” They have since played the larger Latitude stages, and Johnson says with evident warmth: “They almost feel like a Latitude act in a way.”

Johnson’s conviction in the importance of early opportunity is rooted in personal experience. At 16, playing in a teenage punk band in Norfolk, a bandmate had the idea of writing to the BBC, care of Radio 1, to invite John Peel to a gig in Snettisham. They heard nothing back. Then, on the night, Peel turned up.

“Just the fact he came and saw us, encouraged us, posed for photos, played us on the radio, talked about us. It meant I felt like it was totally tangible that it was possible. Somebody like that changed my life.” said Ian.

Peel even wrote about the gig in the music magazine Sounds, declaring Snettisham the rock and roll capital of the world. “I think he changed my life,” Johnson says. “And that’s enough. If you’ve got all the other bits going on, that confidence can carry you forward.”

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
The Climate Live Bus at Latitude
This year at Latitude, Access Creative College is sponsoring the Climate Live stage, a solar-powered double-decker bus that performs across multiple festivals during the summer. Two college acts will play, alongside a graduating sound engineering student named Tom who is doing every Climate Live festival this year.

“It’s not a normal stage. You’re on top of a bus, trying to attract people walking past, it might rain,” Johnson says. “It tests your performance skills and communication skills.”The partnership itself came out of a connection made at Latitude. “That’s another partnership that came out of being at Latitude and being active.”

Asked for a single recommendation from this year’s line up, Johnson doesn’t hesitate: David Byrne. “That’s the one everybody’s mentioned to me. A friend saw that show in New York and came back saying it was life-changing.”

This week’s giveaway…
A private tour on-site & photo shoot experience 📸

What goes into creating a family festival on the scale of Latitude? We’re inviting you behind the curtain with a chance to win a private tour of the Latitude family site. Explore how it all comes together, uncover the stories behind the scenes, and capture the moment with a 30-minute family photo session with one of our festival photographers.

Leading you will be the powerhouse duo behind our Kids and Family programming – Sharon and Chloe!

Sharon has been part of Latitude since day one in 2006, curating unforgettable experiences for families year after year. Heading up a large department, Sharon gives her hand in many aspects of the festival, but her main focus is every detail of the family programme. On-site, it all begins with empty fields. The build is physically demanding, with long days spent outdoors alongside her small crew, juggling countless essential tasks – but it’s work she finds incredibly rewarding.

Chloe joined in 2021 and has been an integral part of the team ever since. Chloe works across almost every aspect of the Kids & Family area, but the core of her role is people relations. When it comes to crew, guests, and anything anyone needs (or might need) she’s the go-to person.

Click the link below to register your interest – a winner will be chosen at random and contacted via email on Friday 3rd July! 💚

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
(L-R) Sharon and Chloe, setting up in Henham Park

With twenty years of expertise, Sharon knows exactly how to make festivals enchanting for families. Be sure to check out her Family Festival Survival Guide below for insider tips, tricks and essential advice from the person who’s seen it all.

And that’s it for this week’s edition of our Family Fridays series – we’ll see you back here for the penultimate instalment on Friday 26th June! Have a fabulous weekend.

With love,
The Latitude Festival Team ✨

How Access Creative College has shaped 15 years of Latitude
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