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THE STAGES
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TFF provides app. 20 stages: big, middle-sized and small,
outdoor and indoor, for listening or going through.
The festival covers three areas of the city, all near-by
yet closed in itself:
- the yard of the Heidecksburg castle including terrace,
Reithalle, and castle park
- the city centre with market, Neumarkt, pedestrian precinct,
Schulplatz, and areas for
craftsmen and instrument makers
- Heinepark with the third main stage, two marquee stages,
and the children´s festival
Outside the city centre, but nevertheless near, are the local
theatre, Schminkkasten, Stadthaus,
the town church, the youth club Saalgärten as well as
the exhibition rooms in Schillerhaus.
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HEIDECKSBURG
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The first of the three main stages is located in the inner
courtyard of Heidecksburg, a Baroque castle approx.
80 meters above town. Here the traditional special concert
takes place on the Thursday preceding TFF, here the
German folk and world music award RUTH is celebrated on
Saturday evening. It´s the circuit for festival stars,
from Taj Mahal to Cesaria Evora, Fairport Convention to
Goran Bregovic, and Biermösl Blosn to Calexico. For
several years now, the castle and its surroundings are being
renovated. Sometimes causing a bit of a hassle,
it has a very positive effect on the festival now: The former
princely Reithalle (horse hall) shines again in
all its former glory, providing a new and durable dance
floor for all (folk) dance freaks. For sound reasons
(in its double sense), the former stage on the terrace is
removed to the castle park (where it has been before
in the mid-90s). Concerts on courtyard and park stages are
inter-locking, thusly giving ample opportunity to
experience folk and world music of all sorts and colours.
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CITY CENTRE
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The second main stage (with a capacity of 5,000) can be
found next to the Town Hall on the market place.
This is where traditionally the festival begins and ends.
The curious and the accidental wanderer will
find the most colourful and maybe the most folkloristic
programme here. The stage is reserved for
all (folk) dance ensembles but is also home to the main
concert of the annual TFF.Magic Concert
(which was devoted to the electric guitar in 2005), a concert
that is recorded and later condensed to
a 60-minute TV special by MDR.
Next to the town hall is the festivals "Folkbude",
The booth where to buy different articles such
as programme books, t-shirts, CDs, posters etc.
Leaving the Marktplatz, you may walk through the Mangelgasse
with its instrument maker´s stalls,
and along the entrance to the Handwerkerhof, an affectionately
restored court housing all kinds
of trade and a gallery - and also a popular stage for smaller
bands that prefer to perform acoustically.
A few meters on, you come to Neumarkt, another (bigger) court
that - because of the surrounding houses
- almost has an indoor quality. Again, this is a concert stage
for folk and world music from around the globe.
On the Marktplatz opposite side you find your way to
the Stadtkirche. You pass along
the historic Town Hall before reaching a minute or two later
the Schulplatz with its historic library.
This again is a court with stands and live music.
Apart from being architectural beauties, Altes Rathaus
(Old Town Hall) and Stadtbibliothek (library) invite
festival goers also to attend seminars and workshops (admission
for festival pass or day ticket holders only).
In front of the Stadthaus (close to the railway station) booked tickets
get exchanged into bracelets. The adjoining
information desk helps answering questions and solving problems.
Inside the building, dance workshops take place on Saturday and Sunday. Besides, Stadthaus is also home
of the TFF Office.
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THEATRE UND STADTKIRCHE
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Two of TFF´s most popular concert locations, and
two of the smallest ones, too. Some will groan at the
pure mentioning of the places as the 280 seats of the princely
theatre, and app. the same capacity of the church St. Andreas require early arrival and queuing. If listening
is enough, you may stay outside anyway, getting wet or sun-burnt on the lawn while loudspeakers transmit what you are
missing inside. What you may miss is the more quiet music of the church, and some more experimental and
"strange" noise inside the theatre
- in either case sounds for connoisseurs and "real"
listeners.
Next to the theatre is another small hall, Schminkkasten
(rouge-box) where Mike Kamp, editor of Germany´s
leading folk magazine, Folker!, hosts his talk show "Mike
Kamp meets...". A new stage placed in the
triangle between theatre, Schminkkasten, and bus station
will not only fill the space but also the "holes"
in the theatre programme needed for preparations and soundchecks.
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HEINEPARK
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The third main stage is in Heinepark across the river Saale.
This is the place for making merry after midnight, when
all other stages have called it a day and the three stages
down here provide the ground for a party that may well last
until the morning. Set in a green environment (and close
to the camp sites), the area holds one big stage - for the
likes of Willy deVille, Mari Boine, Richard Thompson, Hubert
von Goisern, The Hooters or Rachid Taha - and two marquees.
One of those is where people are (folk) dancing almost around
the clock. Equipped with a special dance floor, this is the
kingdom of polka and waltz, of jig and salsa. And in 2005,
of a special focus on polka dance.
The second marquee is for concerts, mostly giving artists
the opportunity for a second gig at the festival (and the
audience who missed them the first time get a second chance).
Walking to the park on Saturday or Sunday afternoon, you
witness just before the entrance the multicoloured and multi-facetted
TFF Children´s festival, certainly one of the biggest
(and most ambitious) of its kind.
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LAST NOT LEAST
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Insignificant at first sight, but of high historic value
is Schillerhaus where the two most famous German poets,
Friedrich Schiller and Johan Wolfgang von Goethe, met for
the very first time. There is also regular live music in the Schillerhaus
garden.
Just a few meters further up the road is the youth hostel
"Fröbelhaus", also a spot for live music (on
Saturday afternoon only). Same day, same distance: another
100 m on, at Weinbergstrasse 4, citizens of Rudolstadt open
their gardens each Saturday afternoon for live music, coffee,
tea and biscuits - and most likely some gossip, too.
The most remote stage (app. a kilometre from the market)
is Saalgärten, Rudolstadt´s youth club. This
is the after-hour and chill-out area for Saturday nights
- the programme (with its popular and very danceable mix
of live music and DJs) starts after midnight and lasts until
7 in the morning.
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