Access All Areas May 2018 | Page 5

MAY | WELCOME Colophon EDITOR Tom Hall CONTRIBUTORS DESIGNER Martin Fullard Sean Wyatt-Livesley SALES DIRECTOR SALES EXECUTIVE James Linin Ashley Armstrong PRODUCTION CONTROLLER SUBSCRIPTIONS EXECUTIVE Elizabeth Nixon Kayode Adedeji PUBLISHING DIRECTOR Duncan Siegle PUBLISHED BY MASH MEDIA GROUP Second Floor, Applemarket House, 17 Union Street, Kingston Upon Thames KT1 1RR. Tel: +44 (0)20 8481 11 22 SUBSCRIPTION: Free to qualified readers within UK, Non-qualified readers within UK - £50, Readers in Europe/Eire - £70, Worldwide - £105. SUBSCRIPTION ENQUIRIES: Tel: 020 8481 11 28. Address: Access All Areas, Second Floor, Applemarket House, 17 Union Street, Kingston-upon-Thames KT1 1RR. The opinions expressed by contributors to this publication are not always a reflection of the opinions or the policy of the publishers. Information on services or products contained within editorial sections does not imply recommendation by Access All Areas. No part of this publication can be reproduced in any form without written authority of Mash Media. Subscribe on www.accessaa.co.uk W e all turn into our parents eventually, or so the saying goes. In my younger days, my dad insisted I was missing out on the world of real ales, with their antiquated names and feudal iconography. My first beer was consumed on my 18th birthday and not a day earlier, obviously. The lifeless, fizzy concoction I pretended to enjoy was popularised in the mid-80s, and carried a brand slogan proclaiming it to be the best lager in the world, probably. The craft beer boom in the late 2000s proved that ‘probably’, was an optimistic adverb as the UK woke up to the dizzying variety of flavours that the world’s brewing boffins could muster. I, meanwhile, grudgingly accepted that my dad had a point. The festival market, however, has been slower to catch up. The plethora of lacklustre beers has been down to strict licensing deals and out-dated business models that made for slim, Soviet-style, pickings at green site bars. Our cover feature (p28) charts the rise of craft beer events and examines how festivals are embracing diversity and quality in their beverages. We also review Cocktails In The City (p15), an event that brought together some of the country’s finest mixologists. Meanwhile, the rise of supermarkets at festivals is examined as a potential threat to the unique food and beverage experience that festivals are famous for (p18). Overall, though choice is emerging as the real winner at modern events. And we’ll drink to that. Tom Hall, Editor Keep up to date by visiting: accessaa.co.uk @access_aa @access_aa 05