Following the resounding success of its second edition, the Mar de Jávea Festival has already marked its next event on its calendar: April 3 and 4, 2026. This announcement comes just days after the closing of an event that has once again left its mark on the Mediterranean music scene.
With more than 16.000 attendees spread over two energetic days and 18 hours of live music, Mar de Jávea far exceeded expectations. This second edition has served to consolidate its position as one of the must-attend events for live music lovers.
The organizers are already working on what will be the third edition. Although the artists have yet to be revealed, the festival's management assures that they will continue to focus on a diverse, inclusive, and high-quality artistic lineup.
I think it's good that they confirmed it, but the current location is crazy.
It is unacceptable that such a scenario, such watts and decibels, should be located just a few meters from homes.
We've all been young, and we all loved going to concerts and festivals. But the administration and public officials should be there to choose the form and location of these leisure projects. If nothing is done, the incompetence of that same administration and those same public officials will only become evident.
There may be contracts involved, but please do your job for the benefit of the taxpayers. As a first step, I recommend listening.
If they listen to you, let them know…
You don't know you're in Jávea, the lawless Mediterranean city where developers and the city council, regardless of their political affiliation, do whatever they want...
sue and report that everything will come to nothing
I hope the city council listens to the countless complaints from all those affected by the noise from 9,30:2 a.m. to XNUMX a.m. on festival days. It's impossible to be in the neighboring homes.
Nobody complains about the festival, but about its location!
Come on, Easter again. Shame on the city council for allowing it on such an inappropriate date.
They have acted too hastily and they don't have anything confirmed yet. In my Via Augusta development, we are going to file a lawsuit. No one can stand this.
I think it's a good idea to file a lawsuit. It should be a general one, that is, by all affected residents of Jávea, against the City Council for allowing such outrageous acts.
There are many people who want to do the same.
Let them do it at Christmas then when we don't have any tourists. If they do things in Javea, people complain, and if nothing is done, they complain too. So what's the deal?
How much money did this concert bring to the local community?
Will this income help local business to survive and grow?
Will it help to keep local taxes down
I suspect the answer is yes so for 2 days of music the end justify the means
We are used to normalizing situations that are not normal.
What if it's only two days.
That if it is for the promotion of Jávea.
That if they are the town festivals.
What if they are the port festivals?
That you are bitter...
It's not normal for a massive festival to be set up 100 meters from your home, and for your family or families who have rented an apartment to relax over Easter to be deprived of sleep, and for four days the hustle and bustle of cranes, trucks, sound checks, and performances to ruin your vacation.
It's not normal that the areas surrounding nightclubs and the nearby parking lot are a nuisance all summer long and become a daily dumping ground that requires cleaning crews to spend several hours cleaning it every day.
It's not normal that Constitution Square has to endure all the activities.
It's not normal for mobile discos to be playing until the wee hours, both at the port and in the town, with their unbridled decibels.
It's not normal... that legislation is not enforced and there is no real fight against noise pollution.
Who has to enforce it: THE CITY COUNCIL.
And it's time to look for locations for these major festivals away from the city center and with adequate parking and facilities.
No one is against these activities, nor are foreign or local promoters making their money. Let's start not normalizing what came from our homes we wouldn't want.