World Creole Music Festival
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The World Creole Music Festival (WCMF) is an annual three-day music festival hosted on the island of Dominica during the final weekend in October, as a conclusion to Creole heritage month.
WCMF is a noted festival of Dominica, and it provides entertainment dedicated to the advancement of global Creole culture and music.
The World Creole Music Festival was launched to promote Dominican tourism and create a platform for indigenous Dominican music.
The festival begins on the last Friday in October each year. Entertainers from the Caribbean, French Antilles, Africa and North America attend.
The festival began in 1997 during International Creole Month October to bolster lagging tourist arrivals during the island's Independence celebrations which culminate on November 3. Dubbed "The Festival That Never Sleeps" because of its evening kickoffs which last into the morning, The World Creole Musical Festival is part of a three-week festival that also features the Cadence-Lypso Competition and Creole In The Park.
The festival has focused on musical genres with roots in various forms of musical fusion from various countries of the Creole-speaking world.
Musical forms played at the festival include Cadence-lypso, Konpa, Zouk, Soukous, Bouyon, Zydeco (from the US state of Louisiana).
The festival is managed by the Dominica Festivals Committee (DFC), formerly headed by Executive Directors Claudine Springer (2016), Natalie Clarke (2012-2014) and Val "Young Bull" Cuffy, who had a decade-long tenure and currently serves as a consultant to the DFC.
Popularity
Dominica's World Creole Music Festival attracts regional and international media coverage.
The festival is noted for building regional cooperation and network capabilities in tourism, culture, and entertainment while catering to over 10,000 patrons, 100 international and regional media partners and upwards of 20 cultural and musical acts each year.