There is a whole-heck-of-a-lot of information surrounding this years Dfest, however the staff here at ThisTulsa.com are in-the-know and prepared to deliver every thing we know to you. Need a quick reference sheet as to whats going on and what is not? Check it out!
What is Dfest?
The most comprehensive music conference and festival in the Midwest—will feature 140 artists and 20 musical genres on 11 stages in downtown Tulsa’s historic Blue Dome District. Headliners include: All American Rejects, The Roots, Clutch, moe., Phantom Planet, A.M., Jacob Fred Jazz Oddessey, Ty England, Ravi, The Apples in Stereo, Joshua James, Paramore, Ghostland Observatory, Zappa Plays Zappa, Helmet, The Disco Biscuits and Edison Glass and over 120 unsigned artists.
The two-day festival will also include a conference comprised of music industry panels, a tradeshow, music clinics and mentoring sessions designed to educate working musicians and music enthusiasts in any stage of their career. The conference will take place at the Crowne Plaza Hotel downtown, just walking distance from the Blue Dome District.
Panelists include Ken Abdo (V.P. Lommen Abdo Law Firm), Stephanie Adware (Furgang & Adwar), Tom Alexander (AEG Live), Craig Alvin (Producer), Holly Anderson (Eventful), Martin Atkins (Tour Smart Invisible Records), Daryl Berg (Fuel TV), David Codr (micSpace), Mia Crow (Visionworks Music), Jon Delange (Tinderbox Music), Dan Efram (The Musebox), Damian Elahi (Interscope-Geffen-A&M Records), Erica Forester Rhino, Jim Halsey (Halsey Institustite), Carrie Hughes (Reflection Music), Chris Jackson (E! Televsion), Paul Kriegler (94.1 The Sound), Keith Lacock (Tinderbox Music), Justin Levenson (SESAC), Catherine Lieu (Eventful), Mike Locke (Rhino Independent), Max Luces-Tucker (Bunim/Murray Productions), Tomy Mc Donald (Warner Music Group), Mollie Moore (Atlantic Records), Shawn Murphy (ASCAP), John Nicholson (Hollywood Records), Eavan Porter (Nettwerk Management), David Preston (V.P. BMI), Scott Perry (New Music Tipsheet), David Ponak (Rhino Entertainment), Ravi Artistic Integrity, Steve Robertson (Atlantic Records), Joe Rudge (ABC), Jon Schroeder (Producer), Jack Shapira (Unison Studios), Wil Sharpe (Sharpe Entertainment), Madalyn Sklar (GoGirlsMusic), Rob Spinelli (Bodog Music), David Teegarden (Artist/Engineer), Larry White (Larry White Management)
* some of the links above are to personal and/or corporate websites
When
July 25-26, 2008
Where
Conference held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel
Festival at Blue Dome District, Tulsa Oklahoma

Who will be there?
More than 60,000 attendees are expected.
How do you get tickets?
Festival passes valid for both days are $30 in advance, $40 at the gate. Price does not include service fees.
Conference badges good for both days are $100 in advance, $150 at the door. Conference badges include festival admission.
VIP tickets, good for the music festival only are $150.
All Dfest tickets are available at www.okctickets.com.
There are NO REFUNDS and NO SINGLE DAY TICKETS
The hours
Conference Hours:
Friday and Saturday: 11 am to 630 p.m.
Festival Hours:
Friday and Saturday: 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.
More random facts
- 7th year of Oklahoma’s largest music conference and festival
- 20 different genres of music
- Over 140 Bands
- 3 Countries are represented on Dfest States
- Dfest was founded by Tom Green and Angie Devore-Green
- Several Dfest acts have gone on to national acclaim (Including American Idol’s David Cook.)
- More then 1,000 bands applied for the 120 unsigned artist slots
- 11 stages of music are available
- The largest music festival and conference in Oklahoma
The history of Dfest
Tom Green and Angie DeVore-Green created DFest in 2001 to help their band Ultrafix win a Jim Beam/Rolling Stone Magazine Best Unsigned Band contest.
The couple came up with several marketing ideas to rally support for the contest. The one that took shape was the idea to host a small festival at Cronie’s Bar downtown consisting of other local bands. Their hope was to gain voting support from as many fans possible.
The event rained out and only 150 people turned out for the 12 booked bands. Fortunately, Ultrafix went on to win the contest. Later that year the Greens were asked if they were doing the Dfest festival again. They decided to make it an annual event, and in 2002 Dfest moved to the Boston District where it remained for the next four years.
In 2007, the festival made a new home in the Blue Dome District of downtown, giving it much needed space for growth. With the help of headliners Leon Russell, Shiny Toy Guns and Norman’s own Flaming Lips, Dfest drew over 40,000 fans.
In 2008, the festival plans to grow on that success and expects a crowd in excess of 60,000.





























July 28th, 2008 at 8:42 am
DFEST was so great this year. Honored to be a part of it.