Annual events Because of the numerous festivals and special events held annually in Indio, the Chamber of Commerce deemed Indio's official nickname to be "The City of Festivals". Indio is considered the second County seat, the Riverside County Fairgrounds is a facility that hosts various events year round such as music concerts, 4x4
monster truck rallies, rodeos, and other special events. Two major annual festivals are the Indio International Tamale Festival and the
Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival and are held each February at the Riverside County Fairgrounds, located on Highway 111 in the heart of Indio. Since 1947, this festival has celebrated the
date fruit crop of the Coachella Valley. The Tamale Festival is held each December on the streets of Old Town Indio and holds one
Guinness World Record as the largest tamale festival (120,000 in attendance, Dec. 2–3, 2000) and once held the record for the world's largest
tamale, [over in diameter and in length], created by Chef John Sedlar, but that record has since been surpassed. In 1993, Paul Tollett, president of
Goldenvoice, booked a
Pearl Jam concert at the
Empire Polo Club in Indio, and six years later, the
Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival was born. Since 2001, Coachella has been an annual event that has brought notable music acts to the desert, including:
AC/DC,
Red Hot Chili Peppers,
Guns N' Roses,
Prince,
Paul McCartney,
Lady Gaga,
Beyoncé,
Ariana Grande,
Kanye West,
Radiohead,
Dr. Dre,
Snoop Dogg,
Pixies,
The Cure,
The White Stripes,
Jay-Z,
Tool,
Beastie Boys,
Jane's Addiction,
Roger Waters and several others. Coachella extended the festival to three days in 2007. Organizers eliminated single-day tickets in 2010 and went to three-day passes only. The festival continues to draw large numbers of concertgoers to Indio and the Empire Polo Club, a venue that
Rolling Stone said possessed a "lush beauty... that made the desert seem very far away." In May 2007, Goldenvoice, promoters of Coachella, started
Stagecoach, a three-day
country music festival held the weekend following Coachella. Performers have included
George Strait,
Kenny Chesney,
the Eagles,
Sugarland,
Taylor Swift,
Carrie Underwood,
Luke Bryan,
Keith Urban, and
Kid Rock. In 2013,
OC Weeklys Dave Barton described the arts scene in Indio with "seems to consist of
Johnny Cash tributes, chalk art,
camel and
ostrich races, and
Neil Simon revivals." In 2016, Goldenvoice brought together
The Rolling Stones,
The Who,
Paul McCartney,
Bob Dylan,
Roger Waters, and
Neil Young for a 3-day mega concert known as
Desert Trip. Desert Trip took place at the same venue as the Coachella Music Festival, over two three-day weekends, on October 7–9 and 14–16, 2016. Despite Desert Trip becoming the highest-grossing music festival in history, Goldenvoice founder Paul Tollett has not announced any plans for a second Desert Trip, stating that it's not necessary for it to "turn into another franchise festival". Indio is also the site of many other annual arts, culture, and entertainment festivals and events. Among these include: • The Southwest Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club • The Cabazon Indian National
Pow wow at
Fantasy Springs Resort and Casino • The Palm Springs Kennel Club's Annual Dog Show and Rhythm at the Empire Polo Club • The Heritage/Living History Festival at the Coachella Valley History Museum • The
Family Motor Coach Association's Annual Western Region RV Rally at the Riverside County Fairgrounds • The Sand Storm
Lacrosse Festival at the Empire Polo Club •
Arbor Day Celebration • Indio Tree Lighting Ceremony •
Dia de Los Muertos Celebration at the Coachella Valley History Museum • Taste of Indio at Jackalope Ranch • The California BBQ State Championship & Festival
Points of interest The
Coachella Valley History Museum Home, on Miles Avenue, has a two-acre campus, which currently includes the Smiley-Tyler House, built in 1926, the 1909 Schoolhouse, and the Date Museum dedicated to the history and development of the fruit (the only date museum in the world), plus gardens and archives preserving historical artifacts of the Coachella Valley. It also has the historic M.H. Whittier Ranch Tower, which is used for the only light art projection system in the Coachella Valley. The
Indio Performing Arts Center, known as IPAC, is located at the heart of downtown Indio at 45–175 Fargo Street to promote arts and entertainment for the community. IPAC has hosted live concerts, theater productions, dinner theater events and
sing-alongs, movie nights, fashion shows, arts and crafts fairs, music video productions, and other special events. IPAC is a 23,000 sq. ft. facility with a main hall, the Expo Hall; three separate theaters that are approximately 2,200 sq. ft. each: Village Theatre, Cabaret Theatre, and the Old Towne Playhouse. Desert TheatreWorks occupies the facility, which has produced more than 50 plays and musicals, 8 children's musicals and more than 20 special events, making them one of the Coachella Valley's leading producers of theatre and educational programming for the performing arts. The
College of the Desert also has a film class in the Village Theatre during the school year. The Coachella Valley Art Center hosts workshops, and special events and includes a main gallery, project spaces, classrooms, a glass studio, performance space, and artist studios. The center has hosted local and international artists, and been a venue for art events and live performances. From January to March each year,
polo season is in full effect at the Eldorado Polo Club and the
Empire Polo Club.
Tailgating, food vendors, picnics, and polo games are a common sight at these family-friendly Sunday events. Golfing is an attraction that brings people Indio and surrounding cities, with the Coachella Valley housing approximately 28 percent of all California's golf courses. Golf course development in the desert became a huge phenomenon in the 1950s, with a golf course opening approximately every 100 days. During the winter months,
country clubs with golf courses attract dozens of vacationers each year. Today, there are more than 13 golf courses located in Indio and 124 golf courses in the entire Coachella Valley. Casinos are also a point of interest in Indio that draw a large crowd.
Fantasy Springs Resort Casino is owned by the
Cabazon Band of Mission Indians, whose tribal headquarters are also located in Indio. The casino opened in 2004 and includes a hotel, bowling center, golf course, and special events center that acts as a concert venue. The Fantasy Springs special events center has hosted musicians as big as
The Beach Boys,
John Legend,
Snoop Dogg,
Stevie Nicks, and
Kelly Clarkson.
Old Town Historic Mural Program In the fall of 1996, the Indio Chamber of Commerce formed a committee to develop a Historic Mural Project to help revitalize the local economy at the time of the statewide economic recession. It began with a suggestion to start a mural project first brought to the city by David Hernandez, a former Indio city council member, after he visited Chemainus. Very little happened with this concept until 1996, when the Riverside County National Date Festival's executive director Bruce Latta and commissioned artist
Bill Weber of San Francisco to paint a mural of the
Taj Mahal on the
Taj Mahal (
Garden of Allah) building at the fairgrounds. At the same time, local businessman Bruce Clark, who was instrumental in promoting Historic
U.S. Route 99 (Indio Blvd.) to its former status as the
Main Street of California. He maintains a website on Historic Route 99. He brought the mural idea forward again after seeing the success of a similar local program in 29 Palms. When Clark presented the idea to the chamber board of directors, the idea was immediately recognized as something that could help the city's economy by encouraging tourism. Indio now has ten murals about the city on the sides of various buildings in Old Town and on a water reservoir tank on Monroe Street. ==Government and politics==