SINCE its inception in 2007, Manchester International Festival has gone from exciting start-up to established power-player on the international arts scene. Its influence reaches far and wide, and it brings plenty back to the city too, with an estimated 250,000 attendees (including 50,000 attending free performances) and benefits to the local economy to the tune of £38m in 2013.
Well before Glastonbury, MIF was hosting controversial rapper and self-proclaimed rockstar Kanye West
But what Manchester International Festival really brings to the city is much more intangible than that: the thrill of discovery, the buzz of major artworks being created on your doorstep, the feeling of having your mind broadened in a day.
So, at the dawn of MIF 2015, we amp up the mood even further by taking a stroll down memory lane with these images of festivals past:
Monkey: Journey to the West made the headlines for MIF07 with its daring, dazzling combination of Chinese opera and circus from composer Damon Albarn and artist Jamie Hewlett together with director Chen Shi-Zheng and a cast of actors, acrobats and musicians from China and Europe.
PJ Harvey brought her signature smouldering intensity to MIF07 with a one-off gig at the Bridgewater Hall.
Well before Glastonbury, MIF was hosting controversial rapper and self-proclaimed rockstar Kanye West at the Manchester Apollo.
Jeremy Deller's Procession at MIF09
Jeremy Deller opened MIF09 with Procession, which used the whole city as his performance space.
MIF09 was all about finding the most unexpected places to host performances: the winner was Kraftwerk at the Manchester Velodrome - the German musicians played as Olympic cyclists whizzed by.
Local boys (and international rockstars) Elbow took on local orchestra (and international classical stars) The Hallé with two special performances which Guy garvey described as "a love letter to the city".
Zaha Hadid Architects took the spaces theme to its limits with its white ribbon-inspired cocoon for performances of Bach at the Manchester City Art Gallery.
Bjork brought the weird to MIF11 with her groundbreaking Biophilia residency.
And Snoop brought the Snoop with a multimedia presentation of his debut album, Doggystyle.
In a tantalising juxtapostion to Snoop, Victoria Wood's That Day We Sang was rapturously received by audiences and ended up as the Royal Exchange's Christmas play.
Macbeth, MIF13
Audiences sweltered as the rain poured and flames danced in this high-profile production of Macbeth performed in a deconsecrated church. Kenneth Branagh starred and directed while Alex Kingston vamped it up as Lady Macbeth.
In 2013 Maxine Peake broke into the MIF inner circle with The Masque of Anarchy, Shelley’s poem about Peterloo, hauntingly recited just yards from where the massacre happened.
Unexpected combinations abounded when revered ballet dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov, Hollywood actor William Dafoe and the experimental theatre director Robert Wilson met in a production of The Old Woman.
Not one to forget the clubbers, MIF13's Despacio boasted seven enormous speaker stacks, 576 black and white
floor tiles and one giant glitter ball for what was mathematically proven to be the best amplified sound ever heard anywhere.
(Photo credits: MIF press)