Your guide to biggest and best music festivals
As Bruce Springsteen heads for Worthy Farm, Blur reunite and Doves aim for great heights, this year’s festival season offers the perfect recession antidote. Ben Walsh is our guide
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As Bruce Springsteen heads for Worthy Farm, Blur reunite and Doves aim for great heights, this year's festival season offers the perfect recession antidote.
End of the Road
"An artistic triumph and fully deserving of its place in the festival
calendar" was how our reviewer Nick Hasted described last year's End of
the Road.
Now in its fourth year, this quirky, independent event, which won the Best New Festival at the Festival Awards 2006, is set deep within the beautiful tranquillity of Larmer Tree Gardens. This year, the 5,000-capacity festival will feature the Broken Family Band, the Cambridge quartet with a haunting, rather unhinged slant on country rock, Alela Diane, the melancholy folk singer from Nevada City, California, the folk-inflected Dodos from San Francisco, the sumptuous, mesmerising harmonies of Fleet Foxes, the Danish post-pop crooner Peter Broderick, bluegrass exponents Mumford & Sons, cerebral folkies Okkervil River and the country-rock colossus Steve Earle. Longer than normal sets are positively encouraged at this corporate-free delight.
Act not to miss: Fleet Foxes
Act to look out for: Okkervil River
Where: Larmer Tree Gardens, Dorset (020-8675 9616;
endoftheroadfestival.com)
When: 11-13 September
Latitude
This perennially intriguing festival, now in its fourth year, celebrates all
aspects of art and culture, including poetry (Jeffrey Lewis and Andrew
Motion will attend) and literature talks (Blake Morrison). Also, this year
the English National Ballet will present a new musical from Che Walker. But
indie rock is still the main draw and Latitude once again boasts one of the
finest line-ups of the year, with Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Pet Shop
Boys, Doves and Grace Jones topping the bill. The Doves' exquisite new
album, Kingdom of Rust, will have hopefully catapulted this Mancunian trio,
who formed in 1998 and have released four albums, to Elbow-like success by
July. They deserve their moment in the sun and they could be the surprise
package at this pretty, family-friendly setting in gorgeous Southwold. Other
highlights at this now major boutique festival include Spiritualized, Bat
for Lashes, Editors and Gossip.
Act not to miss: Doves
Act to look out for: A Belle and Sebastian DJ set
Where: Henham Park, Southwold, Sunrise Coast, Suffolk
(www.latitudefestival.co.uk)
When: 16-19 July
The Secret Garden
This radically expressive and radically inclusive festival boldly claims to
provide "a nihilistic escape from the daily drudge of normality and
invites you into the world of Eden and Babylon", two hedonistic areas
created either side of a picaresque lake. Jarvis Cocker, the gangly, former
misfit, who is now rather part of the establishment, tops the typically
eclectic bill. Also confirmed are the quirky Liverpudlian turntablist Sonny
J, the underrated anti-folk songstress Emmy the Great, electronic whiz and
sonic-soundscape practitioner Caribou, reggae greats Toots and the Maytals
and Golden Silvers, a New Romantic, electro-pop trio from London, whose
debut, True Romance, is released later this month.
Act not to miss: Jarvis Cocker
Act to look out for: Emmy the Great
Where: Mill Hill Field, Grange Farm, Huntingdon
(www.secretgardenparty.com/2009)
When: 23-26 July
Glastonbury
"Glastonbury has a tradition of guitar music. I'm not having hip-hop at
Glastonbury. It's wrong," maintained Noel Gallagher last year. The
granddaddy of music festivals controversially selected Jay-Z as a headliner
last year, but there's no such hip-hop adventure this time, as Glastonbury
plumps for rock mammoths Bruce Springsteen and Neil Young, and Gallagher's
old nemeses, the freshly reunited Blur. Ever since the Boss' 2006 album We
Shall Overcome: the Seeger Sessions, which included 13 old folk songs
made popular by the folkie Pete Seeger, Springsteen has been re-energised.
He released, with his E-Street Band, the superb Magic in 2007 and has
followed it up with the solid Working on a Dream this year. Expect the
insatiable 59-year-old to slide on his knees, grinning like an extra in High
School Musical at some stage of his three-hour-plus set. Other highlights
include Fleet Foxes, Franz Ferdinand, the Ting Tings, White Lies, Emiliana
Torrini, Doves, Lily Allen, Echo and the Bunnymen and the rugged, bluesy
sensation Florence and the Machine.
Act not to miss: Bruce Springsteen (although Blur could run him close)
Act to look out for: Florence and the Machine
Where: Worthy Farm, Pilton (www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk)
When: 24-28 June
Wychwood
Wychwood, which is pitched up at Cheltenham racecourse and overlooks some
green, lush rolling hills, is like a small-scale Glastonbury (7,500 people)
and this relaxed festival has, rather impressively, won the best family
festival award three years since its inception in 2005. Supergrass, Super Furry Animals, the Mummers, Oojami Sound System, who are a unique fusion of
Turkish rhythms and European electro sounds, Red Light Company and the
Wonder Stuff are this year's big acts, but its traditionally folk leanings
see Bellowhead, the Irish folk singer Cara Dillon and Oysterband also
playing. In addition to the four music stages there is a children's
literature festival, comedy and hundreds of workshops.
Act not to miss: Super Furry Animals
Act to look out for: Bellowhead
Where: Cheltenham Racecourse, Prestbury Park (www.wychwoodfestival.com)
When: 29-31 May
Cambridge Folk
The three-time Grammy winner Lucinda Williams plays her only UK festival date
this year at this intimate and rather lovely 45-year-old festival, one of
the most famous and biggest folk events in the world. A reliably dependable
line-up includes the Zutons, LA band Los Lobos, who blend blues, rockabilly,
jazz and Latin, the inimitable folk-rockers the Saw Doctors, Booker T Jones
and his band, the seminal English folk group the Waterson Family, the Irish
folk singer Cara Dillon, Mumford & Sons, Alela Diane, Peter Molinari,
Eddi Reader, Adrian Edmondson and the Bad Shepherds and the provocative folk
singer Jim Moray.
Act not to miss: Lucinda Williams
Act to look out for: Mumford & Sons
Where: Cherry Hinton Hall, Cambridge (cambridgefolkfestival.co.uk)
When: 31 July-3 August
Bestival
One of summer's most vivacious festivals, where most join in the annual fancy
dress, DJ Rob Da Bank's event has grown so much in esteem that it's added
two more – Camp Bestival and Bandstand. The Mercury Prize winners Elbow are
booked to play, as are Polly Scattergood, the flamboyant punk outfit the
Horrors, the Big Pink (the London duo have been compared to the excellent TV
on the Radio), the Ghost, Casio Kids and a DJ set from Toddla T.
Act not to miss: Elbow
Act to look out for: The Big Pink
Where: Robin Hill Country Park, Isle of Wight (www.bestival.net)
When: 11-13 September
Camp Bestival
Voted Best New Festival in the UK Festival Awards 2008, this giant playground
of jollity, dance and psychedelia features a superbly eclectic line-up,
including the 66-year-old soul diva Candi Staton, the delicate, haunting
folk-pop singer Laura Marling, the wonderful PJ Harvey, the preposterous
Welsh rappers Goldie Lookin' Chain, Florence and the Machine, the fired-up
folkie Frank Turner, Will Young and the "doo-wop"
singer-songwriter VV Brown. Plus, there will be DJ Yoda, Dan le Sac vs
Scroobius Pip and the jazz-funk impresario Roy Ayers.
Act not to miss: PJ Harvey
Act to look out for: Frank Turner
Where: Lulworth Castle, East Lulworth
When: 24-26 July
Meltdown
The jazz great Ornette Coleman, responsible for the Pulitzer Prize-winning
2006 release Sound Grammar, has been charged with creating the 16th
Meltdown, a festival previously curated by David Bowie, Morrissey, Patti
Smith and Massive Attack. The revered saxophonist, violinist and trumpeter
is responsible for some of the most dazzling, singular music ever heard,
including the 1959 release The Shape of Jazz to Come and his landmark
release This Is Our Music. Coleman's radical and uncompromising approach –
he's collaborated with the likes of Frank Zappa and Sonic Youth – promises
to attract an improvisational and fascinating (which is still to be
announced) line up.
Where: Southbank Centre, London SE1
(southbankcentre.co.uk/all-events/meltdown)
When: 13-21 June
The Big Chill
An ideal festival for hip families, the Big Chill is located in the exquisite
grounds of Eastnor Castle, which boasts a wood, an arboretum and four lakes.
The typically diverse line-up includes the magnificent former Talking Head
David Byrne (fresh from a productive collaboration with Brian Eno on
Everything That Happens Will Happen Today), the ubiquitous Basement Jaxx,
Orbital, Gong, Mr Scruff, Lamb, the deliciously funky Friendly Fires,
Calexico, Apples and Snakes and Spiritualized, Jason Pierce's alternative
rock/space-rock act, who are always a breathtaking live experience. Plus, a
programme of activities are planned from Thursday night right through the
weekend.
Act not to miss: David Byrne
Act to look out for: Friendly Fires
Where: Eastnor Castle Deer Park, Herefordshire (www.bigchill.net)
When: 7-9 August
Womad
Womad, set up by Peter Gabriel 27 years ago, has long been the home for world
music. This joyous festival has a deliriously faithful following and offers
everything from drum'n'bass to Guinean kora to Cuban divas. More than 3,000
people attend and its diverse line up will include the legendary R&B
songwriter Solomon Burke, Fat Freddy's Drop, the seven-piece folk outfit
from New Zealand, the trail-blazing Guinean kora VC master Ba Cissoko and
Etran Finatawa, who combine the nomadic cultures of the Tuareg and Wodaadbe
people of the West African people of Niger.
Act not to miss: Oumou Sangare
Act to look out for:Ba Cissoko
Where: Charlton Park, Malmesbury, Wiltshire (womad.org)
When: 24-26 July
Green Man
Set in breathtaking countryside, with a mountain called Sugarloaf as a
dramatic backdrop, this environmentally friendly, of course, and deliciously
eccentric festival celebrates indie and folk music. This year's line-up
includes Chicago's superb alternative rockers Wilco, the folkie du jour Bon
Iver, Brighton's eccentric indie-rock quartet British Sea Power, Four Tet,
the highly praised Brooklyn-based indie-rockers Grizzly Bear, Dirty Three,
Vetiver, Peter Broderick, Andrew Bird and the Leisure Society.
Act not to miss: Wilco
Act to look out for: Grizzly Bear
Where: Glanusk Park, Crickhowell, Wales (www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk)
When: 21-23 August
Reading/Leeds
The apex for any self-respecting rock act, this double festival has
performances from Kings of Leon, this year's Brit Award winners for Best
International Group and Best International Album, for Only by the Night,
Kaiser Chiefs, Placebo, the mouthy, experimental indie-rocker Jamie T,
Funeral for a Friend, the Prodigy, Maximo Park, Glasvegas, Gallows and Bloc
Party. Plus, the two biggies, the mighty Radiohead and the Arctic Monkeys,
who are performing in the UK for the first time since they last toured in
December 2007.
Act not to miss: Arctic Monkeys
Act to look out for: Jamie T
Where: Little John's Farm, Richfield Ave, Reading; Bramham Park, Leeds
(www.readingfestival.com/home)
When: 28-30 August
Isle of Wight
Resurrected in 2002 from the original 1970 bash, which saw Jimi Hendrix's last
live performance, this was voted Britain's best major festival in 2007. This
year offers the Prodigy, Simple Minds, Neil Young, the Pigeon Detectives,
the Script, Basement Jaxx, the Ting Tings, Charlatans, Stereophonics, White
Lies, Noisettes, Maximo Park, Ultravox (yes, they're back and it "means
nothing to me, oh Vienna..."), Razorlight and Pendulum.
Act not to miss: Neil Young
Act to look out for: Noisettes
Where: Seaclose Park, Newport, Isle of Wight
(www.isleofwightfestival.com)
When: 12-14 June
Hop Farm
Vince Power, the Mean Fiddler and Reading Festival founder who is also behind
Spain's extremely successful Benicassim festival, holds this small festival,
which is totally free of ticket registration and is devoid of branding or
sponsorship. Expanded to a three-day event this year, the Hop Farm festival
is once again held in the lovely Paddock Wood, and the line-up includes Paul
Weller, the glorious Echo and the Bunnymen, Florence and the Machine, Noah
and the Whale, Howling Bells, Ladyhawke, Mystery Jets, Editors, Super Furry
Animals and Pigeon Detectives. More acts are promised.
Act not to miss: Echo and the Bunnymen
Act to look out for: Noah and the Whale
Where: Hop Farm, Paddock Wood, Tonbridge, Kent (www.efestivals.co.uk/
festivals/others2008/thehopfarm)
When: 3-5 July
Rock-Ness
Set in the Highlands, the fourth year of Rock-Ness, which blends dance and
electronic music with rock, includes a typically heady line-up: the Prodigy,
Placebo, Basement Jaxx, Orbital, the awe-inspiring London rapper Dizzee
Rascal, the Wombats, Alabama Three and Frightened Rabbit, an idiosyncratic
indie-punk outfit from Selkirk in Scotland.
Act not to miss: Dizzee Rascal
Act to look out for: Frightened Rabbit
Where: Loch Ness, Scotland (www.rockness.co.uk)
When: 12-14 June
T in the Park
T in the Park is the biggest Scottish festival and won the Best Line-Up award
at the UK Festival Awards '08 and the Greener Festival Award last year. It
once again comes up trumps with a line-up that includes the Kings of Leon,
Blur, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and the Killers as headliners. Also
playing are Snow Patrol, the Specials (minus, of course, their inspirational
Jerry Dammers), Razorlight, Manic Street Preachers, Bloc Party, Lady GaGa,
Glasvegas, James, Lily Allen, TV on the Radio, the experimental and
sensational five-piece from Brooklyn, New York, Ladyhawke, Keane, Yeah Yeah
Yeahs, Mogwai, Foals and the blistering Nine Inch Nails.
Act not to miss: Blur
Act to look out for: TV on the Radio
Where: Kinross
When: 10-12 July
V Festival
The V Festival perennially seems to have the cream of most festivals' top
draws with Oasis, who made a bit of a comeback with Dig Out Your Soul, the
excellent Elbow, Keane, the Enemy, the Killers, Razorlight, Snow Patrol, the
Specials and Lily Allen. Plus, there's Taylor Swift, the teenage country
sensation Stateside, Fatboy Slim, the Ting Tings, Happy Mondays, the
excellent Brooklyn space-rock sonic conjurors MGMT, Biffy Clyro, the
Streets, James Morrison, Peter Doherty, Katy Perry, Dizzee Rascal and Lady
Gaga. It's impressive.
Act not to miss: Elbow
Act to look out for: MGMT
Where: Hylands Park, Chelmsford; Weston Park, Staffordshire
(www.vfestival.com)
When: 22-23 August
Hard Rock Calling
Hard Rock Calling, back for the fourth year running and now extended to a
three-day event, is blessed with the potent Bruce Springsteen as a
headliner, along with Neil Young, the Killers, who returned to form with Day
and Age, Fleet Foxes, the magnificent bluesman and boogie singer Seasick
Steve and the Pretenders.
Act not to miss: Bruce Springsteen
Act to look out for: Seasick Steve
Where: Hyde Park, London W1
When: 28 & 29 June
Wireless
The superstar rapper Kanye West, fresh from bagging himself a Brit award for
Best International Artist and selling out the O2 Arena, headlines the Sunday
event (5 July), while Basement Jaxx and the DJ Paul Oakenfold head up the
Saturday night (6 July). This two-day-and-night festival is for non-campers
and also features Dizzee Rascal, the Streets, the German duo Digitalism,
Delphic, Q Tip, Filthy Dukes and the rapper Kid Cudi.
Act not to miss: Kanye West
Act to look out for: Digitalism
Where: Hyde Park, London W1
When: 4 & 5 July
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Comments
sell the tix 1st and announce the wankers' cabaret after. A canny idea... won't work next year tho'
Most of the ones above are corporate as hell, booze fuelled with no vibe.
The Secret Garden Party - best small festival 2008 is by far the best festival, though I wouldn't necessarily call it a 'music' festival.
You also forgot to mention Camp Bestival is VERY family focussed...
Rob