
The first Glastonbury Festival was held on the day after Jimi Hendrix died in 1970 over a two day period and before long word had got around. It was the Blues festival at the Bath & West Showground that had inspired Michael Eavis to begin a festival of his own although on a smaller scale. 1,500 people attended at a price of £1 per person including free milk from the farm! The following year ‘Glastonbury Fayre’ attracted 12,000 people and was free! In 1981 the festival changed it’s name to Glastonbury Festival and Michael Eavis took the helm running the event again. This was the first Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament festival and Michael helped positively towards the peace movement by holding the Festival at Worthy farm to benefit the Mid Somerset CND campaign. Michael had to convince National CND that with proper management the Festival could be turned into a profitable venture, so it was up to him to provide the money, arrange entertainment and organise the event, liaise with the authorities and organise market stalls.

The 1975
Loyle Carner
Biffy Clyro
Alanis Morissette
Busta Rhymes
Maribou State
Gracie Abrams
Four Tet
Wet Leg
Anohni And The Johnsons
Badbadnotgood
Blossoms
Burning Spear
Cmat
Denzel Curry
En Vogue
English Teacher
Fatboy Slim
Faye Webster
Floating Points
Franz Ferdinand
Glass Beams
Inhaler
Lola Young
Myles Smith
Osees
Pinkpantheress
Self Esteem
Supergrass
Vieux Farka Touré
Wunderhorse
Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts
Charli Xcx
Raye
Doechii
Deftones
Ezra Collective
John Fogerty
Amyl And The Sniffers
Amaarae
Beabadoobee
Beth Gibbons
Bob Vylan
Brandi Carlile
Caribou
Father John Misty
Gary Numan
Greentea Peng
Jade
Japanese Breakfast
Kaiser Chiefs
Kneecap
Leftfield
Lucy Dacus
Nick Lowe
Nova Twins
Pa Salieu
Scissor Sisters
The Script
Tv On The Radio
Weezer
Yussef Dayes
Olivia Rodrigo
Rod Stewart
The Prodigy
Noah Kahan
Nile Rodgers & Chic
Wolf Alice
Jorja Smith
Overmono
The Libertines
Aj Tracey
Black Uhuru
Celeste
Cymande
Danilo Plessow
Djo
Future Islands
Girl In Red
Goat
Joy Crookes
Kae Tempest
Katy J Pearson
Parcels
Pawsa
Royel Otis
Shaboozey
Snow Patrol
Sprints
St. Vincent
The Big Moon
The Brian Jonestown Massacre
The Maccabees
The Selecter
Turnstile
Glastonbury festival takes place in South West England at Worthy Farm between the small villages of Pilton and Pylle in Somerset, six miles east of Glastonbury, overlooked by the Glastonbury Tor in the “Vale of Avalon”. The area has a number of legends and spiritual traditions, and is a “New Age” site of interest: ley lines are considered to converge on the Tor. The nearest town to the festival site is Shepton Mallet, three miles (5 km) north east, but there continues to be interaction between the people espousing alternative lifestyles living in Glastonbury and the festival. The farm is situated between the A361 and A37 roads.
In recent years the site has been organised around a restricted backstage compound, with the Pyramid stage on the north, and Other stage on the south of the compound. Attractions on the east of the site include the acoustic tent, comedy tent and circus. To the south are the green fields, which include displays of traditional and environmentally friendly crafts. In King’s Meadow, the hill at the far south of the site, is a modern small megalith circle which, like Stonehenge, is coordinated with the summer solstice, and since 1990 represents a stone circle.

















