Continuing the critically acclaimed
Britannia music series for BBC Four, this documentary tells
the story of the emergence and evolution of the British
music festival through the mavericks, dreamers and
dropouts who have produced, enjoyed and
sometimes fought for them over the last 50 years.
The film traces
the ebb and flow of British festival culture from jazz
beginnings at Beaulieu in the late 50s through to the Isle
of Wight festivals at the end of the 60s, early Glastonbury
and one-off commercial festivals like 1972's Bickershaw, the
free festivals of the 70s and 80s and on through the
extended rave at Castlemorton in 1992 to the contemporary
resurgence in festivals like Glastonbury, Isle of Wight and
Reading in the last decade.
Sam Bridger's film explores the central tension between the
people's desire to come together, dance to the music and
build temporary communities and the desire of the state, the
councils and the locals to police these often unruly
gatherings.
At the heart of the documentary
is an ongoing argument about British freedom and shifts in
the political, musical and cultural landscape set to a
wonderful soundtrack of 50 years of great popular music
which takes in trad jazz, Traffic, Roy Harper, the Grateful
Dead, Hawkwind, Orbital and much more.
Featuring rare
archive and
interviews
with Michael Eavis, Richard
Thompson, Acker
Bilk, Terry Reid,
the
Levellers, Billy Bragg, John
Giddings, Melvin
Benn, Roy Harper,
Nik Turner, Peter Jenner, Orbital,
amongst
others.