GuilFest: Difference between revisions
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| location = [[Guildford]], [[England]] |
| location = [[Guildford]], [[England]] |
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| years_active= 1992 - present |
| years_active= 1992 - present |
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| founders = [[Tony Scott (festival promoter)|Tony Scott]] |
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| dates = Weekend in July (3 days) |
| dates = Weekend in July (3 days) |
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| genre = [[Rock music|Rock]], [[Alternative rock]], [[Indie rock]], [[Dance music#Nightclubs and raves|Dance]], [[World music]], [[Punk Rock]], [[Reggae]], [[Folk music]]. |
| genre = [[Rock music|Rock]], [[Alternative rock]], [[Indie rock]], [[Dance music#Nightclubs and raves|Dance]], [[World music]], [[Punk Rock]], [[Reggae]], [[Folk music]]. |
Revision as of 13:56, 19 May 2008
51°14′42″N 0°33′59″W / 51.24500°N 0.56639°W Coordinates: Extra unexpected parameters
GuilFest | |
---|---|
Genre | Rock, Alternative rock, Indie rock, Dance, World music, Punk Rock, Reggae, Folk music. |
Dates | Weekend in July (3 days) |
Location(s) | Guildford, England |
Years active | 1992 - present |
Founders | Tony Scott |
Website | www.guilfest.co.uk |
GuilFest, formerly the Guildford Festival of Folk and Blues is a music festival held in Stoke Park, Guildford, England each July. The festival, like the larger Glastonbury Festival, features a range of genres including rock, folk, blues, and in recent years pop. In 2006 GuilFest was awarded the title of "Best Family Festival" in the UK Festival awards.[1]
Previous GuilFests
The event was started in 1992 by Tony Scott, a Guildford businessman who is a keen festival-goer.
From 1992 to 1994 it was a one day event. In 1995 it became a two day event with onsite camping and was moved to nearby Loseley Park. GuilFest returned to Stoke Park in 1996 and became a three day festival in 1997 with headliners Jethro Tull.
1998 acts included Space, Shed Seven and The Lightning Seeds.
1999 acts included James, The Saw Doctors and Jools Holland & His Rhythm and Blues Orchestra.
2000 was Van Morrison, Joan Armatrading, David Gray, Culture Club, Motörhead and Rolf Harris.
2001 included Pulp, James, Reef, Dreadzone, Lonnie Donegan and Dead Men Walking.
2002 acts included Jools Holland, Fun Lovin' Criminals and The Pretenders .
In 2003, the main acts were Madness, Alice Cooper, The Darkness and Atomic Kitten.
In 2004 the main acts were Katie Melua, Simple Minds, Blondie and UB40.
The 2005 event, at that point the biggest in the event's history, featured 6 music stages along with a comedy tent. The headline acts were The Pogues, Paul Weller, and Status Quo, other acts included The Storys.
The 2006 event was headlined by Embrace, a-ha and Billy Idol, and featured Nizlopi, The Wonder Stuff, The Lightning Seeds, The Stranglers, Gary Numan and The Storys. GuilFest won the Best Family Festival Award for 2006[1].
The 2007 event was held again at Stoke Park on the 13th, 14th, and 15th July 2007 and the BBC Radio 2 main stage was headlined by Supergrass, Squeeze and Madness. The Magic Numbers played before Madness on the Sunday.[2] The second stage (sponsored by Ents24) featured Richard Thompson, The Saw Doctors, and Uriah Heep as the headliners.[3]
- For more line-up details see GuilFest line-ups
See also
External links
References
- ^ a b "UK festival Awards 2006- The Winners". Retrieved 2007-06-27.
- ^ "Official Guilfest Website-2007 event". Retrieved 2007-03-29.
- ^ "Richard Thompsom, The Saw Doctors, & Uriah Heep for GuilFest". 2007-04-16. Retrieved 2007-04-17.