Categories: Stories

Nostalgic Photos From The 60s, 70s and 80s Reveal When Music Festivals Were FREE, Easy And A Lot Edgier

A sign saying ‘Make Friends Here’ at Bath Festival in June 1970. The book’s author believes the festivals were part of an effort to overcome the various social problems that afflicted the country at that time.

They were mostly unnoticed by the mainstream public at the time and it is only in recent decades that the likes of Glastonbury have become commercialized – with a high-security presence and identity checks on tickets.

Glastonbury was also famous for revelers scaling the fences – with 80,000 people getting on site without a ticket in 1995. The same happened again in 2000 when less than half of the 250,000 revelers had gone with a ticket.

 

Signs petitioning against cannabis laws can be seen at the Windsor Free Festival in Berkshire in August 1973.

Other interesting images in the new book by Mr. Knee show The Clash on stage at Rock Against Racism in 1978 and Phil May of the Pretty Things in full flight at the Hyde Park Free Festival in 1968.
Also shown in the book – Memory of a Free Festival – is Arthur Brown at Windsor in 1967 after being lowered from a crane into the audience wearing a flaming headpiece and painted mask.
Writing in the book’s introduction, Mr. Knee said: ‘With roots deeply embedded in British folk history, music festivals were at the heart of counter-cultural movements from the Sixties to the Eighties.’
‘The free festivals were microcosms of society; overnight cities of tents and polyethene shacks – a new Jerusalem taking up temporary residence on England’s green and pleasant land.
‘They were sites of multicultural music worship, where fellow fans and youth tribes congregated and intermingled, living off the land, sharing possessions, food, drugs and ideals; connecting with the past, catching glimpses of a feasible future, united in the service of pleasure under the open sky.’
Mr. Knee believes the festivals were part of an effort to overcome the various social problems that afflicted the country at that time.
‘The apparent frivolity of music festivals is deceptive; it often masked deeper issues around unemployment, racial prejudice, and nuclear threat,’ he said.
‘The festivals were a sometimes naïve but generally earnest attempt at forming bridges to overcome social issues within broader society. 

People look over the crowds at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970, which ended that year before being revived in 2002

 

Phil May of the Pretty Things is pictured in full flight at the Hyde Park Free Festival in London in 1968

Click “Next” for more juicy photos.

Previous 3 of 6 Next

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

‘The Little Rascals’: How ‘Our Gang’ Came to Be and Why Those Kids Should Never Be Forgotten

When it comes to The Little Rascals, Leonard Maltin — along with Richard W. Bann —…

4 years ago

Harrison Ford Officially Leading Fifth ‘Indiana Jones’ Film

Disney announced a fifth Indiana Jones movie due out in July 2022. Harrison Ford is…

4 years ago

Classic TV Debut, December 16: ‘One Day at a Time,’ from ‘All in the Family Creator’ Norman Lear

By the time the original One Day at a Time premiered on December 16, 1975,…

4 years ago

Classic TV Debut, December 16: Jack Webb’s ‘Dragnet,’ One of the First Police Procedurals

If you were try and figure out what the first TV ancestor of Law &…

4 years ago

How The ‘Rat Pack’ Was Destroyed By The Kennedys

Richard A. Lertzman, co-author of the new book Deconstructing the Rat Pack delves into the…

4 years ago

‘Little House On The Prairie’: Melissa Sue Anderson Dated This Famous Older Man

Melissa Sue Anderson played Mary Ingalls on the series Little House on the Prairie. The…

4 years ago