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Glasto all go for 24-26 June

eavis The Glastonbury Festival has been granted its license for 2005. It will take place between 24-26 June with tickets rumoured to go on sale on 3rd April.

Mendip’s local councillors accepted the application at the end of a nail-biting meeting. However, they ruled that several unresolved issues on noise control - including plans to allow markets stalls and the Lost Vagueness area to play music into the early hours - would be left open for further discussion.

Last year, villagers from nearby Pilton claimed late-night music kept them awake, prompting several councillors to call for stages and other areas to close much earlier. Noise levels and closure times will now be reviewed by a council delegation, but the festival will almost certainly go ahead.

After the license was granted, Michael Eavis was quick to attribute the outcome to Mean Fiddler's director of festivals, Melvin Benn, who masterminded the license application.

He told Virtual Festivals.com: "It's absolutely fantastic. It was a real long haul with some complications over the noise but Melvin's the chap who's pulled it all together. I don't know how I managed to do it for 20 years. You definitely can't tell jokes in there any more!"

Earlier in the meeting, Benn told the packed meeting how he felt proud to be part of Glastonbury, urging councillors and residents to recognise the festival as being, "a strong part, not only of Pilton and Somerset, but also of Britain's culture at this moment."

He promised the introduction of dozens of 'noise monitors', to patrol inside and outside the festival site, a move designed to offer a more proactive approach in silencing offending sound systems before complaints from residents could be made.

Improved crowd supervision, ticketing security, transport management, disabled facilities, and waste recycling were also pledged as part of the application.

Benn also revealed plans to help the tsunami relief effort by releasing an extra 3,000 day tickets for locals to attend the Sunday, with all proceeds going to a specific project in Asia - possibly a number of boats or a quayside.

But despite all this, the issue of noise pollution refused to drift away, with many locals refusing to accept late opening times - despite the promise of tight controls on decibel levels. The proposal included the opening of the cinema until 4am, Lost Vagueness all night, and market stalls until 3am.

Pilton resident Verona Fraser Mackenzie told the meeting: "Having music going on into the early hours is a step too far. It's an infringement of our human rights. Residents surely should have the right to sleep in their own homes."

Councillor Dick Skidmore said: "If this was a new festival we wouldn't even entertain the idea of granting it a license. It's only because it's inherited that we even consider Glastonbury."

However, representatives from the relevant emergency services countered that the festival was in good health and confirmed they had no objections to it taking place. Somerest and Avon Police said they are already considering cutting back on the number of officers patrolling the site because of a plummet in crime figures over the last four years. Ambulance officials also reported a severe drop in the numbers of those taken ill or injured.

Eventually, after almost four hours, and despite Benn being compared to Mark Thatcher and Mohammed Al Fayed by one man, as well as being accused of bribing residents living closest to Lost Vagueness, who haven't raised any objections to the festival, a compromise was reached.

After councillor Nigel Woollcombe-Adams argued convincingly that it should be actual noise levels, not area closure times, that should be controlled, it was agreed that a license would be granted on the condition that the issue of noise be delegated to a panel of council officers and technical experts. If the issue is not agreed upon unanimously it will go back to the licensing board. It is not know how long this process will take.

However, Benn was very upbeat when VF caught up with him afterwards. He said: "They've just delegated it to achieve what the officers were already recommending. There were a few areas of clarification that some of the councillors didn't understand. I am 100 per cent sure Glastonbury will go ahead. The worst case scenario is that Lost Vagueness will have to shut at 4am or something - that's it. So I'm happy."

In related news, Eavis is quoted in today's press as saying that there will NOT be a Glastonbury Festival in 2006.

Eavis is quoted in today's Metro: "It keeps up the excitement. You take a year off and you're so excited to get back into it again."

He is also quoted in an industry mailout: "Every fifth year since 1987 we've taken it off - it's like a fallow year in farming terms. It's a good chance for the cows, the farm, the farm workers and villagers to recover. So they come back the year after the fallow year with renewed energy, strength and imagination."

DiScuss: Who will be there? How should the tickets be sorted out?



  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Good news. Though not if that 2006 thing is true, which i Doubt.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    2006 would have probably been my first year cause i would've finished my A2 exams. ah, Reading it is then!
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    The tickets should be sorted, by being first offered to me and all of my friends.

    The following day, the rest of you should be organised into thousands of Battle Royale-type competitions to compete for the remaining tickets.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    The tickets should be sorted, by being first offered to me and all of my friends.

    The following day, the rest of you should be organised into thousands of Battle Royale-type competitions to compete for the remaining tickets.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Hooray! I can start panicking now... ace.

    They've done what they should have done with the tickets last year. Put them on early in the day (so we're not phoning into the night), and (hopefully) put enough people on the phone lines, so that when they're gone they're gone.

    Do not go out and get drunk on Saturday April 2, that's my ticket advice. Actually, do. All of you!
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    The 2006 thing is true, I've just heard Eavis on the radio saying he's booked acts for 2007 cos there'll be no 2006.

    But anyway, 2005 first...
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    iv heard / read the 2006 thing all over the place , so im guessing its true.

    might try and go this year ... you could say im a glastovirgin still.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    I'll be going. Again. ya fukkas
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    The 2006 thing was anounced before last years festival...
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Fucking stupid locals.

    "my sleep might be disrupted for a whole 3 nights a year, oh dear, I will surely die as a result of this"

    These people should be shot. They get free tickets (or at least first pick) the opportunity to exploit people by using their gardens as car parks, and all they do is fucking moan. How much does it raise for charity? Millions! I bet if they donated something to the Countryside Alliance they'd shut up.
    • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      dear, dear, what an ignorant little arsehole you are
    • Re: Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      I'm with Jesus, it has to be said. Never thought I'd hear myself saying that.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Having tried and failed to get a ticket for the past 2 years, Glasto has become a concept, an unattainable television event a little like the moon landings (rumour has it that Feeder arrived on the moon shortly after Buzz Aldrin on the second crater...). And since I now have no television, I find the whole thing rather tiresome.

    That said, I'll still try to get tickets. And be usurped by imbeciles with broadband. Again.
    • Re: Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      im moving to south africa in february therefore i will miss glasto. i am still a glasto virgin. sad. very sad.
    • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      how about artists going down there people??
      i rekon Aqua (of Barbie Gurl fame) and Eiffle 64' (who did that Blue song). Any other guesses??
    • Re: Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      same here.i wouldnt switch on the teevee for the whole week.it has become a overtold story of a magical lost weekend..which i "so should have been there" grr.
      but,with gods will,i shall go to the glasto!(and my first experience,too!)
      only half a year to go.. eep!
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Glasto wasn't even that good last year - don't bother going, spend yer money on 10 really good gigs throughout the summer. U2 don't need your hard earned cash.
    • Re: Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      I'm with you JD, but I'd go even further, never mind "really good gigs" support your local bands and those yet to make it. I do go to see some big names but mostly it's young bands who may or may not be any good - "Life is like a ..........". In my youth I did the gig and Knebworth etc thing but find the surprise of discovering a real nugget is much more rewarding. My latest real nugget is Moneen.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Glasto, too controlled now.Corporate land full of 4x4 vehicles and back stage passes.
    Wrinkly slot on the weekend on the main Stage says it all now

    LOST IT
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    It has to be reasonabley secure, don't you remember how bad the bogs were in 2000 trying to cope with a extra 100,000 unticketed asses (admittedly, mine was one of them) or how many people used to get knifed or mugged in the parking fields?.
    I went to the last 2, to which I actually paid for the first time and it was a refreshing change being able to get from stage to stage in under 45 minutes even if the weather was a bit kack. However I do agree that the acts seem to be getting more dodgy, especially last year, Scissor Sisters? Lost Prophets? I'm suprised Busted weren't asked to play.
  • Glasto all go for 24-26 June

    Why is it surprising that there is no 2006 Glastonbury? Mr Eavis likes to alternate the years in which this glorious coming together of people occurs as Pilton is in fact a working farm and the disruption that is caused to it and the neighbouring towns is massive.

    Also, that argument stating that attending 10 good gigs instead of Glastonbury is slightly flawed given that Glastonbury is only 25% about the music - have you not seen how much there is to do? And even with that in mind, I always manage to see about 20 excellent and diverse bands, none of them being the Scissor Sisters et al (you can see ANYTHING you want really, it's not purely about the Pyramid Stage).

    It's a hugely awarding experience (drugs aplenty or straight edge) that I have enjoyed for years and you cannot beat the relaxed state of joy everybody bumbles around in - for 5 days you are free to do WHATEVER YOU CHOOSE! It is the summer saviour of our rat-race lives that are becoming increasingly mundane by the minute.

    And hopefully the Prince rumours will finally be true this year. Hopefully.
    • Re: Glasto all go for 24-26 June

      i want to go to glasto and then i want to boogie. i want to eat glastonbury festival. it is one of the best things in my life, and i have never even been.


      maybe that's a bit too clingy of me. i was promised i could get a ticket this year, and then suddenly my family decides we're moving to south africa. boo hoo. so i have to wait 2 years before i can go.

      the end.