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I love Glastonbury – but will it ever feel the same again?

The ugly chants and political posturing at this year’s festival feel like a betrayal of its harmonious past

June 30, 2025 12:59
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Chilling at Glastonbury - but will it ever feel the same for Jews again? Photo: Getty Images)
3 min read

My first Glastonbury experience, in the year 2000, began with a bunch of strangers from university, and a spare seat in the driver’s vintage Mini. Loaded with five students and their camping gear, the Mini didn’t make it – we broke down in Birmingham on the way down from York. But we music fans did.

The first song I heard live at that festival was Toploader’s Achilles Heel. But it got better. It was the summer I went to watch Happy Mondays only to be sidetracked by some compelling emotive indie-rock and discover a band called Muse, playing songs from their newly released debut album Showbiz. I also sought out a group celebrating Shabbat, and davened in a field.

I remember the music, the chats under the stars in the green fields where all around the ambience was one of love and peace, and the stardust in my eyes. A few years later, living the dream reviewing Glastonbury for The Independent as the newspaper’s rock and pop editor, the stardust was still there. But it was lost this weekend.

With a Kneecap member’s terror charge, to allow the Irish rap trio to perform at Glastonbury was always going to be a risk. Not just because of the rhetoric they might use, but in the way that endorsing them paved the way for others. Others in the form of Bob Vylan.

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