REVIEW
festival
Old Subbacultcha
Old Subbacultcha
2000 Trees Festival supports ‘save our venues’ campaign
Published
10-12 July 2014 – plus Early Entry tickets available for Thursday 10 July
Upcote Farm, near Cheltenham, GLOS. GL54 4BL
Gloucestershire’s 2000trees Festival will feature two ‘bigger and better’ new stages named in tribute to now fallen music venues in Cheltenham and Bristol. It is also backing the national campaign to save independent music venues from closure. The Axiom stage, named after a famous former music spot in Cheltenham will feature the very best new and underground rock and indie music including Wolf Alice who recently featured on the front cover of NME. While The Croft, named after a similar venue in Bristol, will see more acoustic and folk acts performing. There will also be a new wooded area called Forest Sessions at the award-winning festival, taking the total to six stages plus three busking boxes for the public to perform on too. The festival will be headlined by Band of Skulls, Frightened Rabbit and Dan le Sac vs Scroobius Pip. It features 90 bands, comedy, Silent Disco, family fun, quality food and drink and much more, and takes place at Upcote Farm, near Cheltenham, on July 10-12. Founder James Scarlett backed the ‘Save our Venues’ campaign which is gathering speed across the UK and promised the changes will make ‘amazing new additions’ to the festival. “Many of the UK’s independent music venues are under serious threat which is a really big problem for the industry,” he said. “We want to highlight this by naming our new stages in tribute to important local venues that have sadly already closed. “These are the places where acts like Frank Turner and Frightened Rabbit cut their musical teeth and without them the UK music scene will be further flooded by major label signings and X-Factor winners. “We urge music fans to support their local venues and their local festivals too. Either use them or lose them.” Last year 2000trees Festival scooped the Grass Roots Award at the UK Festival Awards. Tickets are still available but organisers limit capacity to 5,000 people to keep the intimate, friendly, feel good fun element that large mainstream festivals cannot provide. For tickets, to listen to the line-up, or further information visitwww.twothousandtreesfestival..co.uk