Festivals Finder

3 matching festivals

Showing upcoming festivals from Sat 30th May 2026 onwards.

You are filtering by Artists. (Clear All Filters)

July
The Brit Fest
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The Brit Fest

2nd - 5th Jul 2026

Music

Medium

Under 18's Allowed

Showers, Luxury Showers, Luxury Toilets,

Fairground, Kids Area, Cinema / Film screenings, Extreme Sports

Standard Camping, Luxury / VIP Camping, Caravan, Campervan

Back Doune the Rabbit Hole
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Back Doune the Rabbit Hole

Stirling

17th - 19th Jul 2026

Music

Medium

Under 18's Allowed

Showers,

Standard Camping

August
Jurassic Fields Festival
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Jurassic Fields Festival

14th - 16th Aug 2026

Music, Family Friendly

Medium

Under 18's Allowed

Kids Area

Standard Camping, Quiet Camping

Showing festivals: 1-3 of 3

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Skiddle: The UK's biggest guide to festivals

There's so many amazing festivals out there but it can be difficult to work out which festivals you're going to attend. There's so many things to take into consideration - the location of the festival, the size of the festival, the genre of music, whether it's family friendly and the type of facilities onsite.

Skiddle's new Festivals Finder is here to make the process that bit easier. Simply use the Festivals Finder's unique festival search, which include options allowing you to search for festivals based on filters such as location; month; genres; type; size; accommodation; amenities and even the artists you've liked on Facebook!

Space are an English indie rock band from Liverpool, who came to prominence in the mid-1990s with hit singles such as "Female of the Species", "Neighbourhood" "Avenging Angels" and "The Ballad of Tom Jones". They worked with both Tom Jones in 1999 and Cerys Matthews a year earlier. The band had formed in 1993 and released four studio albums, plus a number of charting singles, before eventually disbanding in 2005. In 2011, two years after the death of original drummer Andy Parle, the band announced they would reunite with Tommy Scott, Jamie Murphy and Franny Griffiths returning alongside three new members.
Like many British bands from the '90s era, the core of Space's sound was inspired by '60s guitar groups such as The Kinks and The Who, yet their imaginative use of electronic instruments and sampling drew mostly from hip hop and classic film soundtracks. The band were also known for their over-the-top, dark humoured lyrics, which often dealt with serial killers, failed relationships, social outcasts, and mental illness.

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