Festivals Finder

4 matching festivals

Showing upcoming festivals from Thu 28th May 2026 onwards.

You are filtering by Artists. (Clear All Filters)

May
Wychwood Festival
×

Wychwood Festival

28th - 31st May 2026

Music, Family Friendly

Small

Under 18's Allowed

Showers,

Fairground, Silent Disco, Kids Area

Standard Camping, Luxury / VIP Camping, Quiet Camping, Caravan, Campervan

June
Summer Fest at the Beach
×

Summer Fest at the Beach

6th - 7th Jun 2026

Music

Medium

Under 18's Allowed

Beach

July
Kendal Calling Festival

Kendal Calling Festival

Lowther Deer Park, nr Penrith, Cumbria

30th July - 2nd Aug 2026

» i
×

Kendal Calling Festival

Lowther Deer Park, nr Penrith, Cumbria

30th July - 2nd Aug 2026

Music, Family Friendly

Very Small

Under 18's Allowed

Showers, Luxury Showers, Luxury Toilets,

Kids Area, Cinema / Film screenings

Standard Camping, Luxury / VIP Camping, Quiet Camping, Campervan

November
Shiiine On Weekender
×

Shiiine On Weekender

13th - 15th Nov 2026

Music

Medium

Over 18's Only

On-site Apartments / Chalets

Showing festivals: 1-4 of 4

Got a festival that's not listed or need to update your festival's details? Add your festival

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!

The Twang are an indie rock band from Birmingham, England, formed in 2001. The end of 2006 saw one of those moments in the UK music scene. Unheard of until October of the year, by December, a five piece band called The Twang were the subject of discussion in the pages of the NME, the message boards of a hundred band sites, the A & R departments of pretty much every record label of size in the UK whilst their demos were being played on BBC Radio One in the middle of the day.

View The Twang page