Wychwood Festival
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wychwood_Festival an entity of type: SocietalEvent
Wychwood Festival is an annual music festival held at Cheltenham racecourse in Gloucestershire, UK. As well as music, the family-friendly three-day festival includes workshops, comedy, the Children's Literature Festival, and a Headphone Disco. The festival consists of four stages and has hosted performances from artists such as; The Boomtown Rats; The Proclaimers; Bill Bailey; UB40's Ali Campbell, Astro and Mickey Virtue reunited; The Levellers; Newton Faulkner; Craig Charles; 10cc; The Waterboys; Duffy; Supergrass; The Stranglers; and The Human League.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Wychwood Festival
xsd:integer
9667474
xsd:integer
1085438494
rdf:langString
Bill Bailey performing at Wychwood Festival 2016
rdf:langString
Graeme Merifield and Sam Shrouder
rdf:langString
Family Music Festival
rdf:langString
Wychwood Festival
rdf:langString
Active
xsd:integer
2005
rdf:langString
Wychwood Festival is an annual music festival held at Cheltenham racecourse in Gloucestershire, UK. As well as music, the family-friendly three-day festival includes workshops, comedy, the Children's Literature Festival, and a Headphone Disco. The festival consists of four stages and has hosted performances from artists such as; The Boomtown Rats; The Proclaimers; Bill Bailey; UB40's Ali Campbell, Astro and Mickey Virtue reunited; The Levellers; Newton Faulkner; Craig Charles; 10cc; The Waterboys; Duffy; Supergrass; The Stranglers; and The Human League. This festival is sponsored by Wychwood Brewery (home to the Hobgoblin brand) and works in association with the University of Gloucestershire, who program and run the Wychwood FM Radio Station (in partnership with Tone Radio) and the acoustic Wychwood FM Stage. The festival also hosts the Children's Literature Festival (in association with Waterstones) and also works in partnership with the children's charity Toybox. The festival has been described as “Britain’s most popular family festival”, by the Sunday Mirror, and as "an excellent hybrid of The Big Chill, WOMAD and The Cambridge Folk Festival." by Time Out magazine. The festival has also been called a "bijou Glastonbury". and a “safe, fun place to take the family but also rock ‘n’ roll enough for the most hardened of music fans”.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4149