A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s












1980 – YEAR OFF
After the problems with finances, the organisers took a year out to regroup and plan ahead. It was well worth it because the following year…

GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 19–21 JUNE 1981
THE ONE WHERE NEW ORDER BRING EVERYONE DOWN

Now renamed the Glastonbury Festival, Michael Eavis hooked up with the Campaign For Nuclear Disarmament for the first time, with the charity handling the publicity side and ticket sales. The festival makes a profit for the first time, donating about £20,000 to CND. The proper Pyramid Stage made its debut in 1981, made of corrugated iron and telegraph poles and doubling up as a cowshed the rest of the year. Lucky cows, eh?

Performances this year include Glastonbury stalwarts Hawkwind and Gong, plus the arrival of the post-punk likes of the New Order (whose gloomy set is their biggest show since the suicide of Ian Curtis the year before), poet John Cooper Clarke and that great lost band, The Sound.

Line-up:
Aswad, Ginger Baker, Chicken Shack, John Cooper Clarke, Decline And Fall, Pete Drummond, Gordon Giltrap, Gong, Roy Harper, Hawkwind, Hinkley’s Heroes, Robert Hunter, The Jazz Sluts, Taj Mahal, Beverley Martyn, Matumbi, New Order, Rab Noakes, Nick Pickett, The Sound, Supercharge, Talisman, Judy Tzuke (billed, but apparently replaced by Ronnie Lane and Friends).


GLASTONBURY FESTIVAL – 18–20 JUNE 1982
THE ONE WITH THE RAIN AND THE LASER SHOW

1982 was the first big Glastonbury washout, with the highest recorded rainfall for 45 years on the Friday. Still, this was the first year to feature the laser show after the acts had finished, backed by Gary Numan’s “Are ‘Friends’ Electric?”. The bill featured folk loon Roy Harper, Factory mope-funksters A Certain Ratio and Van Morrison, making the first of many appearances, with some of the performances filmed by ITV and broadcast at some ungodly hour.


Line-up included: A Certain Ratio, Aswad, Black Uhuru, The Blues Band, Jackson Browne, Randy California, The Chieftains, Climax Blues Band, John Cooper Clarke, Ekome, Funkapolitan, Roy Harper, Richie Havens, Van Morrison, Osibisa, Hean-Phillipe Rykiel and Dedier Maherbe, Sad Café, Steve Wally.

How’s my driving? Festival-goers arrive at Glastonbury ’82 (contains live footage of a real Mini Metro):



GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 17–19 JUNE 1983
THE ONE WITH THE RADIO STATION AND PROPER TOILETS

New local gvernment laws introduced this year mean that the 1983 festival requires Michael Eavis to apply for a license for the first time with numbers set at 30,000 and more provision made for water, toilets and other facilities. Another first was the arrival of Radio Avalon, the festival’s very own station. radioavalon.co.uk

Music-wise, there was a definite ska/reggae feel to ’83, with sets from The Specials, The Beat, Terry Hall’s Fun Boy Three and UB40. Bringing up the less frantic end of the musical spectrum were Marillion and pan pipe specialists Incantation, then enjoying a Top 20 hit with Cacharpaya.

Line-up included: A Certain Ratio, The Beat, The Chieftains, Fun Boy Three, Incantation, King Sunny Ade, Marillion, Curtis Mayfield, Melanie, UB40.


GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 20-22 JUNE 1984
THE ONE WITH THE SMITHS

Despite defending some prosecutions against the previous year’s festival, 1984’s event was the best-organised yet, with proper car parks and stewards making their debut. The Green Fields made their first appearance, although rumours that they were a stipulation of Morrissey’s contract that he have somewhere nice and quiet to lie down remain unconfirmed. The Smiths played amidst a hail of gladioli and produce a truly legendary Glastonbury performances in front of a reported 35,000 people.

Line-up included: Joan Baez, Black Uhuru, Elvis Costello, Ian Dury, Fairport Convention, Howard Jones, Fela Kuti, The Smiths, The Waterboys, Weather Report.


GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 21-23 JUNE 1985
THE ONE WITH PAUL WELLER AND THE MUD

A month before Live Aid, another washout greeted the 1985 festival, with some delightful knee-high pools of slurry spread liberally around the site, which had expanded significantly with the acquisition of the neighbouring farm. With the craic ably supplied by The Pogues and the mod duds by The Style Council, not even the presence of Bob Geldof and the Boomtown Rats could dampen spirits. “We’ve had the mud bath and proved we can still cope with the conditions,” beamed the eternally optimistic Michael Eavis.

Line-up included: Aswad, The Boomtown Rats, Roger Chapman, Joe Cocker, Echo And The Bunnymen, Ian Dury, James, Hugh Masekela, The Men They Couldn't Hang, Microdisney, The Pogues, The Style Council, Working Week.


GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 20-22 JUNE 1986
THE ONE WITH LEVEL 42 AND A LOT OF BACKCOMBING

Notable by its absence in ‘86 was the rain, while the new Classical Tent allowed the more genteel of festival goers to escape from Half Man Half Biscuit’s onslaught of puns and childrens’ TV references. Many of the mid-80s heavyweights add gravitas to the festival’s reputation, including the smooth sounds of Level 42 and Simply Red, while the indie scene is represented by The Housemartins, The Woodentops and the pre-makeover Fuzzbox. The Cure headline for the first time, with a selection of poptastic hits and gloomy anthems, including a version of A Forest which concludes three days after the festival ends (well, that’s what it seemed like at the time).

Line-up included: Billy Bragg, Ted Chippington, The Cure, Dream Syndicate, Frank Chickens, The Go-Betweens, Half Man Half Biscuit, The Housemartins, June Brides, Level 42, Madness, Microdisney, The Nightingales, The Pogues, The Psychedelic Furs, Simply Red, Ruby Turner, The Woodentops, The Waterboys, We’ve Got A Fuzzbox And We’re Going To Use It.


GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 19-21 JUNE 1987
THE ONE WHERE NEW ORDER CHEER EVERYONE UP

Glastonbury 1987 very nearly didn’t happen, with the license only granted in May, following an appeal. Nevertheless, 60,000 punters turned up to enjoy the festival, which added the WOMAD Stage for the first time. New Order kicked off their headlining set with the lengthy instrumental Elegia and legendary US power-punk pioneers Hüsker Dü also appeared on Friday afternoon, performing one of their last shows in the UK. Gaw bless ‘em.

Line-up included: Billy Bragg, The Communards, Julian Cope, Elvis Costello, Felt, Gaye Bykers On Acid, Green On Red, Hüsker Dü, Ben E. King, Van Morrison, New Order, Courtney Pine, Pop Will Eat Itself, Michelle Shocked, The Soup Dragons, That Petrol Emotion, The Triffids, Trouble Funk, The Weather Prophets, The Woodentops, World Party.


1988 – YEAR OFF


GLASTONBURY CND FESTIVAL – 16-18 JUNE 1989
THE ONE WITH DEATH THREATS AND CHAINSAWS

During a “fallow” year, the Glastonbury organisation made plans for the rapidly-expanding festival to cope with the growth, but they still faced problems when getting their license. However, 1989 sees the biggest festival yet, with crowds of up to 100,000 estimated, meaning for the first time, police were seen patrolling the site. The Legalise Cannabis tent had to hang out a “BUSTED” sign within ten minutes of opening (boo!). “We confiscated a couple of chainsaws this year,” Michael Eavis told Q at the time. “I mean fancy going to a festival with a chainsaw.”

Even with the presence of “The Man”, Glastonbury was now firmly on the festival map, with storming headlining slot from the Pixies, who played their set in alphabetical order, from Bone Machine to Where Is My Mind. Despite the festival’s reputation for peace and love, it wasn’t much fun for Suzanne Vega who played despite a death threat. Luka wasn’t that bad, surely…?


Line-up included: All About Eve, The Bhundu Boys, Black Uhuru, Elvis Costello, Donovan, Fairground Attraction, Gong Maison, Hothouse Flowers (special guest: U2’s Adam Clayton), Fela Kuti, Mahotella Queens, Van Morrison, Ozric Tentacles, Pixies, Throwing Muses, Youssou N'Dour (special guest: Peter Gabriel), Suzanne Vega, The Waterboys, The Wonder Stuff.

Additional reporting: Ben Patashnik

Did you attend Glastonbury in the 80s? What are your most memorable moments? Share your thoughts here...

Posted by Martin O'Gorman at 10:52AM | May 15, 2007
Add a Comment
Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

Oh how I wish I could be transported to that Pixies set.. sounded amazing, I didn't start going until 1990.. missed them by a year.. boo.

Can't wait for this year's festival.. we need some sun though - who can we ask about that?!

Posted by steve watson at 12:35PM | May 15, 2007 | Reply to this
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Re: Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

i agree, rain rather stopped play in 2005, still '07's going to be a blinder i can just feel it in my bones.

Posted by james cromwell at 12:37PM | May 15, 2007 | Reply to this
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non possa qualche cosa.. td2

Saluti..
voi generato originale le informazioni !..
Ci era un alberino e un autore come a impari [URL=http://corsi-di-yoga.corsicaferry.net]corsi di yoga[/URL] .
Distanza domicilio livello calendario disoccupati roma sui riguardo tecnologie universitari.
Ma Noi desideri fermo favorevole soddisfare circa corsi on line.
Congettura, ricerca poco ..

Posted by FesIssuera at 10:36AM | August 24, 2007 | Reply to this
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Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

the first one i went to was 1986. It was fantastic only a few days after the huge anti apartheid concert on Clapham Common which i also went to. I was 20 and these were the first big festivals i have ever been to. I remember the sound system was huge at Glatonbury and i was miles back on the hill and could still dance to Madness. The Furs were also great and the green laser coming from the CND sign at the top of the CND stage before the Cure came on really had everyone in awe. The festival was smaller and more innocent then and drugs were much more openly for sale. Lovely weather too. Went back as a worker for the Workers Beer compnay and as a steward every chance i got until 1995. Great memories!

Posted by simon pearce at 09:48PM | May 15, 2007 | Reply to this
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Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

I went in 83, 84 and 89 (my parents were heavily involved with CND at that time). I was just turned 13 for the first one, and it was quite an eye-opener for a country boy! I remember in 84 Elvis Costello told the crowd "I just phoned my mum and told her I was about to play a gig in a cowshed. She said Don't worry Elvis, you'll make it one day.!" I heard a rumour the local council wouldn't give planning permission for the pyramid stage, but applications for cowsheds automatically got rubberstamped. So Eavis got a cowshed license, and just happened to build it in the shape of a massive pyramid, hence the need to keep cows in it the rest of the year to fend of irate local planners.

Posted by Donovan Keogh at 12:45PM | June 8, 2007 | Reply to this
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Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

Cant wait - first time back there in 18 years......
First time was in 81 - remember the fight on stage between Ginger Baker and Roy Harper on the Friday night. Then Ginger Baker wandering round the site for the rest of the weekend with a black eye and 2 Dobermans looking for Roy. Happy days.

Posted by John Galvin at 04:13PM | June 8, 2007 | Reply to this
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Ginger

Lol, I remember the compere coming on during the fight and saying 'it's supposed to be an effing peace festival'. I have never laughed so much. I also remember seeing ginger walking about, but I heard he was looking for the w*nker who chucked a rock at him during his set causing blood to pour down his face whilst he was playing. That Roy Harper can be a mischievous little terror...have you ever heard 'the black cloud of islam', imagine if Salman Rushdie had written that ;0)

Posted by Dom Reid at 12:00PM | June 22, 2007 | Reply to this
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Re: A BRIEF HISTORY OF GLASTONBURY PART 2: THE 1980s

I was there in 84, it was a brilliant festi, lots of hash cakes and mushroom tea for sale. Jo Zawinul's Weather Report on the pyramid stage on the Sunday night is something I'll never forget. Only 35,000 people (and I thought it was packed). Beautiful!

Posted by Dub Warrior at 10:42PM | June 26, 2007 | Reply to this
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