
Emily Eavis on Glastonbury's magical 'Thursday Feeling'
Last year, in an unlikely development, I was booked to DJ at Glastonbury Festival. When I arrived on Thursday afternoon, one thing struck me straight away.There was a very particular atmosphere. I'd best describe is as a sense of release – of a wait being over. I'd never seen or felt anything like it.That Thursday feeling stayed with me. I kept thinking about it in the months afterwardsThough the main stages open on Friday and run all weekend, Glastonbury is a five-day festival.To its organiser, Emily Eavis, the first two days are special. The festival was started by her parents, Michael and Jean, and her memories are intertwined with family life."Traditionally, it would be me and my dad who go down to open the gates on Wednesday," she says. "It's like letting people into Christmas in a way, you know? It's sort of like musical Christmas, because they're in the best state of mind."Over the next two days, the site fills up. And, at some point, almost everyone is in."Normally Thursday afternoon is when we reach capacity," Emily tells me. "I get a message when we know that the site is full."I love the Thursday. I love energy of the Thursday."She then describes the same phenomenon I noticed last year."There's a palpable feeling of excitement, anticipation. People want to see everything and touch everything and be there together. It's a feeling of community, and big gangs of friends all reuniting.'"A palpable feeling of excitement," is the perfect way of putting it.
The opening of the festival is something Emily has been witnessing her whole life - although it predates her by 10 years. In 1970, her farmer parents organised the Pilton Pop, Folk and Blues Festival, with glam rocker Marc Bolan, '60s pop star Wayne Fontana and singer-songwriter Al Stewart playing in his back garden. "I think this is the quickest way of clearing my overdraft," said Michael, when asked why he was staging a concert in the field where his dairy cows typically grazed.Rod Stewart on Glastonbury: 'I wish they wouldn't call it the tea-time slot'Glastonbury Festival: Five newcomers you don't want to missGlastonbury: Full line-up and stage timesWith a few fits and starts, that event went on to become the UK's most recognisable music festival.And while it has changed over the years, some things have stayed the same.'When I was little, it was very different to how it is now because it was so much smaller, it was a very few people," says Emily. "But they still had the same look in their eyes which they have now, which is cheer, determination and commitment and joy and excitement and kind of magic. "The look of, like, they're going to make this five days the best five days of their life and it's an amazing thing to witness."
It was an amazing thing to witness first-hand last year. And as Emily once more sees the valley fill up, to my delight, I'm one of those who's pitching their tent. I'll be DJing at Stonebridge on Thursday night and doing my best to capture the sense of expectation and possibility.To do that, I've been getting some help from Radio 1's Greg James and his listeners – and from Drum & Bass DJ and producer Crissy Criss.Last week, I took the lift from the BBC newsroom all the way to the top of London's Broadcasting House and joined Greg on his show. We talked about Glastonbury – and Greg asked his listeners to send us voice notes describing the way they feel as the festival kicks off. A good number of them did.We then sampled some of those messages – alongside my interview with Emily Eavis. Crissy Criss has scattered those samples across a track that's a celebration of what Thursday at Glastonbury is all about.Greg will introduce the track at the Stonebridge venue where I'm DJing.As you can probably tell, that Thursday last year had quite an impact on me.As one of Greg's listeners put it: "You set yourself up, you've got your drink. Life is good. You are where you're meant to be."Or in the words of Emily Eavis: "They're going to make this five days the best five days of their life."The BBC has extensive coverage of the festival over the next few days on TV, iPlayer, radio and BBC Sounds.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
23 minutes ago
- The Guardian
TV tonight: Glastonbury 2025 kicks off on the BBC!
10pm, BBC Two To Worthy Farm for an event the BBC now has down to a fine art, with a mix of live broadcasts, red button choices and iPlayer action. This year's headliners range from gnarled veteran Neil Young to pop star Olivia Rodrigo. Elsewhere, there's Britpop (Supergrass) and hip-hop (Loyle Carner). And who the hell are Patchwork, the mystery band billed to play at 6.15pm on Saturday? Lauren Laverne, Clara Amfo, Jamz Supernova and Huw Stephens host events. Phil Harrison 10pm, Channel 4 Rosie Jones's sitcom challenges received notions of disability by being funny and daring. Emily and Ewen are both in relationships now but drug-dealing and romance aren't always a comfortable combination: when a double date goes wrong, it threatens to derail their operation. PH 8pm, Channel 4 Will the Reform rabble-rouser get his reactionary populism into government? With the next election probably more than four years away, this documentary feels premature – but journalist Fraser Nelson assesses Nigel Farage's prospects all the same. PH 9pm, BBC Two As anyone with a working knowledge of European history will know, this series was never destined to end well for the queen of France. However, the climax is effectively realised, as, imbued with the entitlement of power, Marie still struggles to understand the reasons for the tumult, even as the Bastille is stormed. PH 9pm, Channel 4 The series approaches its end, and while the formula certainly doesn't feel box-fresh any more, it shows no real sign of faltering either. In this penultimate episode, Fatiha El-Ghorri continues her enjoyably stagey antagonism with Alex Horne, Rosie Ramsey faces her fear of heights and Stevie Martin creates a spectacular fishing line. PH 9pm, Sky Documentaries 'I don't put any value on anybody after they're gone … Love 'em when they're here. Period.' That's David Sconce – a California mortician convicted of mutilating corpses and performing mass cremations – who speaks in the final two episodes of this stomach-churning series about his family funeral home. Hollie Richardson


BBC News
24 minutes ago
- BBC News
Antiques Roadshow's Bunny auctions off rabbit collection in Newbury
Antiques Roadshow expert Bunny Campione returned to the rostrum for the first time in decades to start the sale of her prized rabbit collection, which sold for about £24, sale at Special Auction Services in Newbury, Berkshire, included a rare 1906 Steiff wool plush Peter Rabbit, which sold for £7, was gifted to Campione after it was found in a bin in Athens, Greece, and had been expected to fetch between £4,000 and £6, said she "thoroughly enjoyed" selling off some of the items and was "thrilled with all the results". The wool plush was sold to a UK-based private collector. Other highlights included Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, produced by Dean's Rag Book Co., which was sold for £3, was bought by a Singapore-based collector, who was not put off by minor damage that was caused by Campione's pet rabbit. "I was absolutely delighted to have started the auction off – and although things have changed rather a lot since I was last on the rostrum, I thoroughly enjoyed myself," she said."I was thrilled with all the results, particularly my favourite Peter Rabbit, and amazed that the bids were from as far away as Singapore and the United States."Daniel Agnew, Special Auction Services' toy, doll and teddy bear expert, said the auction was "the most fun I have had in an auction for years".He added: "Bunny taking the first part of her lots was highly entertaining. We achieved some amazing prices and it was a pleasure to find homes for her collection." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


BBC News
28 minutes ago
- BBC News
High Angle Battery in Portland to host torchlit photo exhibition
A torchlit photography exhibition exploring themes of otherness, the marginal and the overlooked is set to open at a historic military High Angle Battery is the setting for the exhibition, which has been co-curated by b-side, a Dorset-based arts LGBT+ side group b-side helped set up and British-Israeli artist Gil Mualem-Doron have also helped to coordinate it and they appealed for submissions from around the exhibition, which showcases work from 21 international artists, opens on Thursday and runs until Sunday. "If you can't see people's lives you'll never know they existed but you'll also never recognise the positive contribution that difference makes to our lives," Rocca Holly-Nambi, from b-side, said. "Being seen is to know you're alive. To see yourself in artworks – and they might not be your art – reflected back at you makes you know that you matter and that you exist."The exhibits are contained within the battery's tunnels. The site was built in the 1890s to help defend Portland Harbour against was built so shells could be fired onto attacking ships below it, but advancements in ship speed meant it was obsolete after a decade. The art exhibition is the latest in a series of events held at the battery, with an opera event set to be held there next month. You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.