‘In 1992, 20,000 people gathered for an illegal rave at Castlemorton Common. It was the thing to dance on speaker stacks or on the top of buses or trucks’ In the 1970s I went to free festivals like ...
I spent some of the early 90s in squats and fields dancing to acid house and early hardcore, and I spent the last few months chasing up some of the people who organised those parties for this Sunday's ...
The story of a six-day rave, which saw more than 20,000 people turn up in rural Worcestershire in 1992, has been turned into a stage production. Rachel Tobin's play, The Last Free Rave, is touring ...
Ravers knew they could 'just turn up' to the festivals held by New Age Travellers On a hot bank holiday weekend 25 years ago, 20,000 people descended on land in the shadow of the Malvern Hills. The ...
Never has there been a more turbulent time in UK politics than in the 1980s. Through a new era of young ravers discovering evolving variations of electronic music, political restraints tightening, and ...
An extra performance of a play about the UK's largest illegal rave has been scheduled after four shows sold out. The Last Free Rave, written and directed by Rachel Tobin, tells the story of the ...
Political journalist Tom Barton is joined by some of those whose lives were upended in the aftermath of Castlemorton Common, 'the rave that changed Britain' in May 1992. Show more Political journalist ...
The open date and status above indicate when Castlemorton CofE Primary School opened or when it changed to its most recent incarnation, with a number of schools converting to academies in recent years ...
HUNDREDS of schoolchildren across Worcestershire have taken up their pitchforks and trowels to create a beautiful garden for the Malvern Spring Festival. Five schools - Pitmaston Primary School in ...
The open date and status above indicate when Castlemorton Church of England Primary School opened or when it changed to its most recent incarnation, with a number of schools converting to academies in ...
On a hot bank holiday weekend 25 years ago, 20,000 people descended on land in the shadow of the Malvern Hills. The word was spread by an answering machine message: "Right, listen up revellers. It's ...