I was there! Just turned 17 and took my first tab of black dot acid. Mud and madness. I haven't been the same ever since.....thank goodness. Deeply grateful, thank you Bickershaw
@hopebgood10 ай бұрын
If you liked it....well...that's good enough for me mate. I'm glad you had a laugh.
@memofromessex10 ай бұрын
Did you meet Jeremy Beadle?
@anthonybowers757110 ай бұрын
Me too ! I remember waking up to hear Cpn Beefheart and the Magic band playing 21st century Blues 🤣 great festival
@mrmojosrisen751410 ай бұрын
Mud and madness on the same bill in 72! that will do for me..
@ianwhitehead69110 ай бұрын
Blue micro dot acid was good too 😜
@Ian-gw2vx10 ай бұрын
I grew up in the 70s and old men who were dressed like that were ten a penny. I really miss that. You would have conversations with them that were pure gold.
@elainekerslake686510 ай бұрын
Most of them were WW1 vets. Golden age of men.
@jimsimpson100610 ай бұрын
I had a factory job in the early 1970s and knew a man near retirement age (his job was bagging the swarf from the lathes) who had been a shoemaker most of his life. He could have made you a pair of leather shoes, completely by hand.
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
Legends!! Really was like a different planet back then but simpler compared to now!
@Ian-gw2vx10 ай бұрын
Nothing shallow or superficial about them for sure. These days I tend to draw on my memories more and more @@Paul-rt4ix
@wakeupuk386010 ай бұрын
@@elainekerslake6865Me too, I am 71 now and was one of the leading hippies back in Wantage, Berkshire in the late 1960s and helped put up the Isle of Wight pop concert. I can well recall chatting to old timers who had fought in WW1 and WW2 like my father and not one was rude, critical or just down right nasty to me or my friends. They would just find us amusing and laugh at our antics, as @lan-gw2vx says "pure gold".
@mattsan7010 ай бұрын
Jeremy had a colourful and varied career and raised over £100m for charities before his sad death aged only 59. He died of chronic lymphoma Leukemia. RIP Jezza
@mattsparling984310 ай бұрын
@mattsan70 A correction if I may . it wasn't £100k, it was £100m
@mrpugster10 ай бұрын
@4th_Lensman_of_the_apocalypse the main young guy with the leather jacket
@adrinathegreat309510 ай бұрын
Like Jimmy Saville and made himself a few million along the way as well
@markpower908110 ай бұрын
@@adrinathegreat3095 "like Jimmy Saville"? Eh, really?
@robthomas586410 ай бұрын
@4th_Lensman_of_the_apocalypseDavid Walliams
@villanelle88889 ай бұрын
Loved the shopkeeper who stated that he "wouldn't give yoghurt two glances". 😆
@helenhughes942010 ай бұрын
Sod the festival 😂 Fascinating to see & hear the old chaps gathered at the front gate giving their opinion!
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
It was hard to understand some of the locals, due to the mumbling.
@pyeriotsquad10 ай бұрын
@@primalconvoy I am from near here. Clear as a bell to me !
@willduffay220710 ай бұрын
@@primalconvoyno mumbling, just an unfamiliar accent
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
Love listening to them especially the lasses
@LANCSKID10 ай бұрын
No speak Lanky?
@immaterialimmaterial519510 ай бұрын
WONDERFUL time capsule!
@jimsimpson100610 ай бұрын
Exactly, it's why I watch these things.
@blzbob793610 ай бұрын
I was there as a youngster 13 yrs old. Obviously I thought it was bloody amazing. To have a festival so near to our home town (Leyland) was something all music fans didn't want to miss. Me and a buddy still wear our Bickershaw T shirts at events, to generate chat from others that were there.
@rupert-j8f10 ай бұрын
nice 1. i lived in leyland for about 15 years it wasnt that bad of a place.
@workid365h79 ай бұрын
Did you pay to get in? Haha
@Bombabingbong669 ай бұрын
I m from Leyland...School Lane, I live in France now. Do you remember the Pram Race? I used to work at The Gables and The Tiger back in the day. Leyland was lovely when I was a kid but they have made such a mess of Hough Lane. I love visiting Worden Park when I visit, it's rare though. 😊😊😊
@rupert-j8f29 күн бұрын
@@TommyFoolery-ep3xh yeh i meant to type in it wasnt that bad of a town. i enjoyed it till the 90,s. lots of good pubs and leyland festival.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
Did you go to Deeply Vale ?
@cambs018110 ай бұрын
Harold the Count obviously misheard the locals when they told him what they nicknamed him.
@chrisbayes297210 ай бұрын
Hahahaha
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@KarmasAbutch10 ай бұрын
🏆
@ipilot32010 ай бұрын
He’s a descendent of king cnut the dyslexic.
@andrewarthurmatthews668510 ай бұрын
Yes indeed!!
@thetiredtomcat9 ай бұрын
Pure gold. Born in 1966 in North Yorkshire. Be good if we could get back to these people and this time before it all started falling apart
@RandallSlick10 ай бұрын
Fascinating. So glad the BBC Archive exists.
@filbertthedilbert110 ай бұрын
I like how the count keep a looking at the camera during the interview, like David Brent.
@carolebarker219510 ай бұрын
I felt sorry for the poor little kitten !!
@PodOfHeat9 ай бұрын
I don't agree with that in the workplace!
@hilaryepstein601310 ай бұрын
Love the idea of those long haired hippy festival goers wanting yoghurt which the shopkeeper had heard of but never sold. A complete culture shock for the older locals (one of whom I'm sure was Thora Hird.)
@Simsydav10 ай бұрын
A culture shock all round
@RayZappa10 ай бұрын
live yoghurt
@peanutbuttercookiemonster891610 ай бұрын
That was my grandma ha ha ha
@TomJonesisback9 ай бұрын
Your not in London now mate ❤
@ericsanimeshorts9 ай бұрын
Thora was the one in the flat cap on the left
@ralphmilano170310 ай бұрын
i like that the older folks were cool about it all.
@vince56789 ай бұрын
Yeah so many wonder memories on You tube. I m a survivor of it, twenty two at the time,. Sadly my mate Stu who accompanied me on the three days tripping, curled up his toes just of few months ago. Shine on all you crazy Diamonds!
@Traveller6910 ай бұрын
Oh man, this is just so funny. That line, "I've heard of yoghurt" was the best laugh I've had in ages, genius! 😂 Thinking of getting T-shirts made!
@Dreyno10 ай бұрын
Obviously, as we all know, yoghurt doesn’t really exist.
@anthonybowers757110 ай бұрын
I remember when yoghurt first appeared in our village Culcheth , I was about 15 I think
@freemenofengland288010 ай бұрын
@@anthonybowers7571 Hey come on, I grew up in Culcheth and we ate SKI yogurt from probably the late 60s onwards. My parents shopped at least once a month in Manchester, Liverpool or Chester so I'm sure we had access to it as soon as it was available. SKI was the first yogurt to contain fruit pieces and only began in 1963.
@anthonybowers757110 ай бұрын
@@freemenofengland2880 I did say "i think " ..i ate it in a Wimpy bar in Leigh anyway 🤣
@freemenofengland288010 ай бұрын
@@anthonybowers7571 Those were the days. Lol. 👍
@carolebarker219510 ай бұрын
Bickershaw/Jeremy Beadle/Grateful Dead....parallel universe right there.
@Sol-Cutta9 ай бұрын
No no.😂😂😂 Not Jeremy beadle, not as in you been framed, They were on about the festival manager, who has same name..
@longjonwhite9 ай бұрын
That’s the same Jeremy Beadle, later of You’ve Been Framed.
@Sol-Cutta9 ай бұрын
@@longjonwhite it's most definitely not.
@Sol-Cutta9 ай бұрын
@@longjonwhite it bloody well is !!! 🙏😉😂 I thought no way Is that beadle...then I see his spacca hand...by goodness well spotted.. I would not have known even with same name ..mad
@Bombabingbong669 ай бұрын
@Sol-Cutta You are Correct. Its Beadle.
@keithbessant10 ай бұрын
Jeremy Beadle, I recognised him straight away. He looks a bit different there to the sharp suited, flashy gent he became in his later career. What a clash of cultures. Bless the older generation whatever side they were on. RIP all of them.
@mikemcmahon197010 ай бұрын
Watch out,Beadle's about!
@IThinkYouLookLarvely9 ай бұрын
I recognised him pretty quick too. I laughed when he effectively criticised the camera crew sneaking up on him! Perhaps he was getting his own back 15+ years later 😄
@dfpguitar9 ай бұрын
I was scratching my head for ages wondering where Beadle appeared when it finally clicked he was the Festival manager! Such a change in character and role
@danjensen269510 ай бұрын
Gosh - didn't realise it was Jeremy beadle till i read the comments - i only knew him from when i was a kid in the 80s - thought he was all cheese then , but this shows what a groovy cat he was back in the day
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
Me too!
@Picnicl10 ай бұрын
The truth about 'cheese' is that it's just heavily layered goodwill. People mistake it for the kind of cheese you might see in adverts but that's an artificial cheese.
@theprogrammerrolandmc30399 ай бұрын
i noticed him straight away anyone who hides one hand like that has to be beadle
@IThinkYouLookLarvely9 ай бұрын
I recognised him, although it took a few minutes. Game for a Laugh was only about 9-10 years later, but I guess a suit, perm and a beard made him look quite different 😁
@jabestheshed099 ай бұрын
Beefhearts uk tour manager
@effess869810 ай бұрын
3:47 "I've heard of yoghurt ... but there's no demand for it" The north never changes
@bernadettemurray826010 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@phillipecook322710 ай бұрын
My friend that was over half a century ago.
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
It's the same with comprehensible English and washing.
@antonyberry163210 ай бұрын
Twerp
@koukouvania9 ай бұрын
he obviously hadnt heard enough about it to know that its supposed to go in the fridge lol...
@spooley10 ай бұрын
From Wikipedia, the organizers didn't see a profit. Big surprise, hah. Great slice of history, thanks for uploading. Security on the gates was inefficient. Tickets were taken and resold to those who were entering the site or were not checked. Festival goers simply got passouts and sold their ticket at half price to people arriving. As a consequence the organisers lost money. By Sunday, all semblance of organisation had disappeared and locals wandered freely onto the site to watch the Grateful Dead. By this time much of the site was awash with mud.
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
Sounds like any typical old-skool music festival.
@philiplancaster968210 ай бұрын
I’m sure the Grateful Dead were on Saturday night before Beefheart did his 5 hour set
@andrewarthurmatthews668510 ай бұрын
Yes and British festival organisation had to learn financially painfull lessons along the way . It was due to all those that went before that had allowed Glastonbury Festival to be highly successful and profitable
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
I bet the early Glasto's were like that.
@rapman57918 ай бұрын
I like the old timer who said, when asked what he thought of the festival coming to Bickershaw “we’ve ‘ad our time when we were young, let ‘em have theirs”
@andygarside24184 ай бұрын
That guy is awesome! Shows not all biddies are cantankerous!
@zootius10 ай бұрын
The startling moment when the pop-crazed youngster realizes they are witnessing a groovy young Jeremy Beadle. I'm off to enjoy a lovely yoghurt.
@Smelly_Minge10 ай бұрын
Watch out.... Beadles having a wee on your fence.
@mogadon710 ай бұрын
Yoghurt - there's no demand for it.
@Malegys10 ай бұрын
@@mogadon7That's still the case in Lancashire to this day
@leybald6010 ай бұрын
In 1972 I was 12 living in Lowton a few miles away, I remember this being talked about at school. I also had an aunty and uncle in Bickershaw. Fascinating stuff.
@susiefairfield721810 ай бұрын
yeAAAAH The Grateful Dead played...just listened to their set yesterday ❤⚡💙
@clouddog239310 ай бұрын
Remember that BBC's" news night" showing this and the Workings men club then switching briefly to film of Family on stage commentating that this is the Sound of the underground . Great lineup of American bands as l recall , The Dead , Beefheart , Captain Beyond and the New Riders Of The Purple Sage .
@bestbutter9 ай бұрын
Memories... of The Kinks, Ray Davies in a white suit sashaying around the stage with a bottle of red wine... of Beefheart's stupendous Booglarise You booming from a darkened stage at silly o'clock... of scintillating guitar rock from the Flaming Groovies... and sadly that's about it, even though I love Family, Hawkwind etc and went mainly for the Grateful Dead. Ingestion of too much of the brown yoghurt sent me to sleep shortly after the Dead started Dark Star... when I woke an hour later I believe they were still playing it... I also swear I saw giant, KKK-style burning crosses at the end of the festival, but that was probably also the yoghurt. (Did anyone else see them?)
@rawbluecheese10 ай бұрын
I would love to see the entire documentary! C'mon bbc!
@DeltaJazzUK9 ай бұрын
One can only imagine what the Grateful Dead made of Bickershaw - they must have thought their last trip had marooned them in the 19th century
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
Didn't go- but I heard that when The Dead came on stage, the Rainclouds parted & the Sun came out, for the first time !
@janegrassmarket141410 ай бұрын
13:50 Austin Mitchell Died: 18 August 2021 (age 86 years), Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds
@athelstan9279 ай бұрын
I love that Lancashire accent.. beautiful! ❤
@Hulalulatallulahoop29 ай бұрын
I was too young for the pop festival but I went to Bickershaw primary school...how fantastic!!!!
@DDandrums10 ай бұрын
Jeremy certainly put that interviewer in his place. He was marvellous on LBC though I can’t say the same for Beadle’s about etc.
@Kenny_P_abz10 ай бұрын
Interviewer was Austin Mitchell, latterly a long serving Labour MP.
@DDandrums10 ай бұрын
@@Kenny_P_abzquite so, and JB put him in his place.
@robinbennett353110 ай бұрын
I loved him on LBC, but sadly, on the telly I found him creepy.
@staceygrove597610 ай бұрын
14:10 A similar thing used to happen at many British football grounds in the 1960s and 1970s. Some people used to turn up at my local club, Oldham Athletic, at 'threequarter time' and were able to watch the last 20 minutes or so for nothing.
@Sol-Cutta26 күн бұрын
Sad how so many have long gone...days all spent up.😮😢🎉
@hashburystumble88089 ай бұрын
Friday night rainstorm saw Wishbone Ash, Hawkwind, Jonathan Kelly & a stellar performance from Dr John & the Night Tripper aptly named as we had no tent & spent the night tripping & sheltering under plastic underneath the lighting tower. Contrary to many accounts of Bickershaw, the Saturday was blessed with brilliant sunshine & I can remember the ice cream melting before it could be carried a hundred yards back to the tent which we had strategically erected that morning with the opening facing the stage.
@divisionthree85843 ай бұрын
You must have still been tripping on the Saturday. There was rain in the morning. The afternnon was dry, but never hot. You're right about the Friday night performances though. I remember a late-night announcement from Dave Brock of Hawkwind that someone had stolen his guitar and "You're all a bunch of c***s"
@hashburystumble88083 ай бұрын
@@divisionthree8584 The ice cream didn't melt on it's own 😂 We had to wait until morning to set up the tent (facing the stage). There was 6 of us when we caught a couple caught but when we woke up there were 10 inside & another half dozen in sleeping bags under the fly sheet, all from Glasgow. I remember catching a little of the Incredible String Band & the Kinks from the tent. Of course we were still high that afternoon when we went for a walk outside the perimeter & remember seeing the Children of God with an open decked bus & marching in ranks coming towards us, at which point I sunk down on my knees in the mud. I also recall that they were distributing a comic style paper pushing their religious propaganda on spaced out heads.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
@@divisionthree8584 Stacia. Wow
@S7EVE_P6 ай бұрын
Just imagine hawkwind, wishbone ask and captain beefheart at a festival in your village. Amazing times.
@OldBigCD10 ай бұрын
This is the best Bickershaw footage I've ever seen, the DVD available for sale doesn't have any music from the actual festival. I'm impressed the hippies were able to find any firewood, there didn't seem to be a tree in the entire village.
@wesleyashworth506110 ай бұрын
Ther was no live music on this video either
@anthonybowers757110 ай бұрын
DVD ? tell me more please ?
@OldBigCD10 ай бұрын
There's a DVD for sale advertises all the bands who played at Bickershaw. Unfortunately none of the footage on the DVD shows those performances, just still photos and audio which may or may not be from the festival. There are other performances on the DVD which are from TV appearances. The only actual footage of the festival shows a couple of interviews with the organisers, a guy jumping off a tower into a small pool and some stoned hippies sitting around a campfire. Best avoided unless you want to waste your money.
@anthonybowers757110 ай бұрын
@@OldBigCD ok , thanks !
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
But the DVD of the DEEPLY VALE festival - ( many years later I know ) - definitely IS worth getting.
@pcalf10110 ай бұрын
15:59 David Walliams! 30 years before little Britain. Spooky
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
I thought it was him but then thought naaah
@davidwhite487410 ай бұрын
For me, he's a cross between Walliams and Ben Elton...
@TheKevcarp9 ай бұрын
He was born in 1971!
@pcalf1019 ай бұрын
@@TheKevcarp was a joke kev..
@colinu92098 ай бұрын
@@pcalf101Kevs is being a bit too literal there 😂
@SeasideBandit5 ай бұрын
It's so wonderful watching this. I grew up in Bamfurlong, only a 15 minute or so walk away.
@AFaceintheCrowd0110 ай бұрын
It was rainy, muddy, freezing cold and awful - like most outdoor events in the UK then and now. A few weeks later I saw the Dead twice in the comfort of the Lyceum.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
" Cold Rain and Snow"
@lochside76479 ай бұрын
It was like the Somme with music. Maybe it was the black mini microdots or the yoghurt stash, but I seem to recall incessant Pishing rain and a Slag heap nearby with a train running up the side of it. But it was so memorable for all the reasons on this video: flat cap old geezers and Coronation type matrons tutting away at 'bloody 'ippies' ; amazing lineup, most of whom I missed by sleeping in the big tent after the tabs wore off; the high wire guy setting fire to himself and diving into a tank of water, which then flooded the front of the stage even more into a quagmire; Stacia's magnetic..to my loony eyes... gyrations in front of Hawkwind; one of our mad squad..Laurie falling on top of the log fire..smouldering for a bit...then rising up all smoke and scorched sheepskin..announcing that he was 'aff tae the pub'; me finally staggering out of the place as the 'Dead' played what appeared to be on repeat a nine hour set on the Sunday. How I made it back home?....Dunno....Happy daze yes.
@roygoad287010 ай бұрын
Omg I’am 71 and I could be in this film! Not much actual music, guess it’s the BBC being PC. Amazing to see Jeramy Beagle as a young man, what a talented and unique guy he was, unfortunately died far too young!
@davidjbatley10 ай бұрын
The unmistakable voice of Austin Mitchell confused that this is on BBC as he was YTV calendar anchor about this time.
@YeOldeFootballChannel10 ай бұрын
He was a short time in 1972 at the BBC.
@chrisbayes297210 ай бұрын
"Austin, Austin, Austin...Don't jump the gun."
@davidjbatley10 ай бұрын
@@YeOldeFootballChannel Thanks for that I have an autograph somewhere when he set up Pennine radio in the mid seventies
@smacker218210 ай бұрын
Austin Mitchell broadcasting legend!
@v.rudeboy982910 ай бұрын
Grimsby
@OlafProt10 ай бұрын
I love that the miners are “bring it on”. Exactly the opposite of what you’d expect. 3:05 yeah peace and love 😂 9:23 keep your eye on your telly I’ll be about
@Tickity-Boo10 ай бұрын
"I've heard of yoghurt".
@johndonaldson361910 ай бұрын
When' Ski" yogurt - we couldn't get enough of it - oh, and nice capri at 14.43
@blastfromthepast-o1d10 ай бұрын
When Ski yogurt came in pots that looked like little milk churns. Funnily enough, my friend's dad (who naturally drove a Ford Capri) worked for Ski. I tried a pot of yogurt about 1971, 1972, and hated it. I love it now.
@seanrm8 ай бұрын
Ski, the full of fitness food - for all the famileeeeeeeeeee
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
I used to work with a guy who was a Yoghurt ( Yoghurt ? ) salesman. ( & it wasn't Reggie Perrin 😅)
@edwardmclaughlin79359 ай бұрын
Great to watch. Would have been even better with a glimpse of the stage acts.
@Santiago_Scruzzi_Diefenthaler10 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved it!
@dan63uk3 ай бұрын
I was there with my first wife Heather - we didn't have much wet weather gear because we only had an old MG midget. Apart from the weather it was great. First time I saw Captain Beefheart.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
Electricity.
@mrlotusmic10 ай бұрын
Ah the apprenticeship of Watch out Beadles a lout before rebranding. Great clip.
@mixapikalic9 ай бұрын
I used to love those afghan coats. Oh the good old days. Living through my teens in the 1970's was the best decade of my life. Compared to now, fifty years later, it was bliss.
@mixapikalic9 ай бұрын
@Lookup2Wakeup Ha! 4 shillings. But that changed to 20 new pence in the 70's. Then the prices rocketed. Fish & Chips was less than a pound. Now you'd be lucky to find it for less than eight to ten pounds. In fact, ten shillings (remember the 'ten bob note') was a small fortune back then. Now the equivalent is 50p and what can you buy for that these days. A Bounty maybe? How times change eh!
@gill87798 ай бұрын
I had one of those afghan coats & loved it. Unfortunately it stunk awful when it got wet lol. Loved those hippie days!
@nigelbevan84496 ай бұрын
@@gill8779Ahhhh yesss..... The afghan coat.... I had one also which smelt terrible when it rained... Also a cheesecloth shirt, patched flared jeans and patchouli oil.
@gill87796 ай бұрын
@@nigelbevan8449 Oh yes Patchouli oil I wore it all the time. All my clothes never got rid of the smell, even after washing lol But those days were the best!.
@nigelbevan84496 ай бұрын
@@gill8779 Your comment brought a smile to my face.... Really good times back then. Brought back many nostalgic memories.... Watching bands such as Hawkwind back in the early 70s as well as Tangerine Dream, Rory Gallagher, Steve Hillage to name but a few.... I was a bit of "the odd one out" back then. The majority of teenage kids my age back in the early to mid 70s were fans of Bay City Roller's, The Osmond's, David Essex, Mud to name but a few.
@andrewarthurmatthews668510 ай бұрын
Important video in terms of British social history and so good to see this archive footage. The early festivals were relatively sparsely attended by the counter culture with a legacy of the 1969’s hippie ideal . In the days pre internet etc it was the specific music papers such as rather more mainstream New Musical Express, Sounds , Disc & Music Echo, Melody Maker. Others like Frendz, Zigzag etc catered more for the progressive / underground music scene as those publications were not available at the usual high street outlets.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
They were in "Head" shops. There was one around the corner from "The Vulcan" pub in Blackburn.
@MrMjp5810 ай бұрын
As a teenager, I liked the idea of pop festivals. I only ever went to one. That was enough.
@Ratsotone9 ай бұрын
I was there, I was 17 and it was my first festival, had a great time despite the rain, the mud and those dreaded toilets, held back from using them until Sunday morning then I had to go, called to my mate to find me some arse wipe material, which didn't turn out too well when he passed me a wet Embassy box and an empty crisp packet. We loved it though, saw some great bands and met a lot of colourful characters, and just being there was an experience in itself and one that I'll never forget.
@hopebgood10 ай бұрын
I really liked this vid. I'd never even heard of the Bickershaw Pop Festival (and tbh I can see why!)
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
There were some big American Rock names. AND the Kinks & Hawkwind .
@fredo107010 ай бұрын
If Spinal Tap was a pop festival.
@robt439010 ай бұрын
“So it became a comedy number.” I dare say Ian Faith - armed with his trusty piece of wood - would’ve made more of an effort to squeeze a damn profit out of the thing.
@tonemc604710 ай бұрын
I’m not about to do a Freeform jazz exploration in front of a festival audience !
@robt439010 ай бұрын
@@tonemc6047 Not even with top billing above the children’s puppet show?
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
@@tonemc6047 When Carlos Santana was in his 'trascendental' stage of his career, he wanted the one gig's festival crowd to hush for a first few early minutes whilst some of the band along with him sat down cross-legged on rugs....the 'peace' was suddenly shattered by one Big Rocker shouting- L E T'S B O O G I E C A R L O S !
@alisonlee331410 ай бұрын
"I've heard of yoghurt, but I've never seen it" Great quote from the corner shop owner 😂
@bigboxbobby210 ай бұрын
I was there, but I don't recall having a great time in spite of seeing the Dead and Beefheart, Donovan and the like. The toilets were non existent. If it had rained it would have been an absolute shocker. Good atmosphere though. I didn't understand why the locals were so pissed off at us, but now I get it. Who would want the great unwashed descending on their little pit village and burning down their fences for fire wood and urinating and crapping in their gardens - not me!
@richardjames335610 ай бұрын
Did you manage to catch one of the Grateful Dead's beer cans?
@bigboxbobby210 ай бұрын
What was that? Don't remember! @@richardjames3356
@philiplancaster968210 ай бұрын
FFS it pissed down all day Saturday and Sunday
@royrcf10 ай бұрын
Spent the whole weekend under polythene , as if the rain wasn't bad enough someone decided to empty the divers tank right into the field. @@philiplancaster9682
@LANCSKID10 ай бұрын
A nice old lady let me evacuate in her outside privy as often as I needed.
@patrickcrowther919510 ай бұрын
Lots of hippies completely monged on red leb and Watney's Party 7. By festival's end they'd be game for a barf.
@DeltaJazzUK9 ай бұрын
LOL
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
Makes you "Weak at the knees" according to Humble Pie's Steve Marriott ( & what a singer ! )
@TomJonesisback9 ай бұрын
Take me back to the 70s I want to go back loved the old guys and the drop it's ❤🇬🇧❤
@davidflaneau281010 ай бұрын
Who knew Jeremy Beadle was the world's most defensive & aggravated festival impressario in a previous life?
@TheOldHacker10 ай бұрын
"Count" Dracula was a a Wigan market trader called Harry Cohen, who also owned a pub in Bickershaw. The other investor was Peter Harris, who was arrested for dodgy business dealings three weeks before the event.
@heymusiclover110 ай бұрын
Gotta feel sorry for the poor shopkeeper, first day he's fine, second day (doesn't know WTF is going on)
@northernsnow698210 ай бұрын
He sold more that weekend than he had all year. Hid profits were great, and I'm sure he restocked his shelves and had plenty of money left over.
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
Enough to buy some yoghurt.
@BuJammy10 ай бұрын
Profit margins are about 5%. A small amount of theft will wipe that out@@northernsnow6982
@Sandylaner6310 ай бұрын
😂😂 he wasn’t used to people “ in capes and what have you “
@JimmyJenks15 күн бұрын
He'd heard of yogurt but he'd never seen it before!
@stephenlegg26210 ай бұрын
When the generations didn’t all dress the same. Now it’s tracksuits for all ages.
@K1lostream5 ай бұрын
They all wear pool slippers but with once-white-but-now-dirty socks with the tracksuits as well. Although I am glad to notice walking round with their hands down their pants seems to have gone out of fashion now.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
About 20 years ago, the 'Trakkie' youth all had Baseball Caps, so we called those people simply "caps" . Now it's simply hoodies. Even more self-regimentation, if that's possible.
@onlinemusiclessonsadamphil46779 ай бұрын
wow it looks like the 40s. amazing doc
@DanJamesJames10 ай бұрын
My main memories are of rain, cold, mud, 3-day-old baked potatoes, a drunken and incoherent Ray Davies, a wonderful performance from Beefheart and the Magic Band, a seemingly never-ending Grateful Dead set, and, after it was all over, mud-caked toilets at the nearest motorway services heading North on the M6.
@divisionthree85843 ай бұрын
Ray and the rest of The Kinks (all Arsenal supporters) were pissed off 'cos their team had just lost the Cup Final to Leeds an hour or two before they went on. Not the best day for them to be up north. Some stunning performances though: Wishbone Ash, Friday midnight-ish, Stackridge next afternoon. Cheech & Chong went down a storm too.
@stephenchappell751210 ай бұрын
Jeremy Beadle ⬆️
@spidyman885310 ай бұрын
Yes at 4:28 is a young Jeremy beadle - Watch out Beadles about Before he was famous
@retr0naut82310 ай бұрын
Jeremy was a lovely man,very kind and down to earth.
@derekrobinson23249 ай бұрын
I was there, Beefheart and Stackridge were excellent
@stephenleighton634910 ай бұрын
I was there, the people of bickershaw did not know what hit them !
@peterellison347810 ай бұрын
I was there too. I've only just dried out.
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
@@peterellison3478😂😂😂😂
@Dunbar07409 ай бұрын
Didn't realize it was Beedle. My first thought was, this young fella is a natural in front of the camera. I recall reading interviews in the '90s where he expressed some surprisingly progressive opinions, that were out of kilter with his high profile light entertainment media persona. This early incarnation as a hepcat puts it perspective.
@therookerybookery10 ай бұрын
Ahhh I had no idea about this! Only heard about the Zoo meets Factory Records Halfway (Fac 15) one in Leigh in 1979 😅
@andrewp107510 ай бұрын
I think Steve Coogan must've based his Ernest Moss character on that shopkeeper 😂.
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
Hahahaha absolutely priceless fella!!!
@pauldaviesantiques155610 ай бұрын
'I've heard of yoghurt...'
@Mute_Nostril_Agony9 ай бұрын
10:20: fantastic wallpaper. And those collars
@enjoythemoment65969 ай бұрын
I was thinking the exact same thing! ❤
@davidpollard40519 ай бұрын
Austin Mitchell presenting and that's Jeremy Beadle answering the questions - blimey
@davidlamb75249 ай бұрын
The Summer of Love was long gone by 1972 !
@heymusiclover110 ай бұрын
Jeremy Beadle the Promoter ?!?
@spidyman885310 ай бұрын
Yea, young Beadle before he was famous. Watch out Beadles about
@heymusiclover110 ай бұрын
Beadle the hip young gun slinger, who knew !
@BlackOnionMission10 ай бұрын
I watched this for ages before I realised it was Jeremy Beadle!
@johnm255810 ай бұрын
Changed times. "I've heard of yoghurt" wouldn't amount to much of a boast these days.
@rapman57918 ай бұрын
“Grateful Dead are on stage, I’ve got the ungrateful living here” 😂😂😂😂
@factorylad50713 ай бұрын
I evaded the formidable looking fence as by the time i arrived they were it down and declaring it from there a free festival then ont beefheart with sparls flying out of fingers during the night rain but next day was sunny with the small faces ended up with nrps hilarious thanks to the organisers.
@matthewtrow56989 ай бұрын
It really was a different country back then, completely different.
@Vinkabbeats9 ай бұрын
Raw stuff, l like the old style tv interviews
@scottprather56459 ай бұрын
Love these Brits 👍 Good window into history. Could use some subtitles for some of them though 😅
@deepindercheema491710 ай бұрын
The shopkeeper had never really encountered yoghurt. How times have changed as the biome makes its mighty presence known.
@aartman29 ай бұрын
❤ For the beautiful little black kitten...😊❤
@jonathanmadden511210 ай бұрын
I was at my first art college in East London at this time and remember it being talked about. A few intrepid students went along including my friend Roger Hutchinson who became, I learned later involved in the free festival movement. I unfortunately did not go, which I regret I suppose, I was always trying to earn extra money particularly during the summer break to supplement my grant, sad but true. A ‘bread head’ as we used to refer to them!
@adrinathegreat309510 ай бұрын
Amazing to see those old men, who were probably early 50s but looking like 80 year olds, saying let they young have the fun, we've had our day. Now the middle aged men go around trying to look like teenagers, blasting music out of car windows, walking around with spiky balding hair, moaning about the youth.. Instead of bowing out gracefully and letting the young be the young instead of trying to be like them.
@Paul-rt4ix10 ай бұрын
I agree. I think we live in a day & age where folk over 40 are just scared of getting/looking old. Some can pull the younger look off but some look absolutely ridiculous!
@andrewarthurmatthews668510 ай бұрын
Yes that’s exactly what I thought
@andchat624110 ай бұрын
It seems like that - I can't recall (or seeing a picture of)my parents ever being young ! ....a problem now is missing out on being middle aged !.. I thought I was 'youngish' & then I suddenly felt old !
@andchat624110 ай бұрын
It all went wrong when the 'comb over hairstyle' ended . So you can go baldish & hang on to a youthful style .
@richardhadfield80339 ай бұрын
Have you lot heard yourselves 😂 generalising. Don't tar all of us oldies with such a broad brush please...
@deepindercheema491710 ай бұрын
at 16:07 is none other than Jonathon Green the lexicographer and celebrated scribe of ( documenting) the Underground scene he was partner of writer and later magazine and newspaper editor Rosie Boycott at the time.
@BimBop8310 ай бұрын
Love these videos but as a native English speaker I wish they had subtitles!
@primalconvoy10 ай бұрын
I just had my ears cleaned and I'm ok with most region accents, but as a British person, some of the mumblings were incomprehensible.
@josealejandrocambareri508510 ай бұрын
Being argentinian (start learning english at 8) Im happy to read you. Such a difficult accent!
@colinwilcock97369 ай бұрын
Although not called that then Elvis Costello and Joe Strummer were there in the audience. Joe Strummer later cited the sun coming up at the end of Beefheart's set as one of the all time great festival moments. Plus l got to see the Dead !
@MichaelBennett110 ай бұрын
2:48 all those people have COPD now.
@cityboy930110 ай бұрын
Watch out beadles about 😮
@djs77349 ай бұрын
It's interesting that there isn't one single fat person in the whole video.
@Sol-Cutta9 ай бұрын
Wish there were more.
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
15:06. Is that Richard Ashcroft of 'The Verve' ? - or maybe his Dad - because it's 20 years prior to "Bitter Sweet Symphony ". Dead Ringer.... Wigan lads......both.
@alexfenton2299 ай бұрын
Newfound respect for Beadle!!!!! What a battle he had!!!
@daveymc1726 күн бұрын
Wow...my mam was 19, my oldest sister wasn't born , probably hadn't even met my dad....but she was there....loving "Donovan" and listening to "Bob" Dylan!
@smithpm8110 ай бұрын
hawkwind and grateful dead amazing
@paulinemoriarty362710 ай бұрын
That wallpaper gave me a headache, must of been cheap down market, but what a marvellous look at the past
@noelsalisbury744826 күн бұрын
Remember that "Flock" wallpaper in the Indian Restaurants ?
@longjonwhite9 ай бұрын
Haha! David Walliams @ 16:02 … looking very mature at only one year old!