âItâs the first time Iâve been to this part of the country,â announces Edinburgh wunderkind DJ Barry Canât Swim as he gazes out from the main stage. âItâs proper nice, man.â
Wilderness Festival, held on the prim and proper Cornbury Park estate on the edge of the Cotswolds, has a reputation for being one of the poshest in the country. More than just a music fest â or less, depending on your perspective â itâs almost equally focused on tunes, talks, food and oddball entertainment. Wander around at night and youâll find three women in pink cowboy hats (aka DJ collective Femme Again) lip-syncing to Shania Twainâs âMan! I Feel Like A Woman!â opposite a sports ground where two teams are having a vigorous dance-off over whoâll go first in a game of dodgeball.
Against this backdrop, it doesnât really seem so weird that electro-funkers Ibibio Sound Machine spend Friday evening hyping up an audience that includes two punters dressed as lobsters, or that a guy in a loincloth gets his groove on to Barry Canât Swimâs emotional house. Even returned â90s dance giants Faithlessâ bonkers heavy metal cover of Joy Division‘s âLove Will Tear Us Apartâ, which segues into throbbing house before the two styles merge in mind-melting fashion, sounds perfectly normal here.
Is Wilderness as posh as people say? General camping tickets are ÂŁ278 before booking fees, which makes it cheaper than Reading & Leeds, and the food trucks are only as expensive as those at most festivals. There are boujie âdining experiencesâ and suchlike on offer, but you donât have to book those. So itâs only really âmiddle-classâ if you have preconceived ideas of what middle and working-class people like to do. Us plebs like nice stuff too, you know?

In any case, no-oneâs too stuck-up to resist Alison Goldfrapp, who demands the audience âget [their] arses movingâ to her liquid funk on Saturday night, the band blasting the Van Halen-style synth of âRocketâ and drafting in a keytar â always a good sign â for a super-slinky âOoh La Laâ. Over on the Atrium stage, London DJ Jordss plays to a small but appreciative audience that swells when she drops Diana Rossâ âUpside Downâ (the communal spirit is only mildly interrupted when someone dressed as an alien chases their pal through the middle of the dancefloor).
Easily the musical highlight of the weekend, though, is psychedelic soul don Michael Kiwanuka, a quietly subversive figure whose songs sound like lost â70s masterpieces that tackle police brutality (âHeroâ) and racial identity. The audience is packed on the main stage and as serene strings give way to a distortion-drenched âHard to Say Goodbyeâ; itâs the beginning of what feels like a âGlastonbury momentâ at the wrong festival. âHeroâ crashes out in a squall of feedback and a howling solo tears through epic closer âLove & Hateâ, the heady atmosphere answering the question Kiwanuka posed in earnest at the top of this sensational set: âAre you ready for some soul music?â
Indeed, hip-hop titans De La Soul cheerily demolish any faint prospect of a Sunday evening wind-down with a fuzzily feel-good set that sees rapper Posdnuos lead an enthusiastic crowd chant of âpotholes in my lawnâ, which probably isnât actually much of a problem in the Cotswolds. After disco maven Jessie Ware breezily declares Wilderness her âfavourite new festivalâ, itâs up to future-facing electronic duo Bicep to close the main stage with their hyped CHROMA show, an audio-visual bonanza that pulses with glitching, kaleidoscopic visuals and beats like controlled detonations.

Hugely ambitious and drawing perhaps the youngest main stage audience of the weekend, itâs a fitting end to a do thatâs as much about the party as it is its immersive quirks. New this year, for example, is The Riddle, a dance tent and bar built around trees that sprout up to the rafters, which leads out to a chintzy garden populated by people dressed up as characters from Alice in Wonderland. This is the meeting point of the two sides of Wilderness.
By night the festival is a party paradise, with punters flocking to The Valley, a hedonistic strip deep in woodland that leads up to a triangular stage pumping out house and techno. And then thereâs House of Sublime, a burlesque tent that hosts what can perhaps best be described as a BDSM dominatrix show. Yes, thereâs cage dancing. By day, though, youâll find families taking dips in the tree-lined lake, which is also not a bad way to shake a hangover (though youâll probably want to give the Family Field a wide berth).
Obviously, with Michael Kiwanuka and Bicep as the big draws, however great they are, this isnât a festival with a superstar musical line-up to rival that of, say, Reading & Leeds. If youâre here solely for the tunes, itâs probably a four star weekend. But if youâre looking for pure escapism â be it hedonistic or family friendly â itâs a five. Wilderness: itâs proper nice, man.
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