Big Feastival reveals 2026 line-up

Round & About

Oxfordshire Music

Celebrating its 15th year in Oxfordshire, Big Feastival returns this August Bank Holiday with a diverse mix of music, food and family entertainment. From indie-rock favourites to award-winning chefs, find out what’s on the line-up in 2026.

Big Feastival is back in Oxfordshire in 2026, bringing celebrated musicians, Insta-worthy food and an abundance of family fun when it takes over Blur bassist, Alex James’ Farm from Friday 28 to Sunday 30 August 2026 – making for another cracking Bank Holiday weekend.

Who’s performing at Big Feastival 2026?

Bringing the energy, this year’s headliners include electronic music duo Basement Jaxx; The Streets, performing A Grand Don’t Come For Free in full for the first time; as well as indie pop band Bastille.

On the main stage, see drum and bass legends, RUDIM3NTAL; former Little Mix star PERRIE; alternative band, Doves, known for their soaring melodies; the powerful, piano-led pop of Freya Ridings; psychedelic rock and melodic pop outfit The Coral; as well as Ms Dynamite; comedy music trio, The Cuban Brothers; indie-rock favourites White Lies; The Ordinary Boys – and plenty more.

And it wouldn’t be Big Feastival without Barrioke, with EastEnders legend Shaun Williamson promising his trademark warmth and teasing banter.

Which chefs are at Big Feastival 2026?

And music’s not the only thing on the menu.

Award-winning chef, restaurateur and TV presenter Anna Haugh will headline the Big Kitchen stage. Chef patron of Myrtle Restaurant and The Wee Sister in London, Anna is a regular guest on Saturday Kitchen and Sunday Brunch – in 2026, Anna is due to join MasterChef as a judge, alongside acclaimed food critic Grace Dent.  

Plus, culinary talent will be leading demonstrations and workshops, including Rachel Allen of Ireland’s world-renowned Ballymaloe Cookery School and social media sensation Poppy Cooks, whose no-nonsense potato recipes have earned her a huge online following.

Throughout the weekend, Sally Abé, Emily English, Amber Francis, Tom Barnes, Matblak, Meera Sodha, Nokx Majozi, Jon Watts – and more – will also be sharing their brilliant recipes and advice.

Festival goers can also roll up their sleeves at The Big Feastival cookery schools and masterclasses, then sit back and watch expert chefs tame the flames in the festival’s very own BBQ area, The Smokery.

What family-friendly events are on at Big Feastival 2026?

Big Feastival’s child and family-friendly entertainment promises to delight younger festivalgoers throughout the weekend, too.

Children’s entertainer MC Hammer and Nick Cope provide high-energy, music-filled storytelling; little ones can see Gabby from Gabby’s Dollhouse, show off dance moves at the K-Pop Demon Hunters Disco, enjoy circus-antics of The Flying Seagull Project, and get creative outside in nature with Lizzie’s Way Woodland Play.

Plenty more announcements are still to come.

Tickets for 2026 are on sale now.

For more information or to book, visit Big Feastival’s website.

Images © Matt Higgs

Lunar Kites blast off with BBC Oxford’s Geraldine Peers 

Round & About

Oxfordshire Music

Local band Lunar Kites have teamed up with BBC Oxford’s Geraldine Peers on a cosmic new single. 

Space rock outfit Lunar Kites are blasting off again, with a new single featuring a familiar local voice.

The Oxfordshire–based band have teamed up with former BBC Oxford presenter Geraldine Peers for their latest release, The Final Voyage of the P7E, out now on all major streaming platforms. 

Inspired by Greek mythology and the cult 1978 Doctor Who serial Underworld, the track sees Geraldine lending her unmistakable vocals as the goddess Demeter, searching the afterlife for her lost daughter Persephone. 

It’s a spoken-word performance rather than a sung one – much to her relief, she jokes – but it adds a dramatic, cinematic layer to Lunar Kites’ signature cosmic sound.

“I was delighted when the band asked me to appear on their new single,” she says. “It definitely makes a change from reading the news.” 

The collaboration builds on an existing friendship. Geraldine previously helped the band shoot their first music video in 2024, and Lunar Kites were keen to return the favour.

The accompanying video – filmed with tongue firmly in cheek – is already proving popular online. 

Formed in 2023, Lunar Kites’ members hail from Oxford, Lewknor, Witney and Didcot.

Last summer (as featured here) they wowed music-lovers with a Doctor Who–themed gig in East Hagbourne before closing out the year with a show at Oxford’s O2 Academy. 

Their debut album The DoomStar Chronicles is due for release this year. Find out more, listen and play at lunarkites.com 

Eclectic, eccentric Elizabeth Jennings jam sessions  

Liz Nicholls

Oxfordshire Music

During spring & summer you can join this friendly group of music-lovers on the banks of the Oxford canal for a wholesome Sunday session

Looking for a wonderful soundtrack on a Lazy Sunday afternoon? Head along to the Elizabeth Jennings Jam session in north Oxford, 2-4pm on Sundays throughout summer. 

Enjoy music of the last six decades, from folk, country, blues, ragtime, early European and Latin American music. As Boima Rogers tells us, the genres and ambience can sometimes be a far cry from the tranquil Oxford city canal atmosphere, “notably bawdy English ballads going back a few centuries and haunting blues renditions harking back to the Mississippi delta at the beginning of the 20th century.  

“An eclectic group combining professional and amateur musicians play a variety of contemporary and intriguing traditional musical instruments, such as Bowed Psaltery, accordions, musical saws, lutes, keyboards, string and percussion.” 

While the Sunday afternoon sessions have yet to be “discovered” or placed on the regular tourist To-Do lists, visitors looking for a part of Oxford away from the maddening crowds of regular tours are enthusiastically welcomed and invited to join in; a hidden gem and refreshing experience. 

The event is a child of Covid19 when the lead musician, Frank Underwood decided to go on the green looking for somewhere safe to play. Other musicians followed, leading to regular jam sessions and appreciative audiences – in keeping with the advice to avoid close contacts, spread out on the green. Frank, a classically trained musician, sings and plays lute, guitar, harmonica, piano and more. Originally from Banbury, brought up in Oxford, he has been making music for over half a century. He embodies that unique characteristic of Oxford life, namely ordinary people who turn out to have led extraordinary and well- known lives. The unassuming Frank led a band, Windsong, that featured Annie Lennox prior to her role in Eurythmics. He has also worked with and/or had links with Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and James Blunt. He was commissioned to write and perform music to honour Bishop Desmond Tutu of 

South Africa, featuring “Child of Soweto”. A Jane Austen buff, he has also established a group- Austentation- devoted to the author. He has released three CDs, featuring medieval material, folk and blues. Like his diverse musical genres, his musical journey started from busking in Greenpark tube station, London, to performances all over the UK and worldwide, including stints in France, India, Norway, Italy, Switzerland and America. His focus now is Oxfordshire and nearby counties. 

Angela Mayorga who sings and plays guitar and percussion, also a key member of Austentation, has collaborated with Frank for thirteen years on various musical projects.   

A regular “visitor” is Emma Welsh, Sally’s daughter, based in Brighton who sings and plays the guitar, backing her mother. Emma works in community music to assist mental health, disable and dementia patients and refugees and performs in Rainbow Chorus, an LGTB group.  

The Elizabeth Jennings session is indeed a beautiful quirky part of Oxford but one that gives a lot of fun to session musicians, locals peering from their balconies, in whoever is lucky enough to escape from the hordes of tourists in Oxford city centre. Bystanders have also been known to occasionally introduce 

a tune, a dance or unusual musical instrument. The group welcomes all people to join in and before you know it there is a tambourine or set of bells in your hand and you find yourself singing, humming or tapping your feet, “there is always a song or beat inside of you and you just have to let it out!” 

So, take a picnic and a tune and join the fun on the Green at Elizabeth Jennings Way and look out for notices for performances at NOA in the off- season. There is no charge for the event.