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WELCOME TO GLASTO GAZETTE

THE UNOFFICIAL SITE DEDICATED TO GLASTONBURY MEMORIES, NEWS and more

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WELCOME from the editor

Paul J Michael E.jpg

THERE aren’t many things I can honestly say have changed my life.
From learning to drive (I grew up in a rural community), to meeting my wife, to becoming a parent, there are probably a handful of things I can put my finger on instantly.
And Glastonbury Festival is one of them.
Growing up where I did, and being who I was, was not easy. 
I liked music and held liberal views, had long hair and had plans to travel - none of which were common among my peers, or anyone else for that matter, in my corner of small-town England.
Then, at the age of 16, I went to my first festival, and everything changed.
I didn’t feel alone. 
Everywhere I looked were people who looked and dressed like me, liked much of the same music, and shared many of my views.
This was paradise.
It changed my life.
I have spent the next 20-plus years in fields up and down the country, getting that same feeling each time I unpack my tent, or sit down for that first cold pint, contemplating the days ahead.
This is paradise.
Nowhere have I felt that more than at Worthy Farm.
I have discovered so much in those fields, from political causes to pop music, from different foods to arthouse films.
It was there I found out the result of the EU Referendum, there I heard news of Michael Jackson’s death, and so much more.
I have spent birthdays there (I am lucky enough to be a Summer Solstice baby) and now - something that teenager in muddy wellies all those years ago would never have deemed possible - my wife and I take our own children there.
And I know they too love it more each time they visit. 
Because when you’ve had that special feeling, you recognise it in others too.
This is paradise.
Little did I know, when my festival life began, that I would end up living in Somerset and cover the Glastonbury Festival for 20-odd years.
I have edited a newspaper which played its own small part in getting the festival started - running an ad for the very first event, in 1970 - and still cover news and current events in Somerset.
So, as a confirmed Glasto anorak, it was a pleasure to put together a special supplement to mark the 50th anniversary. It went on to win an award, and I even got to write a book about the festival in 2021. It's truly been an honour.

I launched Glasto Gazette to promote those products really, but it became much more than that, as folks seemed to enjoy seeing my old pictures and hearing my old stories.
Now, it feels like I am at home in these pages and among friends - much as I do in those famous Somerset fields.
This is paradise.
I’ve raided all of my Glastonbury keepsakes, scoured thousands of photographs and raided the memory boxes at the back of the shed (you know the ones just out of reach and which bring everything down with them when you finally get hold of them? Yeah, those) to find little bits and bobs accrued over the years.
There wasn’t room to feature most of it in the book or the supplement, so do follow us on Instagram and Twitter (@GlastoGazette) where I'll share as much as I can on an almost daily basis.
I hope you enjoy taking a trip to the farm with me - and I would love to hear your thoughts because, as we all know, our Glastonbury journey never ends.
If you enjoy looking at these pages more than reading them (I know I do), then that is down to the amazing Kate Chidley.
I am so grateful that after agreeing to create what is an amazing cover for the supplement and my book, she in fact became a defacto art director, putting up with me asking if she happened to have a sketch of this or that, or wouldn’t mind creating this little picture for me... 
Check out her work, it is unbelievable.
Thank you Kate.
Thank you too to everyone who has agreed to speak to me over the years, I think you’ll agree they helped give us a look at Glastonbury from so many unique angles, and I will add some archive stories in the months to come.
I must also thank everyone at Worthy Farm for tolerating me writing about their festival, John Shearlaw in particular for not simply pouring scorn on the idea and instead giving some extremely valuable advice. I am indebted more than you know.
And I thank you, too, even if you are not a Glastonbury goer, for reading this far into my ramblings.
It’s well known - and irritating I’m sure - that if you engage me in conversation about Glastonbury, I will not stop.
So thank you.
Some time ago, I asked Michael Eavis what he thought the legacy of his festival would be, and he was typically understated on assessing what the event means to us festival goers.
“I’ve got no idea why it grew like it did really,” he said. “We did some different things along the way. I mean, 50,000 people without tickets; the whole traveller thing, welcoming them. No one else would have done that would they?
As is so often the case, Mr Eavis doesn’t really do the scale of what he and his team have achieved justice.
They have indeed done things differently - and they have done them right.
There is something special about Worthy Farm and the Avalon Vale - it could be the Leylines - and those of us in Somerset are very lucky to have something like this on our doorstep.
So if you are among the lucky ones to make it there, savour it, for this is where memories are made. 
And if you’ve never made it - make sure you do.

 

This is paradise.
 

Love The Farm, Leave No Trace.
 

PAUL JONES
Editor and Glastonbury Festival anorak

County Gazette editor Paul Jones at Glastonbury Festival
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