Can you match these Glastonbury headliners to the correct year?
GLASTONBURY WEEKEND IS in full swing, with over 200,000 festival-goers in attendance.
Now in its 39th edition, the UK festival has seen some of the biggest names in music headline the iconic Pyramid Stage. While 2026 will be a fallow year for Glastonbury, it is due to return in 2027 for its 40th edition.
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As the celebrations continue at Worthy Farm, it's time to test your Glasto knowledge. Can you match this set of headliners to the correct year?
What year did U2, Coldplay, and Beyoncé all headline?
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2009
2010
2011
2012
What year did REM, Manic Street Preachers and Skunk Anansie all headline?
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1996
1997
1998
1999
What year did Kings of Leon, Jay-Z and The Verve all headline?
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2007
2008
2009
2010
What year did Billie Eilish, Paul McCartney and Kendrick Lamar all headline?
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2020 (they were meant to but it was cancelled...)
2021
2022
2023
What year did Melanie, UB40 and King Sunny Ade & His African Beats all headline?
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1983
1984
1985
1986
What year did Oasis, Pulp and The Cure all headline?
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1994
1995
1996
1997
What year did Arctic Monkeys, The Killers and The Who all headline?
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2005
2006
2007
2008
What year did Joan Baez, David Bowie and Edgar Broughton Band all headline?
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1972
1973
1970
1971
What year did Radiohead, Foo Fighters and Ed Sheeran all headline the Pyramid Stage?
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2014
2017
2018
2013
What year did The Chemical Brothers, Travis and David Bowie all headline the Pyramid Stage?
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2000
1999
1998
2001
Bonus question: This year's headliners are...
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Sabrina Carpenter, Fatboy Slim, Gorillaz
The Prodigy, Chappell Roan, Bruce Springsteen
The 1975, Neil Young, Olivia Rodrigo
Harry Styles, Stevie Nicks, Charli xcx
Answer all the questions to see your result!
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You scored
out of
!
Glastonbur-yay
You got full marks! Next challenge is trying to secure a ticket for 2027.
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You scored
out of
!
Happy camper
Almost 100%, well done.
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You scored
out of
!
Halfway there
Maybe you're too cool for the Pyramid Stage?
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You scored
out of
!
Lost in the crowd
You did okay, but some Glasto revision would do no harm.
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You scored
out of
!
Glastonbur-nay
Let's hope you're better at pitching tents than you are at quizzes.
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The Irish Sun
30 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
My hostage son is chained up alone & going blind in Gaza dungeons while sick Hamas captors are CELEBRATED at Glastonbury
THEY both set out to celebrate peace and love. But while Glastonbury was this weekend awash with support for 19 While Glastonbury was awash with Palestine support, there was little recognition of the 378 people killed by Hamas at the Nova music festival in Israel on October 7 2023 Credit: Alamy 19 Hostage Elkana Bohbot, right, with sibling Uriel before the October 7 attacks Credit: Doug Seeburg Amid a sea of Palestine flags waved by the crowds at Worthy Farm, punk performers The victims of the atrocity nearly two years ago — which marked the onset of full-scale war — were all but forgotten. Instead, here in the UK, its perpetrators were held up as heroes. You would have had to look hard to spot a flag at Glastonbury honouring those killed or taken hostage at the Nova festival. READ MORE ON HAMAS Unsuspecting party-goers there were slain amid a hail of bullets and rockets as waves of Hamas fighters swarmed across the border from Gaza. Rockets blasted across the border from Gaza. It became the scene of the biggest massacre at a music event in history. Incredibly, festivals held since then have not only failed to acknowledge what happened at the Israel gig, but have at times celebrated the terrorists behind the devastation. Most read in The Sun The attack on the event, as well as small villages and towns near the Gaza border on that same day, led to a conflict that has seen thousands of Palestinians killed as Israel continues in its quest to dismantle Hamas and Fury as Glastonbury crowd chants 'death to the IDF' during Bob Vylan set aired live on BBC One member of the band And the recent 12-day war between Iran and Israel has brought more death and destruction to both nations, yet Israel seems no closer to getting its hostages back. 'Grief and pain' The taken no longer feel like a key focus amid the fighting. Of the approximately 250 people who were originally taken captive by Hamas, around 50 are still believed to remain in war-stricken Gaza over 600 days later. Twenty of them are thought to be alive — nine were from the Nova Festival. We want to emphasise that bringing back the remaining 50 hostages is the key to achieving complete Israeli victory. There will be no victory until the last hostage returns Israel's Hostages And Missing Families Forum Slowly, as the Israeli army takes over increasing tranches of the territory, it is finding bodies of dead hostages. Eight have been recovered so far this month. On June 21, a military operation retrieved the remains of three people who had been taken captive — Yonatan Samerano, 21, Ofra Keidar, 71, and Sgt Shai Levinson, 19. Israel's Hostages And Missing Families Forum — which represents some of the hostages' relatives — said: 'Alongside the grief and pain, their return provides some comfort to the families who have waited in agony, uncertainty and doubt. 'We want to emphasise that bringing back the remaining 50 hostages is the key to achieving complete Israeli victory. There will be no victory until the last hostage returns.' One of those caged in the tunnels is Alon Ohel, who is in desperate need of medical attention as shrapnel in his eye is slowly blinding him. Throughout his ordeal, it is music that has kept him going, his mother Idit tells The Sun. Alon started playing the piano when he was nine, with The British pop star's music is likely being sung by the gentle 24-year-old in the tunnel dungeons of Gaza as he tries to keep himself sane. Sir Elton has previously declared himself a fan of Kneecap — admitting he 'loves everything about them'. Alon was held with three other hostages, who were released in previous ceasefire deals. They have told his mother about the nightmare he is enduring. 'Their legs were chained for many months, they were starved and sometimes they were badly beaten,' says Idit. 19 Hamas terrorists used motorised paragliders during the attack 19 Wrecked and burnt out vehicles at the festival site Credit: EPA 'But at least they had each other. The three men Alon was held with have all been released. 'But we believe he is now on his own and, of course, we are so worried about it. 'The only thing that keeps me going is the hope that he will come out alive.' MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!! Donald Trump There has been a new ceasefire deal on the table for many weeks, which could secure Alon's freedom, but Hamas has refused to sign it. Even though it would put an end to the horrendous suffering of the Palestinian people, it would mean them losing their hold on Gaza. Just want them home Yesterday morning, US President Donald Trump, who has said he is hopeful a peace deal could be agreed in the next week, highlighted the plight of the hostages on Truth Social, writing in bold capital letters: 'MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!! DJT.' The question for the Israeli PM, Benjamin Netanyahu, and his cabinet remains: Save the hostages and allow Hamas to keep hold of Gaza, or try to completely defeat Hamas and risk the loss of the hostages? This is why the families of those still being held are so determined they never be forgotten. They just want them home. The hostages are rarely talked about any more in television coverage of the conflict. In countries in the West, posters of them are torn down. When Israeli forces took command of a Gaza-bound aid boat carrying climate campaigner It was alleged she and other activists declined to watch footage of the But the hostages are an ever-present reminder of Hamas's cruelty and the fact that they are — whatever the BBC may or may not have called them — a terrorist group. 19 At Glastonbury this week, punk performers Bob Vylan chanted, 'Death to the IDF' Credit: Getty 19 Northern Irish rappers Kneecap led a chorus of 'F*** Keir Starmer' Credit: PA Windsor MP Jack Rankin has raised the case of Nova hostage Avinatan Or, 31, whose mother Ditza is British, in Parliament. He was twinned with Avinatan's family as part of the Hostages And Missing Families Forum UK, and met with them last December. Avinatan's kidnap, alongside girlfriend Noa Argamani, became front page news as they were pulled away from each other by terrorists who filmed it and put it on social media. The politician says he is disgusted that there is apparent support for Hamas at Glastonbury and a failure to remember those murdered at Nova. 'The juxtaposition is quite sick, to be honest, and I put a lot of it down to a huge degree of naivety on the part of Western society,' says Jack, who hosted Ditza at the House of Commons in March. 'The reality is that if Hamas had the ability to, it would do the same to Western people at Glastonbury as they did at Nova.' Earlier this year, Hamas released a harrowing propaganda video featuring Nova hostage Elkana Bohbot. In it, he addressed his brother, Uriel, asking him to go to the White House and ask US President Donald Trump to urgently get him out. Evyatar David, 23, is another musician who was kidnapped at Nova and is believed to still be alive. We know from the hostages that have returned that they are in a tiny space — about one-and-a-half metres wide — underground, sleeping next to a hole in the ground that they use for the toilet Evyatar's brother Ilay He was filmed alongside best friend and fellow hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal in one of Hamas's sickest stunts. The pair were videoed locked in a car surrounded by terrorists at a hostage release 'ceremony', pleading: 'Let us go.' The footage was released to cause added torment to their desperate families. In Gaza, captives have mainly been held underground, according to those who have now been freed. 'They sing together' 'We know from the hostages that have returned that they are in a tiny underground space — about one-and-a-half metres wide — sleeping next to a hole in the ground that they use for the toilet,' says Evyatar's brother Ilay. 'They have just enough food and water to keep them alive. 'I know that they sing together and talk about the festivals they have gone to and the ones they want to visit. 'Music is a big part of their survival in the tunnels because they have no stimulus at all.' Ilay says that wherever people stand on the Israel-Palestine conflict, they should be speaking up against hostage-taking. 'This is a humanitarian issue,' he insists. 'Anyone who says they are for human rights should be speaking about the hostages, too. 'It is sad to think that there are festivals going on which are filled with Palestine flags, but no one mentions what happened at Nova. 'They should talk about how people who were at a festival because they love music are being tortured in tunnels more than 600 days later.' Hell of captivity THEY danced in the desert until dawn at Israel's Nova music festival. But then terror struck on October 7, 2023, and these innocent revellers never made it home. Most remain missing after being captured by Hamas. Three were reportedly murdered. 19 Alon Ohel Credit: IDF 19 Guy Gilboa-Dalal and Evyatar David Credit: Supplied 19 Avinatan Or Credit: Supplied 19 Eitan Abraham Mor Credit: Supplied 19 Guy Illouz (murdered) Credit: Supplied 19 Bar Abraham Kupershtein Credit: Supplied 19 Inbar Hayman (murdered) Credit: Supplied 19 Maxim Herkin Credit: Supplied 19 Uriel Baruch (murdered) Credit: Supplied 19 Segev Kalfon Credit: Supplied 19 Rom Braslavski Credit: Supplied 19 Idan Shtivi (murdered) 19 Yosef-Chaim Ohana & Elkana Bohbot Credit: Reuters


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
I partied with Oasis & was blamed for triggering split…why their £400m tour is biggest band reunion there will ever be
IT'S now just four sleeps until the biggest British band reunion there will ever be. Yes, I'm calling it. The Oasis reconciliation has never been equalled — and will never be eclipsed. 5 Liam Gallagher, left, and Noel in June 2001 perform for their Dutch fans at a gig in the Netherlands Credit: Redferns 5 The brothers looking out at 125,00 fans in August 1996 at Knebworth It's not hyperbole or exaggeration — this is the reunion to top all reunions, after 16 years of rumours, insults, damned lies, sub-par solo records, bitter divorces and naked venom. Who else but As There are only two Beatles left — drum and bass — The Stones and Read More on Music The animosity between Pink Floyd's Anyway, both groups — and I adore them equally — have already done it for peerless one-off shows I was privileged to witness in 2007 and 2005 respectively. Take That or One Direction? Pah! Forget it. Where are the guitars? Most read in Music The Stone Roses did it already. Crowning moment for cool britannia Noel Gallagher gives update on Oasis rehearsals and breaks silence on Glastonbury rumours And the musical, media and technological landscapes have fractured so significantly over the past decades that I cannot envisage any group hereafter emerging with such impact and cultural significance, capturing the zeitgeist and empowering a nation. Legend will tell you that the Gallaghers never conquered America — yet they are playing two heaving mega-shows at the Spotify and streaming platforms have informed and educated new international audiences about the Mancs, who are now a more dominant global force than ever. So make no mistake, the The Gallaghers also happen to be Catholic brothers — and their complex relationship began to resemble something of a holy tale, albeit latterly played out via X rather than the scriptures. Human beings have always been fascinated by sibling stories of rivalry and jealousy, not least Joseph in the Book of Genesis, which chronicles betrayal and ultimate reconciliation of the main man and his brothers. Sound familiar? Indeed, as Liam might say, biblical. It remains to be seen whether he will be wearing a coat of many colours on stage. These 41 Oasis dates are expected to bring in £400million with further dates in 2026 also being mooted, perhaps in Europe and also to tie in with the 30th anniversary of their peerless shows at There have also been various band and solo brand deals with Merch deals include £40 branded bucket hats, shot glasses, jigsaw puzzles, Oasis-themed tote bags and even baby grows. Curiously, Oasis rivals Coldplay are actually playing more sold-out dates at Wembley Stadium this summer, but with little fanfare. They will perform a record-breaking ten nights at the home of English football after the initial Oasis run of five (with two extra Gallagher shows in September). That will take Coldplay's career total to 22 dates at Wembley, compared to 12 for the Mancunians. 5 Liam rattles a tambourine as Noel strums at Glastonbury Festival in 2004 Credit: Getty - Contributor 5 Noel with his Union Jack guitar at his beloved Manchester City's Maine Road stadium in 1996 Credit: Alamy Chris Martin — who Liam once said looked like a geography teacher — may be trying to get one over on his northern counterparts. Coldplay announced their run soon after Oasis, pointedly spurning dynamic pricing structures which had caused such controversy when the brothers' dates went on sale. They also agreed to commit ten per cent of proceeds from their British dates to the Music Venue Trust, a UK charity which supports grassroots music venues. And, in a further wrestle for the moral high ground, Coldplay's gigs will be the world's first stadium shows powered by 100 per cent solar, wind and kinetic energy. Oasis won't care for such nonsense, but I'm told relationships between the bands, particularly their main songwriters, are not as amicable as they once were. But while Coldplay may be the most-played British group of the 21st century on UK radio and TV and are a bigger band in terms of global commercial success, they don't have anywhere near the cultural and societal impact of Oasis. 5 The Oasis Live '25 tour is the biggest British rock reunion of all time Credit: EPA Oasis played a significant role in shaping '90s British media and politics, assisting the ushering in of Tony Blair as The 1996 Brit Awards were very much the crowning moment for this emerging Nervy PM-in-waiting Blair would present a lifetime achievement award to David Bowie — and Noel, upon receiving one of the band's three awards that night, told the crowd: 'There are seven people in this room who are giving a little bit of hope to young people in this country. That is me, our kid, Bonehead, Guigs, Alan White, Alan McGee and Tony Blair. And if you've all got anything about you, you'll go up there and you'll shake Tony Blair's hand, man. He's the man! Power to the people!' Ounces of cocaine next to the blairs Afterwards, the Blairs approached the Oasis table, stacked high with cigarettes and alcohol — and a little more. 'There were literally ounces of cocaine, just a couple of feet away from them,' Creation Records MD Tim Abbot later confided. And rhythm guitarist There were literally ounces of cocaine, just a couple of feet away from them Tim Abbot This typified the Oasis attitude which the British public largely embraced — they just didn't care about who they offended. About how they behaved. Or what they said. They were a journalist's dream, a consistently controversial band on whom I would forge my career. But, forget not, Noel's songwriting was incomparable at that moment in time, too — paeans like In a post-Thatcher Britain, walls were crashing down and our country was modernising, creatives flourishing with fashion, the punkish Young British Artists, the UK restaurant business with eateries like St John, Quo Vadis and Aubergine emerging, handsome football, a more tolerant politics and the mood-capturing, mega-selling media fusing to make Britain great again. Oasis may have led this charge but the band's crowning glory at the Brits and what followed must be looked at in context. Sprinting out of the Acid House movement of the late '80s emerged a Madchester sound, forged by Hand-in-hand, England's progress at the Rupert Murdoch's Sky splashed out for the rights and the modern game was born, its players' wages detonating, ushering in a new generation of rock star 'ballers who, later, almost delivered in the domestic Euro '96 championship, with heroic Gascoigne again at its heart and The spirit of British music and football became enmeshed, emboldening a young working class, tired of a grubby Conservative government and wielding a desire for swift and radical change. Two deaths in 1994, the year of Cool Britannia's fertilisation, would transform the musical and political landscapes irrevocably. In April, as a fledgling 24-year old journalist for the Sunday Mirror, I would write the obituary of And, just weeks later, Labour leader John Smith's premature passing would stun us all. They were very sheepish. Cherie Blair was like, 'Would you mind awfully signing something for my kids? They're very big fans.' We just went, 'Waaaargh'. We were f***ed Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs These deaths paved the way for the twin emergence of a young, homegrown Britpop movement, New Labour and an equally youthful politician named Tony Blair, just 43. My first live encounter with Oasis came in August 1994 during a ferocious show at London's Kentish Town Forum. A provocative, surly, agitated, subversive, volatile performance, clearly signalling that we were witnessing a bombastic new chapter of British rock. Little did I know then what influence this band would have on our lives and my journalistic career. Within months of that embryonic onslaught, the mad-fer-it brothers would begin to determine the way Britons dressed and cut their hair, even the language they would use — and how they might even vote. At Knebworth House, less than two years later, 250,000 shaggy-haired lads and ladettes, boldly clad in Life felt more fun and colourful Chris Martin is certainly a mighty talented songwriter, but how many people really want to dress like him or copy his haircut? My passion and journalism throughout this period, working closely with both Oasis and Coldplay, in print, digital and broadcast media, would ultimately combine and contribute to my rise to become The Sun's Editor and my appointment was announced on August 26, 2009. Strange timing because, two days later, Oasis would implode and split up in France, dominating those early papers. But, in a 2017 interview with GQ magazine, Liam would claim that it was my presence in the band's dressing room, before the Paris show, which sparked an incendiary row with Noel, ending the band. Dead forever. Or so we thought. I was mortified. He recalled: 'I saw Dominic Mohan and some other fing clown from The Sun waltzing around backstage, necking our champagne. Not having it.' As if I would be ligging backstage, sipping the Gallagher bubbly, just as I'd landed the biggest job in British journalism. Yes, I've been fortunate enough to witness Oasis live on more than 25 occasions — in Manchester, Tokyo, California, Milan, Oslo, Majorca and even Exeter — but never Paris. It was a case of mistaken identity. I was not there. Sixteen years on, these monumental 2025 congregations and the soul-stirring anthems which will reverberate around Britain's most cavernous venues shall serve to remind us all of a less complex time, where life felt more light-hearted, fun and colourful. A pre-pandemic, analogue world where all our dreams were made before we were chained to an iPhone and a Facebook page.


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
I've been hailed a ‘free speech legend' for live-streaming Kneecap's Glasto gig after BBC cut feed – I felt I had to
A WOMAN who live- streamed Kneecap's Glastonbury gig was hailed by the band as a 'legend' after her TikTok broadcast was seen by millions. Helen Wilson, from Advertisement 7 Kneecap performed at Glastonbury Festival on Saturday last Credit: Getty 7 Jamie Dornan joined Kneecap after their Glastonbury set Credit: Instagram 7 Helen filmed the set by the Belfast rappers on the West Holts Stage Credit: Tiktok/helensmashinglife She held up her phone for over an hour, even burning her finger on the overheating device, to bring the music to the masses. It came after But Advertisement READ MORE ON GLASTONBURY Thousands of people watched Helen's livestream of the set, while nearly two million interacted with the broadcast overall, with around 1.8million people 'liking' the stream on Helen describes herself as a vegan chef and yoga teacher on her In a video after the performance, she said she was 'so astounded by the response' to her stream. Helen said she went to the stage after taking part in a pro- Advertisement MOST READ ON THE IRISH SUN Breaking She told her followers: 'So I basically just got a couple of pints, got my big Palestine flag and then I thought 'Ah, I'm gonna go live'. Prime Minister Keir Starmer calls for Glastonbury to axe Kneecap from the line-up 'I could see that very quickly I had a thousand people watching, and then that just grew and grew and grew and grew. 'I then thought 'I can't stop filming now' and then people were saying 'Oh, we need to see more, we need to see more'.' Helen said she burned herself due to the phone overheating while she filmed. Advertisement She said: 'I'm pretty battered, to be honest, but it was a f***ing amazing set.' She added: 'Thank you so much for all your messages and encouragement and support. 7 Thousands of festival goers attended the trio's Saturday gig Credit: PA 7 Bob Vylan led crowds on the West Holts Stage in chants of 'Death, death to the IDF' Credit: Getty Advertisement 7 Kneecap praised Helen in a comment posted on her TikTok profile late on Saturday Credit: Tiktok/helensmashinglife 'IT WAS A MISSION' 'It's ridiculous 'cause all I did is hold a phone up — but it was a bit of a mission. 'The phone overheated, it started to run out of battery, so I plugged in my power bank. I abandoned two pints of cider and a Palestine flag. 'I did it because I knew it wasn't going to be on the Advertisement One person said: 'Helen Wilson will never have to buy a drink in the Falls Road again.' Another said: 'Give Helen from Wales an Irish passport.' Kneecap praised Helen in a comment posted on her TikTok profile late on Saturday - and offered her tickets to any gig she wanted. 'YOU'RE A LEGEND' They said: 'Helen you're a legend! Tickets to any show just giz a shout! Grma.' Advertisement Helen responded: 'Oh my god!! I cannot believe this. Thank you so much for everything you do and stand for.' Helen told The Irish Sun today that she works at the festival selling 'real ale' to the people who pick up the litter. She said: 'I was supposed to be doing that during the Kneecap set, but when we got here earlier in the week, my friend and I spoke to our boss and said 'we really want to go and see Kneecap'.' Helen said she was allowed to go and see the band but had to go back to work afterwards. Advertisement She added: 'Being part of that set really did feel very significant. It was amazing to be there, to share with people the strength of feeling.' Thousands of festival goers attended the trio's Saturday gig. And Belfast actor In the run-up to Glastonbury at Worthy Farm in Somerset, several politicians called for Kneecap to be removed from the line-up, while Advertisement 'FREE MAN' As they took to the stage, Liam Og O hAnnaidh exclaimed: 'Glastonbury, I'm a free man.' Then, in reference to his bandmate's forthcoming court date, Naoise O Caireallain, who performs under the name Moglai Bap, said they would 'start a riot outside the courts', before clarifying: 'No riots, just love and support, and support for Palestine.' During the performance, O Caireallain also said: 'The Prime Minister of your country, not mine, said he didn't want us to play, so f Keir Starmer.' He also said a 'big thank you to the Eavis family', who run the fest, and said 'they stood strong' amid calls for the organisers to drop them from the line-up. Advertisement O hAnnaidh's case is due to be heard again at Westminster Magistrates' Court on August 20. 'CROSSED A LINE' Glastonbury Festival another act on Saturday, punk duo Bob Vylan, 'crossed a line', as footage from their set is assessed by the police. Bobby Vylan led crowds on the West Holts Stage in chants of 'Death, death to the IDF'. A joint Instagram post from Glastonbury and Emily Eavis said: 'Their chants very much crossed a line and we are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the Festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence.' Advertisement Cops said video would be assessed 'to determine whether any offences may have been committed that would require a criminal investigation'. Meanwhile, UK terror police said Kneecap won't be hauled to court over their 'kill your MP' remarks. Their probe began after a video from a November 2023 gig emerged last month. One band member could be heard in the footage saying: 'The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP.' The Met Police have said it will not proceed with the case because of the 'time elapsed' before the video was brought to their attention. Advertisement 7 Revellers hold up Palestinian flags on the day Kneecap performs at Glastonbury Festival Credit: Reuters