
Lowestoft to see in Midsummer Day's first light with arts festival
This is how locals and visitors to Lowestoft in Suffolk will be spending the solstice at First Light, a free arts festival now in its fifth year, which runs for just over 24 hours, with a few brief breaks in the programming for sleep.
About 40,000 people are expected at the event, which will feature an eclectic array of attractions, from the musical headliners Nubiyan Twist and spoken-word events with the poet Jackie Kay to silent discos and sound baths dotted around the sands. As night falls, the action will transfer indoors with a hedonistic club night from Horse Meat Disco and more ambient musical offerings in a church.
The solstice festival came out of a regeneration project aiming to revive the fortunes of the seaside town, led by the designer and Red or Dead co-founder Wayne Hemingway.
Hemingway recalls a meeting in which 'someone said their favourite thing was to go down to the beach on Midsummer Day and be there at around 3.50am for the first light in the morning'.
'We said: 'That sounds lovely but why does it mean so much here?' The person responded: 'It's Britain's most easterly town. So that means I'm getting the first light to hit Britain on Midsummer Day, and it feels mystical and like something special is happening to me,'' Hemingway said.
Throwing a big party on the town's vast, sandy beaches seemed the ideal way to celebrate this, and for Hemingway one of the most important elements has been engaging the community, with local musicians, schools and choirs all performing.
Sign up to Headlines UK
Get the day's headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning
after newsletter promotion
The town's teenagers were initially dubious of the festival's Balearic vibe. 'They were a bit disruptive,' says Hemingway, 'because they'd not heard this kind of music – they were more into house [music]. The next year, the same lot came back and said: 'Actually, we like this music, we've got into it … can we help you clear up after?' Every year they come back and help. They're about 18 now and one of them is DJing.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
2 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
M4 Festival returns to Glasgow with bigger 2025 line-up
M4 Festival will take place at Glasgow's SWG3 on August 30, running from 3pm to 11pm, and will transform the venue's indoor Warehouse and outdoor Garden Terrace into a hub of emerging music. The event, founded and curated by rapper Bemz, aims to amplify overlooked genres and showcase up-and-coming talent from Scotland and beyond. Junglehussi (Image: Supplied) It also offers a platform for both homegrown and international voices. Bemz said: "To be back for another year is something that I am proud of. Read more: Man caught raping woman while people were taking out the bins jailed "The idea of this festival was to give something back to the community which has done so much for me. "We are now able to platform 10 local acts who have all been killing it in their own lane and now we can bring them together to show what Scotland is well and truly about. "Thank you to SWG3 for helping us and being part of our journey." This year's line-up features 10 artists and DJs performing across hip hop, R&B, afrobeat, experimental soul, alt-pop, and club music. FER4Z (Image: Supplied) The announced acts include Bellarosa (live), FER4Z (live), ISO YSO (DJ), Junglehussi (DJ), LAMAYA (live), Leahgte (DJ), LuckyBabe (DJ), Maveen (DJ), Pillz The Energizer (DJ), and Tayoh (live), with a special guest headliner still to be revealed. Live performances will highlight a new wave of talent shaping Scotland's music landscape, from Tayoh's genre-blending storytelling to FER4Z's afro-fusion, Bellarosa's vibrant pop and club sound, and LAMAYA's experimental soul. On the DJ side, ISO YSO and Leahgte will bring cutting-edge underground rap and club mixes, while LuckyBabe, Junglehussi, and Maveen promise global rhythms and high-energy sets. Pillz The Energizer will round out the line-up with his signature Afrobeat style. Tickets are available now via Skiddle


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Ammar Kalia's global album of the month
Since their formation in 2020, the Daytimers collective have been trying to establish a new imagining of British south-Asian music. Taking their name from the daytime parties held by second-generation immigrants in the late 80s and 90s, Daytimers have spent the past five years throwing raucous parties of their own, with residents such as Rohan Rakhit and Mahnoor mixing everything from jungle and Bollywood vocals with dubstep, grime instrumentals and Punjabi folk for a new generation born and raised in the UK. Following in the footsteps of their Asian underground forebears such as Nitin Sawhney and Talvin Singh, who mixed the sounds of 90s Britain with thesouth-Asian music they grew up listening to, Daytimers' latest compilation has 13 south-Asian producers remixing Bollywood hits from the Sony India catalogue with an eye on today's dancefloor culture. There is ample bass-weight across the record's 10 tracks, with German-Pakistani producer Zeeshan's take on the score of 2022 Tamil film Vikram transforming the original's keening vocal melody into a chipmunk snippet skittering over an ominous, growling bassline and siren-like synths. Daytimers co-founder Provhat, meanwhile, layers a thunderous jungle breakbeat over the wedding classic Suraj Hua Maddham – sure to turn receptions into raves – and Rea's take on Anirudh Ravichander's Dippam Dappam flips the cinema standard into a rumbling Afro-house groove. While certain edits work less well – with Baalti's take on AR Rahman's Tere Bina merely speeding up the original over two-step drum programming and Zenjah and Mrii's version of Where's the Party Tonight struggling to wrangle the kitsch, Vengaboys-style vocal of the 2006 Bollywood original into a UK garage groove – the majority of the album produces remarkable rearrangements. Reframing this nostalgic cinema music for the modern dancefloor, Alterations proves there is still plenty of space for future generations of diaspora artists to celebrate and find inspiration in their heritage. Ugandan rapper MC Yallah's second album with Berlin producer Debmaster, Gaudencia (Hakuna Kulala), is typically abrasive and full of irrepressible energy. Employing a languorous flow over Debmaster's growling beats, Yallah spits venomously on Muchaka while showcasing scatter-gun dexterity on highlight Kekasera. Iraqi vocalist Hamid al-Saadi's first record of traditional maqam music in over 25 years, Maqam Al-Iraq (Maqam Records), is a delight. Soaring over intricate santour lines, Saadi's sprawling, 20-minute compositions expand on a centuries-old tradition through his indefatigable voice. Syrian producer Khaled Kurbeh releases the ambient electronic album Likulli Fadāin Eqāéh (Research Records). Whispers of guitar strumming and washes of melody create an imaginative and sometimes ominous palette – a sense of beauty bordering on dread. This article was amended on 4 July to correct Zeeshan's nationality from British to German-Pakistani.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Kartal wants your help picking her next tattoo - what should she get?
British number three Sonay Kartal has said she wants help picking a new tattoo after reaching the fourth round of 23-year-old booked her place in the last 16 with a 6-4 6-2 victory over France's Diane Parry on will face Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova in the next round on Sunday, but has made no secret of her desire to add to the 14 tattoos she already has."I'm not one to say no to a tattoo," she said after her win over Parry. "I think I can easily be persuaded."I'm just lacking on a few creative ideas myself so if people have any ideas let me know and I'm sure that I will definitely get one."Kartal was ranked 298th in the world before Wimbledon last year but is now 51st and is the only Briton left in the women's singles run at this year's tournament is her best ever performance at a Grand Slam, beating her appearance in the third round in her 14 tattoos, Kartal includes the year '2022' to mark the first time she played in all four Grand do you think she should get next? Comment below and suggestions need to be more creative than a strawberry!