BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend

(Redirected from Radio 1's Big Weekend)

BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend (R1BW) (previously known as One Big Weekend, for 2012 as Radio 1's Hackney Weekend, and for 2018 as BBC Music's Biggest Weekend) is a British music festival run by BBC Radio 1. It is held once a year, in a different location within the United Kingdom each time. It was the biggest free-ticketed music event in Europe, until a fee for tickets was introduced in 2018, and always includes a host of new artists.

BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend
GenrePop, rock, dance, grime, hip hop, R&B
DatesVaries (last weekend of May, since 2013)
Location(s)United Kingdom (touring)
Years active2003–present
FoundersBBC Radio 1
WebsiteOfficial website

Background and history

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The 2015 event was held in Earlham Park, Norwich
 
The Main Stage at Radio 1's Big Weekend in Norwich (2015)

The festival is a spin-off of Radio 1's "One Big Sunday", where in each Sunday during the summer months a different town would host the roadshow, usually next to a beach or in a large park. These were also free, but non-ticketed and held from 2000 to 2002. Both events are successors to the Radio 1 Roadshow which toured the country during every summer from 1973 and continued throughout the 1990s.[1]

Originally a "One Big Weekend" would run twice a year, although that last happened in 2004. Since 2005 it has been held once a year instead, usually in May, with the exception of 2012 when a larger festival took place over the weekend of 23–24 June in Hackney, East London.[2]

The form of the event has varied over the years, from one tent at the events in 2003 to as many as six stages in 2012. Every event since 2013 has consisted of one outdoor main stage, one tented second stage, and one much smaller stage dedicated to showcasing emerging talent supported by BBC Introducing. Additionally, the early events dedicated their Saturday exclusively to dance music and their Sunday to bands. The dance day was replaced by a second day of bands from 2006 onwards, although there was a dance-orientated ‘Outdoor Stage’ between 2007 and 2012. The ‘dance day’ was effectively reinstated for the 2013 event in Northern Ireland, with a day of electronic music being held on the Friday night of the weekend. This approach has been repeated in most years since.

The next edition of the event was scheduled to be held between 22 and 24 May 2020 in Dundee, with Camperdown Park becoming the first site to host the event twice. The event however was cancelled in reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic and went virtual. The 2021 Big Weekend was also moved into a virtual mode.

In late 2021, it was revealed that Radio 1's Big Weekend would return in a live tradition for the first time in three years, with Coventry being the host city for this event on 27 to 29 May 2022.[3]

On 30 January 2023, it was announced that Dundee would host Big Weekend from 26 to 28 May 2023. The city was originally due to host in 2020 but it was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

On 29 January 2024, it was announced that Luton would host Big Weekend from 24 to 26 May 2024.[4] A full Friday programme took place in Luton, with all stages being used on this day for the first time, although it was still generally based around dance music.

Venues

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Venue Date Ref(s)
One Big Weekend
Heaton Park, Manchester, England[a] 3–4 May 2003[5] [6]
Coopers Field (within Bute Park), Cardiff, Wales[7] 13–14 September 2003 [8]
Prehen, Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland 24–25 April 2004 [9]
Perry Park, Birmingham, England 18–19 September 2004 [10]
BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend
Herrington Country Park, Sunderland, England 7–8 May 2005 [11]
Camperdown Park, Dundee, Scotland 13–14 May 2006 [12]
Moor Park, Preston, Lancashire, England 19–20 May 2007 [13]
Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, England 10–11 May 2008 [14]
Lydiard Park, Swindon, Wiltshire, England 9–10 May 2009 [15]
Faenol Estate, Bangor, Gwynedd, Wales 22–23 May 2010 [16]
Carlisle Airport, Carlisle, Cumbria, England 14–15 May 2011 [17]
Hackney Marshes, Hackney, London, England[b] 23–24 June 2012 [18]
Ebrington Square, Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland 24–26 May 2013 [19]
George Square and Glasgow Green, Glasgow, Scotland 23–25 May 2014 [20]
Earlham Park, Norwich, England 23–24 May 2015

[21]

Powderham Castle, Exeter, England 28–29 May 2016 [22]
Burton Constable Hall, Hull, England 27–28 May 2017 [23]
BBC Music's Biggest Weekend
Titanic Slipways, Belfast, Northern Ireland 25–26 May 2018 [24]
Scone Palace, Perth, Scotland [25]
Singleton Park, Swansea, Wales 26–27 May 2018 [26]
War Memorial Park, Coventry, England 27–28 May 2018 [27]
BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend
Stewart Park, Middlesbrough, England 24–26 May 2019 [28]
Camperdown Park, Dundee, Scotland[c] 22–24 May 2020 [29]
War Memorial Park, Coventry, England 27–29 May 2022 [30]
Camperdown Park, Dundee, Scotland 26–28 May 2023 [31]
Stockwood Park, Luton, England 24–26 May 2024 [4]
Notes
  1. ^ Saturday cancelled due to adverse weather[5]
  2. ^ Held as BBC Radio 1's Hackney Weekend
  3. ^ Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic but happened virtually instead

Tickets

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Tickets to the festival are, notably, free (except the small booking fee which was introduced from the 2012 event onwards) but are usually now restricted to one pair per person. Prior to 2006, a ticket booth would be set up in an easy location in the centre of the hosting city, and anybody who wished to obtain a pair of tickets would queue up, before a Radio 1 DJ gave them out (pairs of tickets for the Saturday given away on a Saturday and on the following day for the Sunday), on a first-come first-served basis. The theory there was that the majority of tickets would go to local residents, as people from further away would not make the journey. However, as more and more 'non-local' residents came to the giveaways, and the capacity at the events grew year-on-year, it was decided that a different system was needed. From 2006, therefore, pairs of tickets have been given away through an online lottery. People wishing to attend register on the BBC Radio 1 website and pairs of tickets are then randomly allocated and given out. In order to make sure that those who live locally get the majority of tickets, the applications are split into categories of 'local postcodes' and 'other postcodes' and the majority of the tickets (usually 95%) are reserved for the former.

Despite the tickets being free, some people often attempt to sell them on eBay, and in recent years this has meant that various security measures have been introduced, most notably the barcodes on tickets which are scanned at the gate, the rule that the person whose name is registered on the ticket has to be in attendance and, from 2012, passport-style pictures being required as part of the application process. Tickets are also given away as prizes via various competitions held on Radio 1 (and now 1Xtra) in the weeks running up to the event, which is usually the only way in which members of the public can obtain passes for both days of the event. For the 2013 event, no pre-registration was necessary, and instead all tickets were given away on a 'first come first served' basis - albeit still with the skewing of 90% of tickets being held back for residents of Northern Ireland. After an initial 24-hour delay due to technical difficulties, the tickets all sold out within an hour. 2014's event in Glasgow saw the 'first come first served' ticket release return with no pre-registration needed. 50% of tickets were reserved for residents within the boundaries of Glasgow City Council with a further 45% reserved for those in the rest of Scotland. However, for the first time ever, members of the public could obtain tickets to all three days of the festival. This led to complaints from some disappointed fans who were left without tickets to any day while others bagged tickets for the entire weekend.

For the 2006 event in Dundee, less than half of the tickets were given to local residents,[32] and allegations were made of postal workers stealing tickets.[33]

2000s

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May 2003

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On 3 and 4 May, the One Big Weekend was held in Manchester.[34]

Saturday 3 May Sunday 4 May
Judge Jules The White Stripes
Paul van Dyk Dirty Vegas
Rob Tissera Aqualung
Eddie Halliwell The Coral
Good Greef Crew Feeder
Badly Drawn Boy
Stereophonics

September 2003

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On 13 and 14 September, the One Big Weekend held in Cardiff.[35]

Saturday 13 September Sunday 14 September
Basement Jaxx Pink
The Chemical Brothers Travis
Erick Morillo Dido
Seb Fontaine The Darkness
Lottie and Yousef Starsailor
Sander Kleinenberg The Thrills
Hybrid Kosheen
Time Flies DJ

April 2004

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On 24 and 25 April 2004, the first of two in that calendar year - was held at Prehen Fields, Derry. It featured the following line-up:

Line-up

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Saturday 24 April

Main Stage
Faithless
Pete Tong
Seb Fontaine
Judge Jules
Fergie
Armin van Buuren
Agnelli & Nelson
Tall Paul

Sunday 25 April

Main Stage
Keane
Ash
Avril Lavigne
The Streets
Franz Ferdinand
Kelis

September 2004

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On 18 and 19 September 2004, the final 'One Big Weekend' under that name - and the second of that calendar year - was held at Perry Park, Birmingham. It featured the following line-up:

Line-up

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Saturday 18 September

Main Stage Second Stage
Tiesto Groove Armada
Fat Boy Slim David Guetta
Deep Dish Darren Emerson
Judge Jules Xpress 2
Dave Pearce Yousef
Steve Lawler Mylo
Nick Fanciulli Behrouz
Mutiny
Josh 'Rinse' Roberts

Sunday 19 September

Main Stage Second Stage
Lostprophets Kasabian
Goldie Lookin' Chain 22-20's
Mouldy Lookin' Stain The Music
Joss Stone The Departure
Damien Rice 13 Senses
Razorlight Skinnyman
Estelle Exist
Natasha Bedingfield
Broken Dolls

2005

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On 7 and 8 May 2005, the Big Weekend was held at Penshaw Monument in Herrington Country Park, Sunderland, and featured artists included:

Line-up

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Saturday 7 May

Main Stage Second Stage
Foo Fighters Mauro Picotto
Kasabian Pete Tong
Natalie Imbruglia Judge Jules
Chemical Brothers Fergie
Battle Shapeshifters
KT Tunstall
Rooster
Athlete

Sunday 8 May

Main Stage Second Stage
The Black Eyed Peas The Futureheads
Gwen Stefani Maxïmo Park
Kaiser Chiefs Interpol
Feeder The Magic Numbers
Basement Jaxx The Subways
Jamiroquai Do Me Bad Things
The Bravery
Lemar

2006

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In 2006, the Big Weekend was held in Camperdown Park, Dundee on 13 and 14 May 2006 and featured artists which included:

Line-up

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Saturday 13 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage
Paolo Nutini The Fratellis
Corinne Bailey Rae Mystery Jets
Gnarls Barkley Boy Kill Boy
Orson Dirty Pretty Things
Razorlight Bloc Party
Muse Primal Scream
The Streets
Snow Patrol
Mylo

Sunday 14 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage
The Feeling The View
The Ordinary Boys Hot Chip
Sugababes We Are Scientists
Feeder Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Editors The Kooks
Pink The Zutons
Keane
Franz Ferdinand (Surprise Guests)

Many of the BBC Radio 1 DJs including Pete Tong, Tim Westwood and Chris Moyles attended too, and held a number of competitions so that people could win tickets. In addition, Radio 1 also created a virtual festival experience in the virtual reality application Second Life.[36] Avatars on the BBC Radio 1 islands could watch the event on live screens while the audience could see their virtual counterparts on massive stage side screens at the real event in Dundee. The event was hailed as the first ever festival with a professional line-up to take place in a virtual universe.[36]

2007

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On Saturday 19 May and Sunday 20 May, Radio 1's Big Weekend was held in Moor Park in Preston.

For the first time in the history of the event, all tickets had barcodes and were scanned on arrival at the park. The barcodes contained information such as name and address of the winner of the tickets. Having the barcodes meant that Radio 1 could cancel lost or stolen tickets and issue new ones to those affected. In an effort to stop people buying tickets from eBay or through other mediums, the public was told they would be asked to prove their home address if their tickets were thought to be suspect.[37] However, the BBC decided to scrap this idea on the day as they thought it would cause angry scenes if people were to be turned away.

At the close of entry on 8 May 2007, over 450,000 people registered for a chance to get tickets for the 2007 festival. On Tuesday 8 May on The Chris Moyles Show, Chris announced that a further 5,000 tickets will be available taking the total for both days being 35,000.

Tickets were also given away in an alternate reality game online using Radio 1 fan forums. The situation surrounded a man called Paul Denchfield who was supposedly sacked from the station. Throughout the run up to the event 'Frozen Indigo Angel' would appear in various places online and on-air, with it being the player's mission to hunt down tickets.[38]

The line up was as follows:

Line-up

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Saturday 19 May[39]

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Arena
Scissor Sisters Groove Armada Westwood
Razorlight Gossip MistaJam
Kasabian LCD Soundsystem Seamus Haji
The Fratellis CSS Meck
The Fray Biffy Clyro Groove Armada (DJ Set)
Natasha Bedingfield Cold War Kids Judge Jules
The Twang The Pigeon Detectives Tim Deluxe vs The Audio Bullys
Jamie T Simian Mobile Disco
Annie Mac

Sunday 20 May[40]

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Arena
Kaiser Chiefs Bloc Party Bobby & Nihal
Stereophonics Maxïmo Park Rob Da Bank
Mika Klaxons Zane Lowe & Mark Ronson
The View Dizzee Rascal Klaxons (DJ Set)
Rihanna Get Cape Wear Cape Fly Pete Tong & Vernon Kay
Mark Ronson The Enemy David Guetta
Just Jack CSS Trophy Twins
Calvin Harris M.I.A Fergie
Tylor Leigh
Dave Pearce

2008

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In 2008, the festival was held over the weekend of Saturday 10 May and Sunday 11 May, at Mote Park in Maidstone, which can hold up to 20,000 people.[41] 85% of tickets went to people living in Kent, 10% went to those living in areas bordering Kent, including parts of Sussex, Surrey, Essex and London, and the other 5% were handed to others living across the United Kingdom.[42] Concern was raised after a large number of locals commented that even those living within the close vicinity of the park did not receive tickets, with some in the Medway towns winning multiple times.[43]

Line-up

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The full line-up (except for Paramore) was announced on BBC Radio 1 on Monday 21 April 2008.[44]

Saturday 10 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Stage BBC Introducing Stage
Madonna Editors Fatboy Slim White Lies
Usher The Futureheads Chris Moyles vs Judge Jules James Yuill
The Fratellis We Are Scientists Zane Lowe vs Scott Mills Magistrates
Scouting for Girls Foals Steve Angello & Sebastian Ingrosso AG Dolla
Duffy Vampire Weekend Count & Sinden Fighting With Wire
The Feeling Paramore Dave Spoon Natty
Robyn The Ting Tings Annie Mac It Hugs Back
The Hoosiers Nic Fanciulli Folk Face
Eddie Halliwell Jaguar Skills
Kissy Sell Out

Sunday 11 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Stage BBC Introducing Stage
The Kooks The Raconteurs Zane Lowe Golden Silvers
The Enemy The Zutons Pendulum (DJ Set) Twisted Wheel
Nelly (ft. Kelly Rowland) The Wombats Justice (DJ Set) Ebony Bones
Goldfrapp Hot Chip Vernon Kay vs Pete Tong Outl4w
The Pigeon Detectives Gallows Dave Pearce Chipmunk
Newton Faulkner Pendulum Basshunter Kate Goes
OneRepublic Justice Rob Da Bank Tom Williams & The Boat
Adele Black Kids Kutski Wing
MistaJam
Wiley
H "Two" O ft. Platnum
Jodie Aysha
Cameo vs DJ Q

The national newspapers had also reported that Justin Timberlake could be a special guest - performing with Madonna.[45] Although this later turned out to be untrue. Pendulum were hailed as one of the festivals' best acts, outshining even Madonna and packing the INMWT tent.[46]

Headline sets

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Madonna

2009

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The 2009 event was held in Swindon.

Line-up

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Saturday 9 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Stage
Snow Patrol Basement Jaxx Annie Mac
Kasabian Jack Peñate Nerm and D-Code
Dizzee Rascal Doves Kutski
The Script Friendly Fires Pete Tong vs Vernon Kay
Calvin Harris Deadmau5 2ManyDJs
Chris Moyles Florence and the Machine Zane Lowe
The Wombats The King Blues Rob da Bank
Daniel Merriweather Fightstar Tim Westwood
The Saturdays

Sunday 10 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage Outdoor Stage
The Prodigy The Enemy Judge Jules
Lily Allen Maxïmo Park Jaymo and Andy George
Ne-Yo Gossip Kissy Sell Out
Franz Ferdinand Enter Shikari Chase & Status (DJ set)
Akon Tinchy Stryder David Guetta featuring Kelly Rowland
Scouting for Girls Chase & Status Chris Moyles vs Tim Westwood
Alesha Dixon Ladyhawke Fabio & Grooverider
N-Dubz White Lies BBC Radio 1Xtra - MistaJam featuring Wiley, Skepta, Bashy, Chipmunk and Doneao
Little Man Tate Trevor Nelson and Jaguar Skills

2010s

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2010

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On 24 February 2010, it was announced on The Chris Moyles Show that the 10th Big Weekend would take place on the Faenol Estate near Bangor, Wales on Saturday 22 May and Sunday 23 May 2010. Pixie Lott also performed on the show and was announced as the first act on the bill and Lostprophets was announced while they were on tour. Jaguar Skills announced on his website that he would be playing at the event, but he was not on the announced line-up. On the morning of 26 April 2010, the full main stage and INMWT stage listings were announced during the Fearne Cotton Show (which was hosted by Annie Mac, as Cotton was on vacation).

20,000 pairs of free tickets were made available to the public for each day of the weekend. Applicants were able to register for tickets to the event on the Radio 1 website from 26 April 2010 until 3 May 2010.

Line-up

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Saturday 22 May[47]

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage BBC Introducing Stage Outdoor Stage
Florence & The Machine Faithless Frankie & The Heartstrings Westwood Kelly Rowland
Dizzee Rascal MGMT The Joy Formidable Target & Cameo Roll Deep
Alicia Keys Ellie Goulding What Would Jesus Drive? Ras & Seani B Chiddy Bang & Skepta
Lostprophets Tinie Tempah Menis MistaJam Professor Green, Blame & Wiley
Cheryl Cole Bombay Bicycle Club I Am Austin Pete Tong vs Vernon Kay
Chipmunk Hadouken! The Wonder Villains Faithless DJs
Thirty Seconds to Mars Stornoway Alan Pownall Zane Lowe
Justin Bieber Example Y Promatics Rob da Bank
Scouting For Girls Pegasus Bridge Toddla T & Alex Metric
Annie Mac

Sunday 23 May

Main Stage In New Music We Trust Stage BBC Introducing Stage Outdoor Stage
Pendulum Vampire Weekend Beatbullyz Westwood Scorcher
Rihanna You Me At Six Envy Semtex & Robbo Ranx
Biffy Clyro Sub Focus Tempa T Bailey & Fabio
Kesha Plan B UTE Rampage & MistaJam Devlin & McLean
JLS Marina & The Diamonds My Tiger My Timing Chris Moyles vs Westwood
Paramore Crystal Castles Pete Lawrie Tiesto
Jason Derulo Kids In Glass Houses We Are Animal Judge Jules
Paolo Nutini Delphic Django Django Jaymo & Andy George
Pixie Lott Yr Ods Kissy Sell Out
Huw Stephens

Live Lounge Tent

Diana Vickers
Ellie Goulding
Lostprophets
Joe McElderry
Florence and the Machine
Example
Biffy Clyro
Taio Cruz
Kate Nash

2011

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The announcement of location and dates for Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was made by Scott Mills on 30 March 2011, with his breakfast show (he was covering for Chris Moyles that week) being broadcast from Trinity School, Carlisle that morning. Over 750,000 people applied for tickets to the event.[48]

20,000 pairs of tickets were available for the two-day event with the usual allocation policy applying. It was announced that the priority areas for tickets would be the borders of Carlisle, Cumbria, the Scottish Borders and the North East of England.

As usual, competitions to win VIP tickets were run on various Radio 1 shows in the weeks leading up to the Big Weekend.

Line-up

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Line-up
Saturday 14 May Sunday 15 May
Main Stage

Foo Fighters
The Black Eyed Peas
Tinie Tempah
Chase & Status
Nicole Scherzinger
Plan B
Ellie Goulding
Jessie J
Arctic Monkeys

Lady Gaga
My Chemical Romance
Taio Cruz
The Script
Katy B
Professor Green
Olly Murs
The Wombats
Bruno Mars

In New Music We Trust Stage

Swedish House Mafia
Friendly Fires
Nero
Panic! at the Disco
Everything Everything
Cage the Elephant
The Joy Formidable
Wretch 32

The Strokes
Magnetic Man
Noah and the Whale
Devlin
Two Door Cinema Club
The Vaccines
Yasmin
Pulled Apart By Horses

BBC Introducing Stage

Friends Electric
Aaron Delahuntly
Rizzle Kicks
Yaaks
Luke Bingham
Fiona Clayton
Saturday Night Gym Club
Baron Van Alias
Birds vs Planes

MOPP
MyElectrik
Masters in France
DJ Vimto vs Jah Digga
Linc
Polarsets
Among Brothers
Let's Buy Happiness
Colt 45

Outdoor Stage

Zane Lowe
Jaymo and Andy George
Judge Jules
Pete Tong
Riva Starr
Pete Tong vs Vernon Kay
Rob da Bank
MistaJam
Annie Mac vs. Nick Grimshaw
Target
Cameo
Westwood

Skream and Benga
Annie Mac
Toddla T
Fabio and Grooverider
Kutski
Kissy Sell Out
Calvin Harris
Westwood vs. Moyles
Jaguar Skills
Zane vs. Fearne
Dev
DJ Semtex
Westwood

Headline sets

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Foo Fighters
  1. "Bridge Burning"
  2. "Rope"
  3. "All My Life"
  4. "My Hero"
  5. "Learn to Fly"
  6. "White Limo"
  7. "Times Like These"
  8. "The Pretender"
  9. "Walk"
  10. "Cold Day in the Sun"
  11. "Best of You"
  12. "Monkey Wrench"
  13. "Everlong"
  14. "This Is a Call"
  15. "Tie Your Mother Down"

TV & radio coverage

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Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 was streamed live on the Radio 1 website. The headliners of each day (Foo Fighters and Lady Gaga on Saturday and Sunday respectively) were broadcast live on BBC Three and BBC HD. The Big Weekend was also broadcast live on BBC Radio 1. Highlights of the event were also broadcast on BBC Three and BBC HD during the week following the Big Weekend.

2012

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On 23 May 2011, it was announced that for 2012, Radio 1 would be replacing the Big Weekend with a 'Hackney Weekend' to form part of the London 2012 Festival, in the buildup to the 2012 Olympics.[2] The festival duly took place on the Hackney Marshes over the weekend of 23 and 24 June 2012.

50,000 people attended each of the two days in 2012, meaning a total of 100,000 people visited the site over the weekend: more than double the previous highest attendances (40,000 across the weekends in each of 2010 and 2011). Due to the upgraded scale of the festival, the number of stages were increased (from four to six) and, for the first time, the Main Stage was outdoors rather than inside a tent.

Florence The Machine were initially announced as playing on Saturday 23 June, but a double booking at another European festival meant that they actually performed on Sunday 24 June.[49]

The Ting Tings were initially announced as to be playing on Saturday 23 June, but due to logistical reasons beyond their control they had to pull out of the bill.[50]

On both days of the festival, a number of unannounced special guests performed with artists on the bill, the most noteworthy of which were Rihanna, M.I.A. and Kanye West appearing as part of Jay-Z's headlining set on Saturday; and, in turn, Jay-Z went on to return the favour and make a special multiple-song contribution during Rihanna's own headlining set the next day.

Line-up

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Saturday 23 June

Line-up
Saturday 23 June Sunday 24 June
Main Stage

Jay-Z
Kasabian
Nicki Minaj
Ed Sheeran
Example
Rizzle Kicks
Leona Lewis

Rihanna
Dizzee Rascal
Florence and the Machine
Tinie Tempah
Jessie J
Plan B
Professor Green

In New Music We Trust Stage

Jack White
Lostprophets
The Vaccines
The Maccabees
Rudimental
Delilah
Michael Kiwanuka
Rita Ora
Jessie Ware

Chase & Status
Magnetic Man
Lana Del Rey
Enter Shikari
Sub Focus
Ben Howard
Santigold
Bombay Bicycle Club

1Xtra Arena

Sean Paul
Flo Rida
will.i.am
D'banj
Trey Songz
Tinchy Stryder
Chip
Boy Better Know
DJ Fresh
Emeli Sandé
Dappy

Nas
Wretch 32
B.o.B
Gyptian
Taio Cruz
Azealia Banks
Maverick Sabre
Devlin
Sway
Lethal B
Mindless Behavior
Labrinth

Dance Arena

Swedish House Mafia
Deadmau5
Calvin Harris
Eric Prydz
Nero
Annie Mac

David Guetta
Andy C
Madeon
Pete Tong
Flux Pavilion & Doctor P
Zane Lowe

DJ Stage

Nihal
Robbo Ranx
Semtex
Benji B
Mosca
Rob da Bank
Moyles vs Westwood
DJ Target
DJ Cameo
Tim Westwood

DJ Edu
Nihal
Robbo Ranx
Toddla T
Friction
B.Traits
Skream & Benga
Vernon vs Charlie Sloth
MistaJam
Tim Westwood

BBC Introducing Stage

Random Impulse
The Skints
In Search Of
Isaac Danquah
Lil Simz
My Panda Shall Fly
Paigey Cakey
Cheekie Bugga
UD Vocal Collective
Xploder

Arthur Beatrice
Driving Lolita
Joe Black
Kersha Bailey
Lola King and The Kickstarts
Pepstar
Project Hackney Collective
Savages
Stevie Neale
ShezAr

Headline sets

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Jay-Z
  1. "Run This Town" (with Rihanna)
  2. "Dirt off Your Shoulder"
  3. "I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)"
  4. "PSA"
  5. "Where I'm From"
  6. "Jigga What, Jigga Who"
  7. "U Don't Know"
  8. "99 Problems"
  9. "'03 Bonnie & Clyde"
  10. "Girls, Girls, Girls"
  11. "On to The Next One"
  12. "Dead Presidents"
  13. "Swagga Like You"
  14. "Paper Planes" - Performed by M.I.A.
  15. "Bad Girls" - Performed by M.I.A
  16. "Izzo (H.O.V.A)"
  17. "Empire State of Mind"
  18. "Otis" (featuring Kanye West)
  19. "Gotta Have It" (featuring Kanye West)
  20. "Who Gon Stop What?" (featuring Kanye West)
  21. "No Church in the Wild" (featuring Kanye West)
  22. "Lift Off" (featuring Kanye West)
  23. "Niggas in Paris" (featuring Kanye West)

2013

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The new Radio 1 Breakfast Show host Nick Grimshaw announced that the Big Weekend would return to Derry in May 2013 to celebrate its title of UK City of Culture 2013, the same city that hosted the first of the two 2004 Big Weekends (although the actual site is different). For the first time, the Big Weekend extended to a third day - which focused on dance music. Alongside that initial announcement were the confirmation of the first two acts, Olly Murs and Two Door Cinema Club, with the rest of the line-up being announced by Grimshaw during another Radio 1 Breakfast Show on Monday 6 May. Both of the stages were in Ebrington Square - unlike recent Big Weekends there was no BBC Introducing Stage or Live Lounge Tent at this event. The '1Xtra' and 'In New Music We Trust' stages from Hackney 2012 were combined into a single venue.

Line-up

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Line-up
Friday 24 May Saturday 25 May Sunday 26 May
Main Stage

Biffy Clyro
The Vaccines
Two Door Cinema Club
Labrinth
Foals
Ellie Goulding
Conor Maynard
The Saturdays

Bruno Mars
Paramore
Thirty Seconds to Mars
The Script
Olly Murs
Jake Bugg
Wretch 32
Little Mix

1Xtra Arena/In New Music We Trust Stage

Rita Ora
A$AP Rocky
J. Cole
Wiley
Maverick Sabre
Katy B
AlunaGeorge
Angel Haze

DJ Fresh
Kendrick Lamar
alt-J
Bring Me the Horizon
The 1975
Iggy Azalea
Kodaline
Laura Mvula
Frightened Rabbit

Vampire Weekend
Disclosure
Bastille
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
Everything Everything
Jessie Ware
Miles Kane
We Are The Ocean
HAIM

  • Due to issues at Heathrow Airport, two acts on the bill for Friday were unable to attend the event: those being Angel Haze and AlunaGeorge. Further acts also had their performances affected by the flight disruptions but were still able to appear: J. Cole was forced to substitute his band for a backing track, and Rudimental's equipment was stuck in London, forcing them to use the equipment of Chase and Status.
  • The above tables do not always represent the stage orders - for example, Two Door Cinema Club opened the Main Stage on Saturday, as opposed to The Saturdays, who in fact performed second on the day. Similarly, 30 Seconds To Mars opened the Main Stage on Sunday.

Headline sets

edit
  1. "Spectrum"
  2. "Awooga"
  3. "We Are Your Friends"
  4. "Reload"
  5. "Flashback"
  6. "Bounce"
  7. "Monkey See Monkey Do"
  8. "Drinking From The Bottle"
  9. "Here We Fucking Go"
  10. "We Found Love"
  11. "Be Strong"
  12. "Ladi Dadi"
  13. "You Got The Love"
  14. "Yeahhh"
  15. "In My Mind"
  16. "We'll Be Coming Back"
  17. "Epic"
  18. "Feel So Close"
  19. "Metropolis"
  20. "Promises" (cover of Nero)
  21. "Move"
  22. "Rage"
  23. "Need U 100%" (cover of Duke Dumont)
  24. "Million Voices"
  25. "Turn It Up"
  26. "I Need Your Love"
  27. "One More Time" (cover of Daft Punk)
  28. "Sweet Nothing"
  29. "Bura"
  30. "Let's Go"
  1. "Radioactive"
  2. "Facemelt"
  3. "Love and War"
  4. "Hot Right Now"
  5. "Shine Ya Light"
  6. "Roc the Life"
  7. "Hella Good"
  8. "She Wants To Move"
  9. "How We Do (Party)"
  10. "R.I.P."
  1. "Stingin' Belle"
  2. "The Captain"
  3. "Living Is A Problem Because Everything Dies"
  4. "Biblical"
  5. "Sounds Like Balloons"
  6. "God & Satan"
  7. "Who's Got A Match?"
  8. "Bubbles"
  9. "Spanish Radio"
  10. "Opposite"
  11. "Glitter and Trauma"
  12. ""Many of Horror"
  13. "That Golden Rule"
  14. "Black Chandelier"
  15. "Mountains"
  1. "The Feeling"
  2. "Gold Dust"
  3. "Talkbox"
  4. "Hypercaine"
  5. "Levels" (cover of Avicii)
  6. "Hip Hop"
  7. "Paradise" (cover of Coldplay)
  8. "Lassitude"
  9. "Seven Nation Army" (cover of The White Stripes)
  10. "The Power"
  11. "Fire Over Water"
  12. "Hot Right Now"
  13. "The Edge"
  14. "Skyhighatrist"
  15. "Forever More"
  16. "Louder"
  1. "Locked Out Of Heaven"
  2. "Natalie"
  3. "Treasure"
  4. "Marry You"
  5. "Runaway Baby"
  6. "When I Was Your Man"
  7. "Grenade"
  8. "Just The Way You Are"
  1. "Cousins"
  2. "White Sky"
  3. "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa"
  4. "Diane Young"
  5. "Step"
  6. "Holiday"
  7. "Unbelievers"
  8. "Everlasting Arms"
  9. "A-Punk"
  10. "Ya Hey"
  11. "Campus"
  12. "Oxford Comma"
  13. "Giving Up the Gun"
  14. "Walcott"

2014

edit

On 30 January, Nick Grimshaw, Rita Ora and Paolo Nutini announced that the 2014 event would be held in Glasgow to celebrate the 2014 Commonwealth Games. For the first time, the event took place in two different locations in the same city. The Friday night of the event was held in George Square and was dedicated to dance music.[51] The remaining two days followed the traditional format of the Big Weekend and took place at Glasgow Green. Coldplay, Rita Ora, Paolo Nutini, Pharrell Williams and The 1975 performed. On 31 March, 60,000 weekend tickets for the event sold out in 30 minutes.[52] The Main Stage lineup was announced on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show on 28 April 2014. It was announced that Katy Perry would headline on the Sunday night while One Direction and Kings of Leon would open the Main Stage on the Saturday and Sunday respectively. Local Scottish band Baby Stange performed on the BBC Introducing Stage.

Line-up

edit
Line-up
Friday 23 May Saturday 24 May Sunday 25 May
George Square Stage Main Stage
Tiësto
Martin Garrix
Pete Tong
Zane Lowe
Annie Mac
Danny Howard
Coldplay
Calvin Harris
Ed Sheeran
Lily Allen
Jake Bugg
Pharrell Williams
Bastille
One Direction
Katy Perry
Paolo Nutini
Tinie Tempah
The 1975
Rita Ora
John Newman
The Vamps
Kings of Leon
In New Music We Trust Stage
Example
Clean Bandit
Lorde
Bombay Bicycle Club
Katy B
Twin Atlantic
Wilkinson
The Kooks
Kasabian
Sub Focus
You Me at Six
London Grammar
Sam Smith
Chvrches
Klaxons
Gorgon City
BBC Introducing Stage
Catfish and the Bottlemen
Honeyblood
XO
Darlia
A-L-X
KARI
Lyger
Saint Raymond
Sega Bodega
Coasts
Model Aeroplanes
Racing Glaciers
Indiana
Little Shoes Big Voice
RHODES
Shy Nature
Leon Else
MDNGHT
Royal Blood
Baby Strange
Juce
Rosie Lowe
Algernon Doll

Headline sets

edit

2015

edit

On 23 January, Nick Grimshaw announced on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show, that the 2015 event would be held at Earlham Park in Norwich, Norfolk, next to the University of East Anglia, taking place on Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 May. On 31 March, 50,000 tickets went on sale and sold out within 40 minutes. The full lineup for main stage and the INMWT tent was announced on 20 April, Muse headlined on the Saturday and Foo Fighters on the Sunday. The majority of acts for the BBC introducing stage were announced on 22 April with the remaining acts announced on 4 May.

Line-up

edit
Line-up
Saturday 23 May Sunday 24 May
Main Stage
Muse
Florence and the Machine
David Guetta
Fall Out Boy
Ben Howard
Charli XCX
The Vaccines
5 Seconds of Summer
Foo Fighters
Taylor Swift
George Ezra
Imagine Dragons
Rita Ora
Catfish and the Bottlemen
Clean Bandit
Olly Murs
In New Music We Trust Stage
Rudimental
Jess Glynne
Hozier
Years & Years
Circa Waves
Ella Eyre
Mallory Knox
Snoop Dogg
Slaves
Jamie T
Alt-J
Sigma
James Bay
Jungle
Lethal Bizzle
SOAK
Raury
Lower Than Atlantis
BBC Introducing Stage
Port Isla
Laurel
HUNTAR
Context
Ted Zed
Fickle Friends
Amber-Simone
Get Inuit
Ruen Brothers
KLOE
The Hearts
Kill It Kid
Laura Doggett
Star.One
Honne
Hot Cops
Formation
Will Robert
Harry Edwards
Best Friends
Cash David
Franko Fraize
Youth Club
Claws

2016

edit

The event was held in Powderham Castle, Kenton near Exeter on 28 and 29 May. Coldplay headlined the second and final night, with other acts performing including Bring Me the Horizon, Chase & Status, Ellie Goulding and Craig David.[53] On 1 March, it was announced that The 1975 and Jake Bugg had been added to the lineup.[54] Ticket information was announced on Monday 21 March.[55] Tickets went on sale at 8 am on Monday 4 April. As usual, the tickets themselves were free, but there was an £8.50 administration fee with each ticket. In 2016, 60% of the tickets were reserved for residents living in areas covered by Exeter City Council and Teignbridge district council. A further 35% went to residents in surrounding areas of Exeter, including those with any other Exeter (EX) and Torquay (TQ) postcodes and those with Truro (TR), Plymouth (PL), Taunton (TA) and Dorchester (DT) postcodes, whilst the remaining 5% of tickets were available to the rest of the UK.[56] The full line-up was announced in April 2016.

Line-up

edit
Line-up
Saturday 28 May Sunday 29 May
Main Stage
Mumford & Sons
Chase & Status
Bastille
Jess Glynne
Jake Bugg
Sigma
Meghan Trainor
Tom Odell
Nick Jonas
Coldplay
The Weeknd
Ellie Goulding
The 1975
Iggy Azalea
Years & Years
Catfish and the Bottlemen
Kygo
OneRepublic
In New Music We Trust
Bring Me the Horizon
Fetty Wap
Tame Impala
CHVRCHES
Stormzy
Flume
Twenty One Pilots
Craig David
Biffy Clyro
Alesso
The Last Shadow Puppets
Skepta
Wolf Alice
Jack Garratt
Alessia Cara
Panic! at the Disco
BBC Introducing Stage
Tiny Folds
Louis Berry
Declan McKenna
Wolfie
Cortes
Rosie Lowe
Jealous of the Birds
Barns Courtney
The Hunna
Spring King
Shannon Saunders
Reuel Elijah
Catholic Action
Blossoms
Emmi
Black Foxxes
Vital
KYKO
Alice Jemima
Tobi Sunmola
Yonaka
Izzy Bizu
BB Diamond
James Cherry

Controversies

edit

Twenty One Pilots had their set cut short due to "safety concerns". Frontman Tyler Joseph climbed a mast whilst singing "Car Radio", which prompted BBC officials to appear and cut his microphone off, and ask bandmate Josh Dun to stop drumming. They could not continue with their set and had to leave the stage.[57]

2017

edit

For 2017, the event was held at Burton Constable Hall approximately 9 miles (14 km) north-east of Hull. The location was confirmed the morning of 23 January, acts confirmed include Kings of Leon, Little Mix and Stormzy.[58] On 16 March 2017, it was announced Katy Perry will be headlining the Saturday night.[59]

Line-up

edit
Line-up
Saturday 27 May Sunday 28 May
Main Stage
Katy Perry
Biffy Clyro
Emeli Sandé
Kasabian
Lorde
Imagine Dragons
James Arthur
Galantis
Zara Larsson
Kings of Leon
Clean Bandit
The Chainsmokers
Rita Ora
Bastille
Sean Paul
Shawn Mendes
Stormzy
Little Mix
Where It Begins
Plan B
Two Door Cinema Club
HAIM
Lana Del Rey
You Me at Six
London Grammar
Rag'n'Bone Man
JP Cooper
The Amazons
Royal Blood
alt-J
Christine and the Queens
Twin Atlantic
Dua Lipa
Circa Waves
Mura Masa
Blossoms
Anne-Marie
BBC Introducing Stage
Zuzu
Krrum
FLAWES
Shells
Scorpz
Declan McKenna
Stevie Parker
The Modern Strangers
The Hubbards
LIFE
Superfood
Chiedu Oraka
Pale Waves
Freak
Cosima
Lumer
Haarm
Loyle Carner
Seramic
Brand New Friend
Jack Conman
The Big Moon
Mullally
Our Girl

Headline sets

edit

2018

edit

In order to take advantage of the absence of the Glastonbury Festival in 2018, 4 separate Big Weekends were held simultaneously between 25 and 28 May in four cities each in the UK's four countries. Stylized as "BBC Music's Biggest Weekend", events were held in Swansea (with a line-up curated by Radio 1), Coventry and Perth (both curated by Radio 2) and Belfast (curated by Radio 6 Music).[62] Tickets sold out for the Swansea, Perth and Coventry Big Weekends.

Line-up

edit
Belfast
edit
Line-up
Friday 25 May Saturday 26 May
Main Stage
Orbital
Beck
Manic Street Preachers
The Breeders
Courtney Barnett
Public Service Broadcasting
Lykke Li
Father John Misty
Ulster Orchestra
Underworld
Franz Ferdinand
First Aid Kit
Neneh Cherry
Ash
Little Dragon
Young Fathers
Goldie
Radio 6 Recommends Stage
David Holmes
The Orielles
Jordan Rakei
Hannah Peel
Baloji
TOUTS
Phoebe Bridgers
Mary Anne Hobbs
Shame
Superorganism
Hollie Cook
Dream Wife
Imarhan
SOAK
Perth
edit
Line-up
Friday 25 May Saturday 26 May
Main Stage
Nigel Kennedy
Danielle de Niese
Evelyn Glennie
Eddi Reader
Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Mica Paris & Michael Xavier
Karine Polwart
Jamie Cullum
Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds
Simple Minds
Emeli Sandé
Squeeze
The Shires
Amy Macdonald
The Beat starring Dave Wakeling
Julie Fowlis
Radio 2 Stage
Moishe's Bagel
Namvula
Mezcla
Breabach
Sistema Scotland
Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Rae Morris
Callum Beattie
Blue Rose Code
Andy Brown
Hannah Grace
ONR
Emma McGrath
Vistas
Swansea
edit
Line-up
Saturday 26 May Sunday 27 May
Main Stage
Sam Smith
Craig David
Jess Glynne
George Ezra
Years & Years
Liam Payne
Clean Bandit
Anne-Marie
Ed Sheeran
Florence the Machine
Taylor Swift
Thirty Seconds to Mars
Shawn Mendes
Camila Cabello
Jason Derulo
Demi Lovato
Luis Fonsi
Niall Horan
Rita Ora
Radio 1's Other Stage
Bastille
Wolf Alice
CHVRCHES

Mabel
Not3s
Sigrid
Jorja Smith
Steel Banglez
James Bay
Panic! at the Disco
Christine and the Queens
J Hus
Jessie Ware
Stefflon Don
Hailee Steinfeld
Jax Jones
Tom Walker
BBC Music Introducing Stage
Astroid Boys
Band Pres Llareggub
Chroma
Mellt
Annabel Allum
Bad Mannequins
Alicai Harley
Isaac Gracie
Connie Constance
Fizzy Blood
Sea Girls
Trampolene
Rachel K Collier
Boy Azooga
Serol Serol
Esha Maria
The Howl & The Hum
Caitlyn Scarlett
Mahalia
Declan J Donovan
Yungblud
Art School Girlfriend
Coventry
edit
Line-up
Sunday 26 May Monday 27 May
Main Stage
Liam Gallagher
Stereophonics
Paloma Faith
UB40
Billy Ocean
Snow Patrol
Jamie Cullum
The Selecter
Nigel Kennedy
Strictly Come Dancing
BBC Concert Orchestra
Miloš Karadaglić
Eliza Carthy
GoGo Penguin
Angélique Kidjo
Radio 2 Stage
Turin Brakes
The Wandering Hearts
Jalen N'Gonda
Catherine McGrath
Ten Tonnes
Nikhil
Brother Zulu
Joe Dolman
Dinosaur
Dorcha
JK
Jon Boden
Jaguar Land Rover Band

2019

edit

On 27 February, Greg James announced on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show that the Big Weekend would be held in Stewart Park, Middlesbrough, England for 2019 with Miley Cyrus, The 1975, Little Mix, Mabel, Zara Larsson and Khalid performing. The daily capacity was 32,000.[65]

Line-up
Friday 24 May Saturday 25 May Sunday 26 May
Dance Stage Main Stage
Mark Ronson
MK
Annie Mac
Danny Howard
Wilkinson x Sub Focus x Dimension
Purple Disco Machine
Miley Cyrus
Foals
Khalid
James Arthur
Billie Eilish
Sigala
Anne-Marie
Mumford & Sons
The 1975
Ellie Goulding
Sean Paul
Rita Ora
Catfish and the Bottlemen
Jax Jones
Zara Larsson
Little Mix
Got What It Takes?
The 1 for New Music Stage
Bring Me the Horizon
Future
Vampire Weekend
Charli XCX
Lewis Capaldi
The Amazons
Sam Fender
Stormzy
Twenty One Pilots
Dave
Two Door Cinema Club
Mabel
Sigrid
Pale Waves
Hrvy
CamelPhat
AJ Tracey
BBC Music Introducing Stage
Aitch
Dylan Cartlidge
Hamzaa
The Amazons
Eve Conway
Barny Fletcher
L Devine
Jade Bird
Rika
Charlotte OC
Slowthai
Bloxx
Joy Crookes
Cape Club
Bellah
Llovers
Tom Walker
The Orielles
Sophie and The Giants
Emily Burns

Headline sets

edit

2020s

edit

2020

edit

On 27 January, Greg James announced on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show that the Big Weekend would be returning to Camperdown Park in Dundee in 2020 with Dua Lipa and Harry Styles headlining. With Camperdown Park having previously hosted the Big Weekend in 2006, it would have been the first time the same venue hosted the event twice - and the second time the Big Weekend has visited the same city twice, after Derry in 2004 and 2013.

On 13 March 2020, it was announced that the Big Weekend had been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[66]

However, in late April 2020 it was announced that there would be a virtual version airing on Radio 1 on the weekend of Friday 22 - Sunday 24 May 2020. The new Big Weekend festival featured newly recorded mini sets from the artist's homes as well as re-airings of full sets from previous Big Weekend performers over four "virtual stages".[67]

Line-up
Friday 22 May Saturday 23 May Sunday 24 May
Dance Stage Main Stage
Fatboy Slim and Eats Everything
Bicep
Jamie Jones
Hannah Wants
Solardo
The Black Madonna
CamelPhat
High Contrast
Disclosure
Armand van Helden
Sam Smith
Anne-Marie
Blossoms
Mabel
Lauv
Yungblud
Becky Hill
Haim
Aitch x AJ Tracey
Doja Cat
Jonas Brothers
Rita Ora
Niall Horan
Biffy Clyro
Dermot Kennedy
Sean Paul
Declan McKenna
Young T & Bugsey
Rex Orange County
Ellie Goulding
Headliner's Stage
Katy Perry (2014)
Coldplay (2016)
Ed Sheeran (2018)
Billie Eilish (2019)
Kings of Leon (2017)
Shawn Mendes (2018)
One Direction (2014)
Calvin Harris (2014)
Bruno Mars (2013)
Khalid (2019)
Jay-Z (2012)
Little Mix (2019)
The 1975 (2019)
Lady Gaga (2011)
Stormzy (2019)
Rihanna (2012)
Mumford & Sons (2019)
Miley Cyrus (2019)
Muse (2015)
Florence and the Machine (2018)
Twenty One Pilots (2019)
Foo Fighters (2015)
Bring Me the Horizon (2016)
1 Xtra Stage
Stormzy (2017)
Alicia Keys (2010)
J Hus (2018)
Snoop Dogg (2015)
Koffee
Dave (2019)
Pharrell Williams (2014)
Nas (2012)
Ms Banks
Dizzee Rascal (2013)
Mahalia
AJ Tracey (2019)
ASAP Rocky (2013)
Afro B
Aitch (2019)
Stefflon Don (2018)
Jorja Smith (2018)
  • Artists in italics have recorded new performances for the 2020 Big Weekend.

2021

edit

Due to the continuing pandemic, the 2021 edition of Big Weekend was again held virtually. As with 2020, the event included a mixture of newly recorded performances and archive sets from previous years. It was held on 29 and 30 May 2021.[68][69]

Line-up
Dance Stage Main Stage Headliner's Stage Live Lounge Piano Sessions
Eric Prydz
Bicep
Floorplan
Honey Dijon
Logic1000
Michael Bibi
Patrick Topping
Paul Woolford
Solomun
The Blessed Madonna
Ed Sheeran
Coldplay
Jorja Smith
AJ Tracey
Royal Blood
Mabel
Wolf Alice
Celeste
London Grammar
Anne-Marie
Billie Eilish (2019)
Stormzy (2019)
Little Mix (2019)
Foo Fighters (2015)
Jay-Z (2012)
The 1975 (2019)
Shawn Mendes (2018)
Rihanna (2012)
Sam Smith (2018)
Miley Cyrus (2019)
Blossoms (2020)
Katy Perry (2014)
Bring Me the Horizon (2016)
Doja Cat (2020)
Florence and the Machine (2018)
Calvin Harris (2014)
Twenty One Pilots (2019)
Lady Gaga (2011)
Kings of Leon (2017)
Khalid (2019)
Mumford & Sons (2019)
Rex Orange County (2020)
Ariana Grande (2018)
Harry Styles (2019)
Dua Lipa (2018)
Lewis Capaldi (2019)
Lizzo (2020)
Alicia Keys (2020)
George Ezra (2018)
Lana Del Rey (2019)
Charli XCX and Christine and the Queens (2019)
Hayley Williams (2020)
Years & Years (2018)
Sam Fender (2020)
Sigrid (2021)
The xx (2017)
Vampire Weekend (2019)
Glass Animals (2020)
Phoebe Bridgers and Arlo Parks (2020)
Foals (2020)
Haim (2020)
Lianne La Havas (2020)
Thom Yorke (2018)
Griff (2021)
Tom Grennan (2020)
Dodie (2019)
Låpsley (2020)
Clairo (2019)
Alessia Cara (2018)
King Princess (2019)
Mac Demarco (2019)
  • Artists in italics recorded new performances for the 2021 Big Weekend.

Headline sets

edit

BBC Introducing sets

edit
  1. "23, Never Me" - Dead Pony

2022

edit

In late 2021, it was revealed that Radio 1's Big Weekend would return in a live tradition for the first time in three years, with Coventry being the host city for this event on 27 to 29 May 2022.

On 14 May and 16 March 2022, Saturday's & Sunday's main stage line-up were retrospectively announced on The Radio 1 Breakfast Show with Greg James whilst the Future Sounds Stage line-up was announced on Radio 1's Future Sounds with Clara Amfo.

Line-up
Friday 27 May Saturday 28 May Sunday 29 May
Main Stage
No performances Calvin Harris
Ed Sheeran
Anne-Marie
Aitch
Central Cee
AJ Tracey
Joel Corry
Yungblud
Harry Styles
George Ezra
Lorde
Becky Hill
Dermot Kennedy
Jax Jones
Mabel
Chase & Status
Radio One's Future Sounds Stage
Disclosure
BOYOCA
Danny Howard
Eats Everything b2b Shermanology
Jodie Harsh
LP Giobbi b2b Ben Hemsley
Patrick Topping
Pete Tong b2b Franky Wah
Sam Divine
Sarah Story b2b Jaguar
Sam Fender
Easy Life
Fontaines D.C.
KSI
Mimi Webb
Sigrid
Tom Grennan
Pa Salieu
Foals
Alfie Templeman
Griff
Holly Humberstone
Joy Crookes
Koffee
Wet Leg
Rina Sawayama
Radio One Dance Stage
AmyElle
Bklava
Craig & Grant Gordon
Emily Nash
LF System
Meg Ward
Nia Archives
Prospa
Arielle Free
Charlie T
Jaguar
Pete Tong
René LaVice
Sarah Story
Charlie Hedges
Danny Howard
Jeremiah Asiamah
Kenny Allstar
Target
BBC Music Introducing Stage
Anish Kumar
Barry Can't Swim
Hannah Laing
Jaguar B2B ABSOLUTE
Junior SIMBA
Kilig
Lau.ra
TAAHLIAH
Artemas
Celina Sharma
Deyah
Jordan Mckampa
Tamera
Thomas Headon
USNA
Willow Kayne

A1 x J1

Alfie Indra
Crawlers
Danniella Dee
Hope Tala
Lizzie Esau
Piri & Tommy
Queen Millz
Sad Night Dynamite

Tom Walker

Radio 1 Relax Tent
Penelope
Sian Eleri
Jess Iszatt
Jessie Marcella

Headline sets

edit

2023

edit

On 30 January 2023, Dundee was announced as the host city for the 2023 edition of Big Weekend alongside the initial line-up. Dundee is the first Scottish city and second overall city to host the event twice.[70]

Line-up
Friday 26 May Saturday 27 May Sunday 28 May
Main Stage
No performances The 1975
Jonas Brothers
ArrDee
Jess Glynne
Joel Corry
Mimi Webb
Tom Grennan
Lewis Capaldi
Wet Leg
Anne-Marie
Becky Hill
Nothing But Thieves
Royal Blood
Zara Larsson
Niall Horan
Radio One's Future Sounds Stage
Jamie XX
LF System

Jayda G
Danny Howard
Eliza Rose
Ben Hemsley
Denis Sulta
Pete Tong b2b Sarah Story
Testpress
Rudimental
Danny Howard
FLO
Headie One
Pale Waves
Piri
Romy
Self Esteem
The Snuts
Sub Focus
Arlo Parks
Ashnikko
Cassyette
Thirty Seconds to Mars
Cat Burns
Georgia
Inhaler
Jack Saunders
RAYE
Radio One Dance Stage
Hannah Laing
AmyElle

Carly Wilford
D.O.D
Hayley Zalassi
Melle Brown
Salute
Schak
Charlie Tee
Connor Coates
Danny Howard
Jaguar
Pheobe Inglis-Holmes
Sarah Story
Arielle Free
Charlie Hedges
Connor Coates
Jaguar
Jeremiah Asiamah
Kenny Allstar
BBC Music Introducing Stage
Barry Can't Swim
Boo

DAINTY
Jaguar B2B KILIMANJARO
Kintra
Pheobe I-H
TIBASKO
Van Damn
Akemi Fox
ARXX
Bemz
Caity Baser
Olivia Dean
Chowerman
Sliime
Tom A. Smith
Venbee
Aby Coulibaly
Brooke Combe

Gretel Hanlyn
Katie Gregson-MacLeod
Michael Aldag
Piers James
Rose Gray
Terra Kin

Headline sets

edit
  1. "Being in Love"
  2. "Wet Dream"
  3. "Supermarket"
  4. "Obvious"
  5. "Oh No"
  6. "Ur Mum"
  7. "Too Late Now"
  8. "Angelica"
  9. "Chaise Longue"

2024

edit

On 29 January 2024, it was announced that Luton would host Big Weekend from 24 to 26 May 2024. The festival took place in Stockwood Park[4] and was headlined by Coldplay, Chase & Status, Vampire Weekend, and Raye.[71]

Line-up
Friday 24 May Saturday 25 May Sunday 26 May
Main Stage
Chase & Status
Becky Hill
Ella Henderson
Nathan Dawe
Rudimental
Raye
Aitch
Mabel
Rag'n'Bone Man
Griff
Jax Jones
Joel Corry
Coldplay
Vampire Weekend
Olly Alexander
Sabrina Carpenter
Declan McKenna
London Grammar
AJ Tracey
Radio One's New Music Stage
Eric Prydz
Diplo
Dimension
Hannah Laing
Kenya Grace
Sonny Fodera
Wilkinson
Charli XCX
Alfie Templeman
Caity Baser
Cat Burns
Dylan
The Last Dinner Party
Shygirl
Tems
Beabadoobee
CMAT
Everything Everything
Fizz
Olivia Dean
Remi Wolf
Sea Girls
Teddy Swims
Radio One Dance Stage
A Little Sound
Ammara
ESSEL
Girls Don't Sync
Joy Anonymous
salute
Sammy Virji
Y U QT
Charlie Tee
DJ Target
Jerimiah Asiamah
Kenny Allstar
Panjabi Hit Squad
Charlie Hedges
Danny Howard
DJ Kizzi
Sarah Story
BBC Music Introducing Stage
Charlieeeee
Deeps
JGrrey
LAVS
Sam Girling
Victor Ray
Cam Thomas
Issey Cross
Jarki Monno
Kiimi
Myles Smith
NewDad
Ryussi
Saloni
Beth McCarthy
Etta Marcus
Frozemode
JW Paris
Low Girl
Max Jones
Picture Parlour
Shehxna

Headline sets

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  1. Smash TV
  2. Selecta with Stefflon Don
  3. Censor VIP
  4. Liquor & Cigarettes with ArrDee
  5. Time
  6. Mixed Emotions with Clementine Douglas
  7. Don't Be Scared
  8. NRG
  9. Let You Go
  10. Disconnect
  11. No Problem
  12. Original Nuttah 25 with Irah
  13. Baddadan with Irah
  14. End Credits
  15. All Goes Wrong with Ethan Holt
  16. Blind Faith with Liam Bailey
  17. Program with Irah

References

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  2. ^ a b "Radio 1's Hackney Weekend 2012". BBC. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  3. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2022 to be live in Coventry". BBC News. 16 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b c "Radio 1's Big Weekend coming to Luton". BBC News. 29 January 2024. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
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  6. ^ "BBC - Radio 1 - One Big Weekend". BBC.
  7. ^ "BBC - Press Office - One Big Weekend Cardiff". BBC.
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  10. ^ "BBC - Radio 1 - One Big Weekend Birmingham 2004". BBC.
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  12. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend 2006". BBC.
  13. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend 2007". BBC.
  14. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend - Home". BBC.
  15. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend - 2009". BBC.
  16. ^ "BBC - Radio 1 - Big Weekend 2010". BBC.
  17. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 - Home". BBC.
  18. ^ "Radio 1's Hackney Weekend 2012". BBC Music Events.
  19. ^ "Big Weekend 2013". BBC Music Events.
  20. ^ "2014". BBC Music Events.
  21. ^ "2015". BBC Music Events.
  22. ^ "2016". BBC Music Events.
  23. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2017". BBC Music Events.
  24. ^ "BBC Music - Biggest Weekend - The Biggest Weekend: Belfast". BBC.
  25. ^ "BBC Music - Biggest Weekend - the Biggest Weekend: Perth".
  26. ^ "BBC Music - Biggest Weekend - The Biggest Weekend: Swansea". BBC.
  27. ^ "BBC Music - Biggest Weekend - the Biggest Weekend: Coventry".
  28. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2019". BBC Music Events.
  29. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2020". BBC Music Events.
  30. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2022". BBC Music Events.
  31. ^ "The 1975 and Lewis Capaldi to play Radio 1's Big Weekend". BBC News. 30 January 2023. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
  32. ^ "Home". The Courier. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  33. ^ "Home". The Courier. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  34. ^ "Radio 1 - One Big Weekend". BBC. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  35. ^ "Press Office - One Big Weekend Cardiff". BBC. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  36. ^ a b "BBC starts to rock online world". BBC News. 12 May 2006. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  37. ^ "BBC - Radio 1's Big Weekend - Tickets FAQs". Archived from the original on 4 May 2007. Retrieved 30 April 2007.
  38. ^ "Forums". Unofficial Mills. 23 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 February 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  39. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend - Artists". BBC. 20 May 2007. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  40. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend - Artists". BBC. 20 May 2007. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  41. ^ "Leicester News, Sport and What's On in Leicester". Thisisleicestershire.co.uk. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  42. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend - Tickets - FAQs". BBC. 1 January 1970. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  43. ^ "Welcome to Kent Online | Your gateway to Kent". Archived from the original on 7 May 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  44. ^ "Forums". Unofficial Mills. 23 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 February 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  45. ^ "Forums". Unofficial Mills. 23 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 February 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  46. ^ "Pendulum Rock Radio 1's Big Weekend". Skiddle.com. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  47. ^ "Radio 1 - Big Weekend - 2010 - Line Up". BBC. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  48. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011 - FAQs". BBC. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  49. ^ "Live". Florence and the Machine. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  50. ^ "news". The Ting Tings. 14 November 2011. Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  51. ^ "Newsbeat - Radio 1's Big Weekend 2014 to take place in Glasgow". BBC. 30 January 2014. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  52. ^ "BBC Newsbeat". BBC News. 31 March 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
  53. ^ "BBC Radio 1 - BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend, 2016, Watch Nick Grimshaw announce the Big Weekend 2016 lineup!". BBC. February 2016. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  54. ^ "The 1975 are added to Radio 1's Big Weekend in Exeter, Devon". Newsbeat. March 2016.
  55. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2016". BBC.
  56. ^ "BBC Radio 1 - BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend, 2016 - Ticket Information". BBC. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  57. ^ Biddulph, Andy. "TWENTY ONE PILOTS HAVE FESTIVAL SHOW CUT SHORT". Rocksound. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  58. ^ "Kings of Leon and Little Mix to play Radio 1's Big Weekend in Hull". BBC News. 23 January 2017. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  59. ^ "Katy Perry to headline Radio 1's Big Weekend in Hull". BBC. 16 March 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  60. ^ "Katy Perry - Full Concert 2017 R1 Big Weekend". Archived from the original on 7 May 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2017 – via YouTube.
  61. ^ "Kings of Leon". BBC. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  62. ^ "BBC Music - Biggest Weekend - About the Biggest Weekend".
  63. ^ "Sam Smith Setlist at the Biggest Weekend Swansea 2018". setlist.fm.
  64. ^ "Florence the Machine Setlist at The Biggest Weekend Swansea 2018". setlist.fm.
  65. ^ "Radio 1 Big Weekend 2019 Middlesbrough: Lineup, timings, parking and everything else you need to know". TeessideLive. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  66. ^ "Radio 1 Big Weekend cancelled due to coronavirus". BBC News. 13 March 2020.
  67. ^ "Radio 1 announces alternative Big Weekend 2020 line-up". BBC News. 5 May 2020.
  68. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend of Live Music 2021". BBC Music Events.
  69. ^ "Radio 1's Big Weekend 2021: Who's performing and how can I watch or listen?". Newsround. CBBC. 28 May 2021.
  70. ^ "The 1975 and Lewis Capaldi to play Radio 1's Big Weekend". BBC News. 30 January 2023. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
  71. ^ @BBCR1 (20 March 2024). "Here's your #BigWeekend Luton lineup‼️Want to be there? Tickets go on sale at 5PM tomorrow (Thursday 21st March). Click here for ticket info: bbc.co.uk/bigweekend". X (formerly Twitter).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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