Wireless Festival is an annual rap and hip-hop music festival that takes place in London, England, United Kingdom, and is owned and managed by Live Nation. Debuting in 2005, the festival's earlier years primarily featured rock and pop artists; since the 2010s, the focus has shifted largely towards hip-hop and other genres; for example, urban contemporary music.[1][2]
Wireless Festival | |
---|---|
Genre | Hip hop |
Dates |
|
Location(s) | 2005–2012: Hyde Park, London 2006–07: Harewood House, Leeds 2013: Olympic Park, London 2014: Perry Park, Birmingham 2014–2019: Finsbury Park, London 2021: Crystal Palace Park, London 2022: Crystal Palace Park; Finsbury Park; NEC, Birmingham 2023–2024: Finsbury Park, London |
Years active | 2005–present |
Founders | Live Nation Entertainment |
Next event | 12–14 July 2024 |
Capacity | 50,000 |
Organised by | Live Nation and Festival Republic |
Sponsor | Rockstar Energy (Official Partner) |
Website | www |
From its 2005 inception until 2008, the festival was sponsored by telecommunications company O2, and was called the O2 Wireless Festival. From 2009 to 2012, the main sponsor was Barclaycard, and the festival was renamed to Barclaycard Wireless Festival. In 2013, the sponsor changed to Yahoo!, thus renaming it to Yahoo! Wireless. In 2015, the sponsor became the fashion retailer New Look. Sponsorship then changed to delivery company Gopuff in 2021, and has remained the same for the 2022 and 2023 editions of the festival.[3] Sponsorship again changed in 2024, to be partnered with PepsiCo's Rockstar energy.[4]
The capacity of the 2023 event was just shy of 50,000 people.[5] Adjacent festivals were held in Leeds in 2006 and 2007, as well as Birmingham in 2014. In 2017, Live Nation also established Wireless Germany in Frankfurt, as well as Wireless Middle East in Abu Dhabi.[6]
History
edit2005
editThe first festival took place in June 2005 and was in Hyde Park only. Tickets were £35 a day. Some of the acts on the line-up were (headline acts in bold):[7]
- Friday, 24 June: New Order, Moby, Hard-Fi, The Bravery, Graham Coxon, The Dresden Dolls, The Dears, Rilo Kiley
- Saturday, 25 June: Basement Jaxx, M.I.A., LCD Soundsystem, Death In Vegas, Lady Sovereign, Killa Kela, Mylo, Roots Manuva, Stereo MCs
- Wednesday, 29 June: Keane, Echo & the Bunnymen, Supergrass, James Blunt, Brendan Benson, Rufus Wainwright, Martha Wainwright
- Thursday, 30 June: Kasabian, Editors, The Rakes, The Others, Ladytron, Soulwax, Peter Doherty, JJ72, Cut Copy
2006
editIn 2006, the festival played in both Hyde Park and Harewood House. Tickets were £37.51 per day.
The Hyde Park festival ran from 21 to 25 June and on the bill were:[8]
- The Strokes, Belle & Sebastian, Dirty Pretty Things, Super Furry Animals, The Raconteurs, Gogol Bordello, The Like
- David Gray, Fun Lovin' Criminals, KT Tunstall, Violent Femmes
- Massive Attack, The Flaming Lips, Pharrell, Gnarls Barkley, Metric, Damian Marley
- James Blunt, Zero 7, Eels, Beth Orton, Paolo Nutini
- Depeche Mode, Goldfrapp, OK Go, The Dears, The Fratellis, Mystery Jets
The Harewood House festival ran from 24 to 25 June and tickets were £32.50 for the first day and £37.50 for the second. It featured:[9]
- Massive Attack, Goldfrapp, DJ Shadow, Pharrell, Gnarls Barkley, Terry Callier, Just Jack, Sway
- The Who, Super Furry Animals, The Flaming Lips, The Zutons, Eels
2007
editTickets for both venues went on sale on 16 March 2007 and the festival took place between 14 and 17 June in Hyde Park, and 15–17 June at Harewood House. Tickets were £40 for one day, £75 for two, £105 for three or £135 for four days.
The acts for both Hyde Park and Harewood House were:[10]
- The White Stripes, Queens of the Stone Age, Air, Satellite Party, The Bees, The Thrills, The Sounds, Dredg, Polytechnic, Ghosts, Connan and the Mockasins, Far From The Dance, Kissaway Trail, Pete and the Pirates, The Scare
- Daft Punk, LCD Soundsystem, Klaxons, CSS, Plan B, New Young Pony Club, Calvin Harris, Simian Mobile Disco, Digitalism,
- Kaiser Chiefs, Editors, The Cribs, The Rakes, The Twang, The Only Ones, Kate Nash, Ripchord, The Duke Spirit, Polysics, Mumm-Ra, The Pigeon Detectives, You Say Party! We Say Die!, Los Campesinos!, and Under the Influence of Giants. Kaiser Chiefs selected the line-up for the day they were headlining (Saturday at Harewood House and Sunday in Hyde Park).
The acts which performed the extra date in Hyde Park were:
- Faithless, Badly Drawn Boy, Kelis, Just Jack and Cat Empire.
For the first time, the Leeds festival offered camping facilities at the festival. Campers were allowed to stay on Lord Harewood's land for £25 for as many festival days as they wished. There were 3 stages this year, and the O2 Blueroom where only O2 customers were allowed to enter.
2008
editThe 2008 O2 Wireless Festival spanned 4 days in Hyde Park, and was the last to carry the O2 sponsorship. An attempt to hold a parallel festival in Leeds similar to the Reading and Leeds Festivals arrangement was unsuccessful, and instead a variety of club nights featuring billed artists were held. Tickets were £45 per day.
The line-up was as follows:[11]
- Thursday, 3 July: Jay-Z, Mark Ronson, Hot Chip, Róisín Murphy, David Jordan, The Cool Kids, Hercules and Love Affair, Alice Smith, Kano, Saul Williams, Lethal Bizzle, Elliot Minor, Pete and the Pirates, The Stiff Dylans, Sparkadia, The Hot Melts, Electric Dolls, Beans On Toast, Red Snapper, Annie, Bryn Christophers, Kid Sisters, Tinie Tempah, Yelle
- Friday, 4 July: Morrissey, Beck, The Wombats, Guillemots, Dirty Pretty Things, Lightspeed Champion, The National, Siouxsie, The Courteeners, Black Kids, The Rascals, The Hosts, Kristeen Young, Howling Bells, Magic Wands, The Whigs, Nicole Atkins and the Sea, Mon Ouisch, The Fashion, The Reprieve, New York Dolls, Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly, Liam Finn, Apollo Sunshine, Seawolf, Jaguar Love, Peter and the Wolf
- Saturday, 5 July: Fatboy Slim, Deadmau5, Robyn, Bootsy Collins, Neon Neon, Cornershop, Ryan Shaw, Underworld, MSTRKRFT, Does It Offend You, Yeah?, Sam Sparro, Cut Copy, Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip, The Whip, Junkie XL, Akala, Audio Bullys, Cagedbaby, Japanese Pop Stars, Familien, Yacht, Booka Shade, Why?, Das Pop, InnerPartySystem
- Sunday, 6 July: Counting Crows, Ben Harper, Powderfinger, Goo Goo Dolls, Eddy Grant, Magic Christian, The Hold Steady, Bowling For Soup, Donavon Frankenreiter, Delays, Melee, Luke White, Galactic with Lyrics Born and Boots Riley, Roy World, Joe Purdy, Amy Studt, Dawn Kinnard, The Galvatrons, Silver Seas, Chief, Nellie McKay, Alice Smith, Ryan Shaw, Sons of Albion, Pablo Francisco, Jamie Kennedy, Jo Koy, Gabriel Iglesias
2009
editThe 2009 festival was sponsored by Barclaycard and was cut from four to two days in Hyde Park. Tickets were £45 for one day or £80 for both. The line-up was as follows:[12]
- Saturday, 4 July: Basement Jaxx, The Streets, Dizzee Rascal, Paul Oakenfold, Metric, Jack Peñate, Saint Etienne, Afrika Bambaataa & the Soulsonic Force, Frankmusik, Sneaky Sound System, N.A.S.A., Tommy Sparks, Delphic, Filthy Dukes, Digitalism, Skint & Demoralised, Master Shortie, Japanese Popstars, Phenomenal Handclap Band
- Sunday, 5 July: Kanye West, Noisettes, Alesha Dixon, Calvin Harris, N-Dubz, Tinchy Stryder, Q-Tip, Flo Rida, Kid Cudi, Daniel Merriweather, Lady Sovereign, Young Jeezy, Mr Hudson, Chipmunk, Ironik, Example, Florence Rawlings, Zarif, Steve Appleton, The Black and White Years, Diversity, Ratatat
2010
editThe 2010 Wireless Festival was increased to three days and took place from 2 July to 4 July 2010. Tickets were £47.50 for one day, £85 for two and £110 for three days. The line-up was as follows:[13]
- Friday, 2 July: P!nk, The Ting Tings, Gossip, The Temper Trap, Plan B, Bowling For Soup, Hockey, Daisy Dares You, Neon Hitch, Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders, Bluey Robinson
- Saturday, 3 July: LCD Soundsystem, Snoop Dogg, 2ManyDJs (aka Soulwax), Kids on Bridges, The Big Pink, DJ Shadow, UNKLE, Missy Elliott, The Hundred in the Hands, Phenomenal Handclap Band
- Sunday, 4 July: Jay-Z, Lily Allen, Friendly Fires, Slash, Mr Hudson, dan le sac Vs Scroobius Pip, Chipmunk, Tinie Tempah, Chase & Status, D12, Wiley, Roll Deep, J. Cole, Chiddy Bang, Wale, Professor Green, Laura Steel, Talay Riley, McLean, Bluey Robinson, Hesta Prynn.
The Sunday date sold out in record time, three weeks before the festival.[14]
2011
editThe 2011 Wireless Festival was held from Friday 1 July to Sunday 3 July 2011. Tickets were £48.50 (Saturday/Sunday) or £49.50 (Friday) for one day, £92 for two and £130 for three days. The Black Eyed Peas headlined the Friday, The Chemical Brothers on the Saturday, and Pulp reformed after ten years to play the Sunday and other festivals in 2011. The Black Eyed Peas date had sold out by the end of June, while tickets for the other two days remained on sale until the festival.
2012
editThe 2012 Wireless Festival was held from Friday, 6 July to Sunday, 8 July. Tickets went on general sale on 18 November 2011, priced at £49.50 (Friday/Saturday) and £52.50 (Sunday), plus booking fee.[15] All tickets for the Rihanna day sold out by the end of March, a new record for the festival.[16]
The acts which played were:
2013
editThe 2013 event was moved to the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford after Live Nation pulled out of the tender for Hyde Park due to curfew issues.[17] The festival was held from Friday, 12 July to Sunday, 14 July 2013, and tickets were priced at £57.50 for day tickets and £110 for two days, plus booking fees. The event was sponsored by Yahoo!.
The line-up for the festival was:[18]
2014
editIn February 2014 it was confirmed that Wireless Festival 2014 would be held at Finsbury Park, London and Perry Park, Birmingham. The event was held over the weekend of 4–6 July 2014, on three stages. London day tickets were priced at £71.50 while Birmingham day tickets were priced at £68.75.[19] Weekend tickets for London went on sale at £210 while Birmingham weekend tickets were set at £172. On 3 July, the day before the first day of the festival, it was widely reported that Drake had pulled out due to illness, (making it the second time he had pulled out of a Wireless Festival). This was confirmed on the festival's social media sites and organisers announced that Kanye West would play instead of Drake in London, and Rudimental (who had been the support for Drake) would headline the Saturday in Birmingham with a special extended set featuring very special guests. The organisers also offered those attending on Saturday in Birmingham £20 of "Wireless Credit" which was redeemable against any concessions, merchandise stands and funfair attractions at the event.
London
Birmingham
2015
editOn 31 January 2015, it was confirmed that the festival would be held in Finsbury Park between 3 and 5 July. The lineup was confirmed via the festival's Twitter page, with confirmation that Drake would return to the festival following his cancellation in 2014. It was also revealed that David Guetta and Nicki Minaj would perform as co-headliners on the Sunday, and that Avicii and Kendrick Lamar would be co-headlining on Saturday. As it was the festival's tenth birthday, there was a special 'birthday' event on Sunday, 28 June. Following the announcement of the lineup, several artists cancelled their appearance. In early June, Big Sean removed the Wireless appearance from his tour's website and he no longer appeared on the Wireless website's lineup. Around the same time, Boy Better Know were added to the Wireless 10 event. On 14 June, Stromae cancelled his Wireless appearance amongst other summer dates, after suffering a reaction to anti-malaria drugs whilst on his tour of Sub-Saharan Africa. Someone tweeted a day later to say she would also be cancelling a number of summer dates, including Wireless, due to having to undergo vocal chord surgery. The Friday sold out by the end of April, whilst the other three dates remained on sale until the festival.[citation needed]
Line-up | |||
Main Stage | |||
Sunday 28 June | Friday 3 July | Saturday 4 July | Sunday 5 July |
---|---|---|---|
Drake
|
Drake
|
Avicii
|
David Guetta + Nicki Minaj
|
Stage 2/Pepsi Max Arena | |||
Sunday 28 June | Friday 3 July | Saturday 4 July | Sunday 5 July |
Public Enemy
|
Nero
|
Knife Party
|
Grandmaster Flash
|
Capital Xtra Presents Re:Wired Arena | |||
Sunday 28 June No Stage |
Friday 3 July | Saturday 4 July | Sunday 5 July |
Lethal Bizzle
|
Kurupt FM
|
George the Poet
|
2016
editWireless Festival 2016 was held on the weekend of 8–10 July at Finsbury Park. The lineup was announced on 9 March, with Calvin Harris to headline on the Friday, Chase & Status and J. Cole co-headlining on Saturday, and Kygo and Boy Better Know co-headlining on Sunday. On 16 March, Dua Lipa was announced for Friday. Three days later, Lady Leshurr was announced for Saturday. On 11 May, Wizkid and 99 Souls were announced for Friday, and Natalie La Rose, Angel, Shakka, Rude Kid, KStewart, The Manor, Jorja Smith, and A2 were announced for Saturday, while Fergie, Big Sean, Metro Boomin, Jay Sean, Ghetts, Thomas Jack, Fekky, Elf Kid, Sonny Digital and Father were announced for Sunday. On the same day, Lady Leshurr was moved to Friday. On 21 May Kyla was announced for Saturday. Wizkid had pulled out due to Visa problems.
2017
editWireless Festival 2017 was held on the weekend of 7–9 July at Finsbury Park. The lineup was announced on 23 February, with Chance The Rapper to headline on Friday, Skepta headlining on Saturday and The Weeknd headlining on Sunday. On 28 March, Fetty Wap and Geko were announced for Friday, Travis Scott was announced for Saturday, and Bugzy Malone and Kojo Funds were announced for Sunday. On the same day, Cadet was moved from Sunday to Saturday. On 30 June, AJ Tracey was announced for Friday. Lil Uzi Vert was also part of the lineup, but pulled out, due to continued exhaustion. He was replaced by Pusha T. Wiley was also part of the lineup but also pulled out, due to delays with his travel plan. He was replaced by Lethal Bizzle.
2018
editWireless festival was held on 6–8 July at Finsbury Park. The lineup was announced on 22 January, with J. Cole to headline on Friday, Stormzy on Saturday, and DJ Khaled with others on Sunday. The Festival was fully sold out within a day. On 9 April Cardi B announced her pregnancy, and therefore she pulled out. Three days later, Raye, Russ, Suspect, Big Shaq, Sneakbo, Davido, Ms Banks, Majid Jordan and Last Night In Paris were added to the lineup. On 14 May, AJ x Deno, EO, M Huncho, Just Banco, Big Heath, Romzy and Yung Fume were added to the lineup. On 3 July, J Hus pulled out, due to legal issues. Fredo also pulled out due to unforeseen circumstances. On the same day, Krept & Konan, Chip, Avelino, D-Block Europe and Ambush were added to the lineup. On 5 July, MoStack was moved from Saturday to Friday. On the same day Trippie Redd pulled out, due to unforeseen circumstances. On the day that DJ Khaled was meant to be headlining, it was announced that he had pulled out due to travel issues. He was replaced by a surprise guest, who turned out to be Drake.
Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
J. Cole
|
Stormzy
|
DJ Khaled and Friends (cancelled)
|
2019
editThe Wireless Festival was held on 5–7 July at Finsbury Park. The lineup was announced on 28 January, with Cardi B and Migos to co-headline on Friday, Travis Scott headlining on Saturday, and ASAP Rocky headlining on Sunday. On 9 February, Cadet, who was meant to be performing on Saturday, died. Wireless kept his performance set, in order to remember him. On 13 March, One Acen, Lotto Boyzz, THEY., Tiwa Savage, Lady Sanity and Lil Yachty were added to the lineup. In April, Loski pulled out due to legal issues. On 8 May, Yungen was added to the lineup. On 14 June Megan Thee Stallion was added to the lineup. On 20 June, it was announced that a number of acts would be streamed globally, live in virtual reality, by using a platform provided by MelodyVR. Streamed content would also be available via Wireless's Facebook page and MelodyVR's Android and iOS VR/360 apps.[20][21] On 1 July, Polo G was added to the lineup. Two days later, Headie One and Lil Uzi Vert pulled out for unknown reasons. Jay1 replaced One and a surprise guest, Skepta, replaced Vert. Also, ASAP Rocky pulled out, due to legal issues. On the day before he was meant to headline, J Hus was added to the lineup and it was also announced that Rae Sremmurd would be headlining Sunday. At the same time, Polo G cancelled his performance, due to the birth of his child, and was replaced by Aitch.
Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Cardi B / Migos
|
Travis Scott
|
ASAP Rocky (cancelled)
|
2020
editThe sixteenth edition of Wireless Festival was due to take place on 3–5 July 2020 at Finsbury Park, London. In social media statements posted on 23 March 2021, it was announced that the festival would be moved to Crystal Palace Park and would take place on 10–12 September 2021.
Cancelled Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
ASAP Rocky
|
Skepta
|
Meek Mill
|
2021
editIn social media statements posted on 23 March 2021, it was announced that the festival would be moved to Crystal Palace Park and would take place at a later date than usual, due to Covid, on 10–12 September 2021.
Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Future with a surprise appearance from Drake
|
Skepta
|
Migos
|
2022
editOn 25 February 2022, it was announced that Wireless Festival would take place in Crystal Palace Park on 1–3 July, while a second and third festival would be held in Finsbury Park and the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham, both on 8–10 July. Seven headliners would be split between the three locations: A$AP Rocky, J. Cole, Tyler, the Creator, Dave, Cardi B, Nicki Minaj, and SZA.
Crystal Palace Park Line-Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
A$AP Rocky
|
J. Cole
|
Tyler, The Creator
|
Finsbury Park Line-Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Cardi B
|
SZA
|
Nicki Minaj
|
Outdoor at NEC Line-Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Dave
|
Cardi B
|
J. Cole
|
2023
editIt was announced that Wireless 2023 would be returning for one weekend, at Finsbury Park. The event is due to take place on 7, 8 and 9 July, with headline artists Playboi Carti, Travis Scott and D-Block Europe, and 50 Cent as a special guest, all UK festival exclusives. Saturday day tickets sold out within 60 minutes of going on sale.
Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Playboi Carti
|
Travis Scott
|
D-Block Europe / 50 Cent (Special Guest)
|
2024
editIt was announced that Wireless would return to Finsbury Park between 12 and 14 July 2024, with headline artists Nicki Minaj, 21 Savage, J Hus and Doja Cat.[22]
Line Up | ||
Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
---|---|---|
Nicki Minaj
Kairo Keyz |
21 Savage
|
Doja Cat
|
Sponsors
editYears | Name of Sponsor | Organised by | Notes | Location | Date | Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005–08 | O2 | Live Nation & Festival Republic | as O2 Wireless Festival | Hyde Park, London Harewood House |
5–7 July | 2005–19 |
2009–12 | Barclaycard | as Barclaycard Wireless | ||||
2013–14 | Yahoo! | Olympic Park (2013) Perry Park (2014) | ||||
2015– | Pepsi Max | Official partners | Finsbury Park | |||
Pepsi | Crystal Palace Park | July | 2021–2023 | |||
2021–2023 | Gopuff | Official sponsors | Finsbury Park | |||
2024–Present | Rockstar Energy | Official sponsors | Finsbury Park | 12-14 July | 2024–Present |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Time, The UK (30 May 2022). "Wireless Festival 2022 Lineup, Tickets, Date, Location, and Much More". The UK Time. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
- ^ Rice, Sam (4 July 2022). "Wireless Festival London review: Local artists created magic onstage". Evening Standard. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
- ^ Orpen, Tim (10 July 2022). "GOPUFF DELIVERS WIRELESS". EXECUTIONAL. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ "Wireless Festival 2019". eFestivals. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ Chapple, Jon (4 December 2018). "Wireless to return to Germany in 2019". iq-mag.net. Retrieved 18 April 2019.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ [2] Archived April 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [3] Archived April 2, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [4] Archived April 6, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "O2 Wireless Festival 2008::line-up". 2008.wirelessfestival.co.uk. Archived from the original on 1 March 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
- ^ [5] Archived January 23, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [6] Archived December 16, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "JAY-Z at Wireless sponsored by Barclaycard - now sold out!". Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
- ^ Rihanna Barclaycard Wireless Festival 2012 tickets on sale Archived 2014-11-10 at the Wayback Machine, Virtual Festivals.
- ^ More acts announced across the weekend, Wireless Festival official site. Archived March 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Travel Info | Wireless Festival 2013". Archived from the original on 22 February 2013. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
- ^ "Line up 2018". Wireless Festival. 29 March 2016.
- ^ "Tickets". Wireless Festival. 6 April 2016.
- ^ "MelodyVR to livestream London's Wireless Festival in virtual reality via new app". 20 June 2019.
- ^ ""It's a festival first!": Wireless joins forces with Melody VR for virtual reality live broadcast".
- ^ Collins, Riyah (29 January 2024). "Nicki Minaj tops Wireless festival line-up with 21 Savage and Doja Cat". BBC News. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Line Up - Friday". Wireless Festival. Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ "Line Up - Saturday". Wireless Festival. Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
- ^ "Line Up - Sunday". Wireless Festival. Archived from the original on 5 February 2024. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
External links
edit- Wireless Festival Official Website
- Virtual Festivals' Wireless Festival page
- Sights and sounds from Wireless Festival 2006: The week in pictures
- Wireless 2010 News
- Wireless Festival News