Field Day has announced the line-up for its 2025 edition – you can check it out below.
- READ MORE: Field Day 2022 review: the past, present and future of electronic music
The one-day event is due to take place at Brockwell Park near Brixton in South London on Saturday May 24. Today (November 5), organisers have shared the first wave of acts, with Peggy Gou now revealed to be headlining.
Other confirmed acts include Jungle (for a DJ set), Folamour, Skream & Benga, Dixon, Mall Grab and Midland.
Also appearing Bubble Love, Fatima Yamaha, female-only DJ collective Girls Don’t Sync, Jayda G, Palms Trax and and Special Request, with additional DJ sets from German electronic duo Modeselektor and AK Sports – with more names set to be announced.
The pre-sale for Field Day 2025 begins at 10am on Tuesday November 12 and you can sign up here. Tickets going on general sale at 10am Thursday November 14.
The artist line-up announcement follows news that the electronic music festival would be moving locations next year, having previously operated from Victoria Park in East London for the past four years as a one-day event run by All Points East.
Last month, (October 10), they announced that in 2025 they’ll be moving to Brockwell Park, joining a string of other festivals taking place at the south London park including Wide Awake, Cross The Tracks, Mighty Hoopla and City Splash.
They’ve also announced a new date, with Field Day 2025 set to take place on Saturday May 24 as part of the Brockwell Live Bank Holiday Weekender.
Mark Newton, Field Day Festival Director said he is “incredibly excited” about the new location and date, which he said “solidifies [the festival’s] place at the beginning of London’s summer.”
This year’s edition of Field Day saw Justice and PinkPantheress headline, alongside performances from 2ManyDJs, Romy, Mura Masa, I. Jordan, Yves Tumor and Sega Bodega.
In 2022, NME headed to the festival, calling it one of the “most thrilling curations yet” and “a return to what it does best: showcasing the past, present and future of electronic music”, in a four-star review.