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The festival ran from Friday 28 August 2009 – Sunday 30 August 2009. Weekend tickets cost £175. Day tickets cost £70. Alexisonfire and The Bronx (band) played two sets at both Reading and Leeds – one on the Main Stage and one later in the day on the Lock Up stage. A Day to Remember cancelled their appearance on the Festival Republic stage.
However, in 2001, the festival moved to the current format, wherein the Reading line-up plays at Leeds the following day, with the opening day line-up from Leeds playing the final day in Reading (with the exceptions of 2009 and 2010 when the bands playing Leeds played Reading the following day, and the bands on the opening day of Reading closed ...
The Leeds leg of the festival saw the original band members re-united following a backstage appearance by Andy Nicholson. [10] Earlier in the summer Arctic Monkeys had taken the main stage at Oxegen by storm when they made an appearance on the rainy, windswept Saturday of the festival. The following evening at T in the Park, Kinross in Scotland ...
The 2008 event took place over the weekend of the May Day bank holiday and featured two concerts by Leeds band The Pigeon Detectives at Millennium Square as its centrepiece. [3] 1990s and White Lies were among the groups who played the 2009 festival, [4] while 2010 saw sets by the likes of Lightspeed Champion, British Sea Power and The Twilight ...
Chappell Roan, Hozier, Travis Scott and Bring Me the Horizon have been announced to headline Reading and Leeds in what arguably marks the festivals’ most eclectic lineup to date. Hozier, Roan ...
The first annual Deathfest took place on Sunday 3 May 2009 at the University of Leeds. It billed 17 bands over two stages and tickets cost £19.50. Festival headliners were Vader and Leng Tch'e .
Leeds Festival has opened its arena following delays caused by Storm Lilian. It follows the announcement that the Chevron Stage, which was due to host American DJ Skrillex, would become the third ...
The event is presented by Leeds City Council, in partnership with Magic 828 radio station and the Yorkshire Post newspaper. [3] The 2009 event drew an audience of 50,000, and featured soprano Natasha Marsh, tenor Alfie Boe, The Hallé and Leeds Festival Chorus. [4] The event was cancelled in July 2014 [5]