The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Summer festivals are back in vogue

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EVERY week our Holiday Hero NEIL SIMPSON takes an in-depth look at a brilliant holiday topic, doing all the legwork so you don’t have to. This week:

Festivals and outdoor events for a summer of fun.

FANS of film, fireworks, music, vintage fashion and more can all find the perfect summer festival to attend as lockdown eases.

In May, Bath will be among the first places to welcome back visitors with a series of live events.

Socially distanced audiences can sit below the high ceilings of the Georgian Assembly Rooms to hear all 16 works that Beethoven wrote for string quartets, or step inside Bath Abbey and the unlikely setting of the old Green Park railway station for concerts by the festival orchestra, founded by Yehudi Menuhin in 1959.

Prefer to be outdoors? Try the new Frankenste­in In Bath walking tour to learn where Mary Shelley wrote her Gothic novel in 1816. Book tickets for all events at bathfestiv­als.org.uk.

June sees the start of the year’s first festival aimed squarely at families. The Chalke Valley History Festival will take place in two huge marquees in the fields of Wiltshire, with socially distanced talks on everything from Norman treachery to life as a lady-in-waiting.

The outdoor programme includes demonstrat­ions of 16th Century cookery and historical storytelli­ng in front of crackling fires, while fully costumed Iron Age Celts and Romans amble by. There’s even a podcast called Chalke Talk if you want more tales from history. For more details see cvhf.org.uk.

Also in June, Cardiff kicks off a four-day film and food festival that will then tour across the country to cities including Nottingham, Wolverhamp­ton and Newcastle.

At each venue, outdoor screens will show singalong classics and family favourites such as Grease and The Greatest Showman (film andfoodfes­t.com).

Festivals move up a gear in July with the reschedule­d Classic Bike Show at Staffordsh­ire County Showground. Described as the world’s biggest festival of speed, the hugely popular annual event regularly attracts 30,000 visitors to watch riders roar around the parade circuit (staffordcl­assic bikeshows.com).

In August, the skies above Plymouth harbour will light up for the British Firework Championsh­ip. Over two colourful, noisy nights, six manufactur­ers will compete for the crown.

Later in the month, the city also hosts 1 Big Summer, a three-day music festival that will feature DJ sets and a 26-piece orchestra playing classic Ibiza dance tunes.

Plymouth is also set to host The Great British Sausage And Cider Festival on the final Sunday of August. Details of all three events are at visitplymo­uth.co.uk.

Step back in time in September at the Vintage Nostalgia Festival in Stockton Park, Wiltshire. Guests are invited to dress to impress in clothes from their favourite era.

Organisers say the 1940s and 1950s tend to be the most popular, and dancing shoes are essential – expect jive, swing and other classes during the day, and big band, boogie woogie, skiffle among the live music at night.

Need a break? Grab a Pimm’s in the Top Deck Bar, a 1963 Leyland double-decker. It’s a two-day festival and you can book a glamping site if you want to stay overnight (vintagenos­talgiafest­ival.co.uk).

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 ??  ?? SPARKED INTO LIFE: Plymouth’s fireworks show. Left: Dressed to impress at the Nostalgia Festival
SPARKED INTO LIFE: Plymouth’s fireworks show. Left: Dressed to impress at the Nostalgia Festival

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