Co-organiser of the Glastonbury Festival
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Graham and Chris turn TV hosts to present a special edition of This Is Your Life, calling out Pet Shop Boys' 10 greatest achievements from the famed Big Red Book. Career highs recalled include having their first 12” available in Soho's Record Shack, rescuing Dusty and aiding the drive to pardon Alan Turing, as well as subverting UK institutions and rubbing shoulders with Hollywood royalty. There's also In Depth analysis of Hallo Spaceboy's cut-up lyrics and Neil's only published poem, while guests lining up to pay tribute include Bobby O, Madonna, Sammy Davis Jr, Es Devlin, Emily Eavis and Jimmy Tarbuck himself. But will Neil and Chris accept their knighthoods for services to pop? There's only one way to find out...
In the second Glastonbury special of Sidetracked, Annie Macmanus and Nick Grimshaw sit down with festival organiser Emily Eavis in front of the Pyramid Stage. What's the weirdest thing found in lost property, what did Kanye request 30 seconds before going on stage, how do they predict the weather and will they ever change the ticketing system? Get in touch with Annie and Nick! If you're over 16 WhatsApp 079700 82700 or email sidetracked@bbc.co.uk Sidetracked is all about taking a look at the things Annie and Nick have loved (and perhaps more importantly not loved) from the world of music. A week in music, a week in Annie and Nick's lives, this is the destination for music and pop culture lovers looking for an authentic and light-hearted take on the week's most compelling stories… getting seriously sidetracked along the way.
Who's performing at Glastonbury 2024? Emily Eavis joins from Worthy Farm as Annie and Nick try to get the goss on next year's headliners. Plus, the new West End run of Cabaret has had a hefty injection of pop and is Eric Cantona bigger than The Rolling Stones? Sidetracked is all about taking a look at the things Annie Macmanus and Nick Grimshaw have loved (and perhaps more importantly not loved) from the world of music. A week in music, a week in Annie and Nick's lives, this is the destination for music and pop culture lovers looking for an authentic and light-hearted take on the week's most compelling stories… getting seriously sidetracked along the way. Get in touch with Annie and Nick! If you're over 16 WhatsApp 079700 82700 or email sidetracked@bbc.co.uk Sidetracked is a BBC Audio Production for BBC Sounds – new episodes drop every Thursday.
Back from her heavenly journey to Glastonbury, Sophie floats back to Earth and beguiles Clara with tales from Worthy Farm. From Elton's historic set to Fatboy Slim's failures, to Fred Again's happy crowd of dancers to Lewis Capaldi's heart breaking live on stage, in a moment where the whole world wept together. Sophie then put on her Karen wig and has a list of helpful hints for Emily Eavis and next year's festival.The girlies then dive deep on the new season of 'And Just Like That', where they hone in on the fabulous fashion moments, the rock solid plotlines and the egomaniac that is Michael Patrick King.Linky-poo's:Ten minutes of Rocket ManFred Again Full Glasto setLewis Capaldi's moment - if you don't cry at this, you're an animalKristin Davis on the pressure of agingHear Michael Patrick King literally get moved by his own work on the AJLT podcastFollow this newsie girlie @newsbyhil NOWWW!Share your festival stories and AJLT thoughts - @soph_lyons & @clazzykabana Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For Woman's Hour's first ever live broadcast from Worthy Farm Anita is joined by BBC 6 Music's Jamz Supernova. Jamz gives Anita her top tips and talks us through the women she's most excited to see perform this year. Emily Eavis has been co-organising Glastonbury since 1999, working alongside her father and founder of the festival, Michael Eavis. Over the years, she's booked some of the biggest names in music, from Beyonce and Adele to the Rolling Stones. Emily has been committed to making the festival more sustainable, banning single-use plastics in 2019 and she's been vocal about improving gender equality within the live music industry. So how does she feel about this year's line-up of all-male headliners? Four time Grammy nominee and folk legend Allison Russell joins Anita live for a very special performance. Alongside being a singer and songwriter Allison is a poet, an activist and a multi-instrumentalist. Fresh from performing alongside the one and only Joni Mitchell earlier this month she is at Glastonbury, performing on The Acoustic Stage. There are no female headliners at Glasto this year, what does this mean for women in the music industry? Anita is joined by a top panel including Vick Bain who has been in the business for over 25 years and founded The F List – a directory of female musicians, the Welsh songwriter and producer The Anchoress and 6 Music DJ and founder of Future Bounce record label Jamz Supernova. Rebecca, Diana and Kristine invited Anita to their camp site. The three friends, who are festival lovers and Woman's Hour listeners, share their Glasto memories and tell us why it's such a magical place. Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Emma Pearce
In this week's episode of Play Next, in partnership with BMW, we explore the future of festivals and upcoming artists on the music scene with the legendary Emily Eavis. We are also joined by Sipho, who will be headlining our stage at Luno presents All Points East. As always, we will also feature the latest tracks from innovative new artists. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It's been 3 years but finally Glastonbury will be back in all its magnificent glory this week. The biggest festival in the world. A festival like no other. To get excited, co-organiser Emily Eavis made a visit to Annie's rave shed to talk about all things change; personal change and changes at the festival which turned 50 in 2020! This year back on Worthy Farm in Somerset, the family and 200,000 revellers will finally be able to properly celebrate. Emily grew up on Worthy Farm so has witnessed it evolve since the 80s, taking on the role of co-organiser after her mum died when Emily was 19. Since then, she has had her own family and made her mark on Glastonbury, a festival with the most legendary line ups of all time. Annie and Emily talk through early memories, the festival's beginnings and roots, personal highlights and that defining moment of booking Jay Z to headline in 2008. All hail Emily Eavis. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Leave Us a Virtual Message! Subscribe to Festival Gasp Deep Dives … our in-depth topic show. Be an Expert Guest on the Show? Guest Sign Up Form Bio-Glitter Special Offer! Get your Moon Shatter 3-Jar Bundle Preview Sparked Magazine Pilot Issue Articles Discussed in this Episode: Burning Man 2021 Still in Limbo, Organizers Promise Official Update in February New "Corona-Proof" Music Festival Set For This Summer RUMOR: Insomniac Plans to Bring Festivals to Miami in 2022 Ultra Music Festival Will Cancel 2021 Event A new Australian festival is coming from the Groovin' The Moo promoters Glastonbury Canceled but Other music festivals determined to go ahead amid Covid-19 Glastonbury's Emily Eavis says livestreamed sets could happen in place of cancelled festival Podcast Editing by GBA Recordings gba.record@gmail.com Support Festival Grasp News Cast by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/festival-grasp-news This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
For our final special compilation episode, we hear legendary tales from the likes of Emily Eavis, Sir Tom Jones, Sigrid, Niall Horan and more. I hope you’ve enjoyed a little look back at some of our favourite clips from the first 2 series of George Ezra & Friends. I’ll see you back here next year for some brand new episodes. I hope you’re well, look after yourselves and each other. This podcast was edited by Natalie Jamieson. The animations and visuals are thanks to Oisin Griffin. Thank you to the teams at Closer Artists and 4th Floor Creative. And of course, thank YOU for downloading.
More tales of being "escorted" from all-you-can-eat buffets, Emily Eavis off of Glastonbury chooses some bangers from Worthy Farm and a boys weekend in Prague is remebered in Tap End.
If we can’t get to Glastonbury Festival, we thought we’d bring a little bit of Glastonbury to you. What an honour to have the Queen of Worthy farm, Emily Eavis on Table Manners on the week where Glasto would have been celebrating 50 years with all of us in the SUNNY fields.We delve right into Glastonbury food; how they choose the food stalls, specialities (the secret Goan Curry by West Holts), artist's private chefs, and of course mum has secured a Chicken Matzoh ball soup stand for next year Emily tells us about growing up on the farm, how they’ve had to deal with the current pandemic and how she sings Moana songs in the festival office. As if this episode couldn’t get any better, Emily invites me back to perform next year, with mum in tow....well, we will see about that. Make sure to tune into the BBC coverage of Glastonbury highlights this weekend! Enjoy! (Side note - I'm overzealous and in awe in this episode so please excuse my fawning over this excellent woman!) X See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
More highlights from another fabulous week on the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show!
In today’s episode we’re discussing the radio 4 Desert Island Discs interview with Emily Eavis who is the co-organiser of the world famous Glastonbury festival. We explain the words ‘mind boggling’ and ‘logistical’ that are used when they talk about the organisation required. We also explain some of the many phrasal verbs in the interview. Such as to take on, chip in and put on.
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2IPLl8l Various Artists: Gemma Whelan, Louise Brealey, Oliver Ford Davies, Lauren Laverne, Jamael Westman Glastonbury 50 is the authorised, behind-the-scenes, inside story of the music festival that has become a true global phenomenon. The story begins in 1970. The day after Jimi Hendrix's death... dairy farmer Michael Eavis invites revellers to his field in Somerset to attend a 'Pop, Folk & Blues' festival. Tickets are £1 each, enticing more than a thousand customers with the promise of music, dance, poetry, theatre, lights and spontaneous entertainment - as well as free milk from his own Worthy Farm cows. Fast forward through five tumultuous decades and the Eavis's vision now encompasses a gigantic 'city in the fields', with a total annual population nearing a quarter of a million. Tickets sell out within minutes, the show is beamed live to more than 40 countries around the globe, and over 3 million people are registered to attend. Meanwhile, the bill has expanded to include big name performers, artists and designers from every branch of the creative arts. Glastonbury Festival is now the largest outdoor green fields event in the world. Michael and Emily Eavis reveal the stories behind the headlines, and celebrate 50 years of history in the Vale of Avalon. They're joined by a host of big-name contributors from the world of music - among them Adele, JAY-Z, Dolly Parton, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Lars Ulrich and Guy Garvey. They're joined by artists - Stanley Donwood, Kurt Jackson and many more. Writers - Caitlin Moran, Lauren Laverne, Billy Bragg - and by a host of photographers, from Seventies icon Brian Walker to rock and roll legends Jill Furmanovsky and Greg Williams. Together they bring you the magic that makes Glastonbury, Glastonbury.
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2IPLl8l Various Artists: Gemma Whelan, Louise Brealey, Oliver Ford Davies, Lauren Laverne, Jamael Westman Glastonbury 50 is the authorised, behind-the-scenes, inside story of the music festival that has become a true global phenomenon. The story begins in 1970. The day after Jimi Hendrix's death... dairy farmer Michael Eavis invites revellers to his field in Somerset to attend a 'Pop, Folk & Blues' festival. Tickets are £1 each, enticing more than a thousand customers with the promise of music, dance, poetry, theatre, lights and spontaneous entertainment - as well as free milk from his own Worthy Farm cows. Fast forward through five tumultuous decades and the Eavis's vision now encompasses a gigantic 'city in the fields', with a total annual population nearing a quarter of a million. Tickets sell out within minutes, the show is beamed live to more than 40 countries around the globe, and over 3 million people are registered to attend. Meanwhile, the bill has expanded to include big name performers, artists and designers from every branch of the creative arts. Glastonbury Festival is now the largest outdoor green fields event in the world. Michael and Emily Eavis reveal the stories behind the headlines, and celebrate 50 years of history in the Vale of Avalon. They're joined by a host of big-name contributors from the world of music - among them Adele, JAY-Z, Dolly Parton, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Lars Ulrich and Guy Garvey. They're joined by artists - Stanley Donwood, Kurt Jackson and many more. Writers - Caitlin Moran, Lauren Laverne, Billy Bragg - and by a host of photographers, from Seventies icon Brian Walker to rock and roll legends Jill Furmanovsky and Greg Williams. Together they bring you the magic that makes Glastonbury, Glastonbury.
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2IPLl8l Various Artists: Gemma Whelan, Louise Brealey, Oliver Ford Davies, Lauren Laverne, Jamael Westman Glastonbury 50 is the authorised, behind-the-scenes, inside story of the music festival that has become a true global phenomenon. The story begins in 1970. The day after Jimi Hendrix's death... dairy farmer Michael Eavis invites revellers to his field in Somerset to attend a 'Pop, Folk & Blues' festival. Tickets are £1 each, enticing more than a thousand customers with the promise of music, dance, poetry, theatre, lights and spontaneous entertainment - as well as free milk from his own Worthy Farm cows. Fast forward through five tumultuous decades and the Eavis's vision now encompasses a gigantic 'city in the fields', with a total annual population nearing a quarter of a million. Tickets sell out within minutes, the show is beamed live to more than 40 countries around the globe, and over 3 million people are registered to attend. Meanwhile, the bill has expanded to include big name performers, artists and designers from every branch of the creative arts. Glastonbury Festival is now the largest outdoor green fields event in the world. Michael and Emily Eavis reveal the stories behind the headlines, and celebrate 50 years of history in the Vale of Avalon. They're joined by a host of big-name contributors from the world of music - among them Adele, JAY-Z, Dolly Parton, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Lars Ulrich and Guy Garvey. They're joined by artists - Stanley Donwood, Kurt Jackson and many more. Writers - Caitlin Moran, Lauren Laverne, Billy Bragg - and by a host of photographers, from Seventies icon Brian Walker to rock and roll legends Jill Furmanovsky and Greg Williams. Together they bring you the magic that makes Glastonbury, Glastonbury.
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2IPLl8l Various Artists: Gemma Whelan, Louise Brealey, Oliver Ford Davies, Lauren Laverne, Jamael Westman Glastonbury 50 is the authorised, behind-the-scenes, inside story of the music festival that has become a true global phenomenon. The story begins in 1970. The day after Jimi Hendrix's death... dairy farmer Michael Eavis invites revellers to his field in Somerset to attend a 'Pop, Folk & Blues' festival. Tickets are £1 each, enticing more than a thousand customers with the promise of music, dance, poetry, theatre, lights and spontaneous entertainment - as well as free milk from his own Worthy Farm cows. Fast forward through five tumultuous decades and the Eavis's vision now encompasses a gigantic 'city in the fields', with a total annual population nearing a quarter of a million. Tickets sell out within minutes, the show is beamed live to more than 40 countries around the globe, and over 3 million people are registered to attend. Meanwhile, the bill has expanded to include big name performers, artists and designers from every branch of the creative arts. Glastonbury Festival is now the largest outdoor green fields event in the world. Michael and Emily Eavis reveal the stories behind the headlines, and celebrate 50 years of history in the Vale of Avalon. They're joined by a host of big-name contributors from the world of music - among them Adele, JAY-Z, Dolly Parton, Chris Martin, Noel Gallagher, Lars Ulrich and Guy Garvey. They're joined by artists - Stanley Donwood, Kurt Jackson and many more. Writers - Caitlin Moran, Lauren Laverne, Billy Bragg - and by a host of photographers, from Seventies icon Brian Walker to rock and roll legends Jill Furmanovsky and Greg Williams. Together they bring you the magic that makes Glastonbury, Glastonbury.
In this week's mash-up we hear a selection of stories on the theme of recovery. First we hear from from Jilly Moss whose little girl Alba contracted what turned out to be measles before her first vaccination. Jilly tells how frightening it was when no -one could recognise the illness and her daughter became so ill. This interview is with Claire on the phone - so apologies for the sound quality. We also hear from Dave who became obsessed by his weight and describes his recovery from anorexia (season 4 episode 2) and finally Tiff's story of recovery which is absolutely remarkable as she had been diagnosed with terminal cancer (season 3 episode 4) but to the amazement of her rugby-playing husband Tom Youngs and her daughter Maisie and the rest of her family she was told that the cancer had gone. Our podcast recommendation is Emily Eavis on BBC's Desert Island Discs and Jon Ronson's audible original: The Last Days of August.Trigger warnings for this episode: anorexia, cancer. Help and support:NHS website advice on measlesBeat - eating disordersMacmillan -cancer supportYou can support us with likes, shares and reviews. Music credits:Main theme:Title: NancyAuthor: Grimo (http://www.gosoundtrack.com/the-team/)Source: www.gosoundtrack.comLicense: CC By 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Head of PR, Mike Shields, Digital PR Executive Andy Clowes and Head of Ads, Tom Jacobs talk about this year's packed Glastonbury Festival's PR content, from an appearance by David Attenborough and Lewis Capaldi's t-shirt statement, to Emily Eavis managing her public profile in the media. There can be no doubt that this year's festival has been one to remember for many PR reasons as well as the music.
More highlights from another fabulous week of the Zoe Ball Breakfast Show!
Ahead of Glastonbury this weekend, we've done a re-edit of the first ever A-Z of Festivals Podcast to include some juicy bits we couldn't before!After 23 Glastonbury visits, Rob went down to Worthy Farm to chat to Emily Eavis who drives the Glastonbury ship these days.He finds out where they are at with 2019 planning, and her perspective on planning one of the world's biggest and most loved festivals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Emily Eavis is co-organiser of the Glastonbury Festival. Together with her husband and her father, she masterminds the booking of bands and oversees the setting up of what is the largest greenfield festival in the world. The site itself becomes the size of Oxford town centre once it’s built and rigged, and when tickets for 2019 went on sale, they sold out within 36 minutes. Born in 1979, she was a small child when her parents, Jean and Michael, were inspired to make the Glastonbury Festival an annual event, although she wasn’t keen on the yearly invasion of the family farm. By her late teens, however, she had changed her views. She left Worthy Farm to study to be a teacher at Goldsmiths College in London but when, at the end of her first year, her mother was diagnosed with cancer, Emily left and went home to help look after her and to help her father run that year’s festival. Emily never went back to university. Motivated by a visit to Haiti to look at Oxfam projects, she spent a few years in London putting on charity gigs, before returning home to work with her father running the festival. She married her husband, Nick Dewey, manager of The Chemical Brothers in 2009. The couple have three children and live on Worthy Farm. BOOK CHOICE: The Shadow of the Sun by Ryszard Kapuscinski LUXURY: Carpenter’s tool set (so she can build her own veranda) CASTAWAY'S FAVOURITE: You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go by Bob Dylan Presenter: Lauren Laverne Producer: Cathy Drysdale
Rob Da Bank started as a music journalist, reviewing the biggest bands, superclubs and DJs all over the UK. He’s had his own show on BBC Radio 1 and is the co-founder of Bestival & Camp Bestival. He’s a massive fan of travel – whether touring Europe in a yellow camper van called Stella, taking his four kids on sabbatical to Bali or DJing at some of the best parties all over the world. With his own very successful podcast too - The A to Z of Festivals – it’s Rob Da Bank. On this episode we cover: The 1970s dream in a Bedford campervan to the South of France Visiting the Berlin Wall as it was being knocked down His dad still having the same campervan (pre 1976!) Avoiding the campsite warden for a free night Camping with a bell tent His 1970s yellow hippy van called Stella Josie da Bank festivalling a week after a CSection with child number 4 Lisa working for Brighton’s Essential Festival and Harvey Goldsmith The 1999 Eclipse festivals and a cloudy sky Moving to London’s New Cross in the early 90s New Cross being trendy (kinda) Being an 18 year old middle class white kid dropped into gritty South London Being mugged numerous times by the friendly local drug dealer who wanted to go to Wimpy Loving Brixton, Old Street, Shoreditch, Camberwell Josie opening a bar in Shoreditch Being mad for Madchester, Ian Brown, Shaun Ryder and big jeans The trance scene, drum ‘n’ bass and chill out scenes of the time Spiral Tribe raves, Gumbo raves in Oxfordshire, Glastonbury and driving around in a Citroën 2CV Glastonbury’s Emily Eavis on Rob’s festival podcast Vaulting over a fence at Glastonbury to escape security on horses Apologising to Emily and Michael Eavis about the above Sunday Best with Fatboy Slim and Basement Jaxx Teaming up with BBC Radio 1 Travelling across the UK as Clubs Editor at Music Magazine Gatecrasher, Cream, God’s Kitchen and insane superclubs Paul Oakenfold, Sasha, Seb Fontaine and the superstar DJs The North being a bit of a mystery to the South and vice versa Saturday night in Newcastle with everyone dressed to the nines Being sent to interview Basment Jaxx in New York or Todd Terry in Miami or Armand Van Helman in Ibiza The summer in Ibiza that sent him off the rails Paradise turning into hell Matt Haig’s Reasons to Stay Alive and how Matt got f*cked up by Ibiza Learning how being far away from home can get out of hand Mental health issues with DJs in the dance industry – Avicii Not letting the hedonism carrying on too long Doing six years work experience unpaid on the magazine Starting Bestival and being able to call up some well known names Lisa popping round to Norman Cook’s house to interview him Travelling with Josie and their four boys A three month sabbatical round Bali and Indonesia Not dragging six month old babies to Cambodia Camping on the Isle of Wight Combining a DJ gig with holidays – the Maldives, India, Rajasthan, Goa and Josie planning a trip from the Himalayas to Kerala by train India’s comparative lack of health and safety – rickshaws, cows, bikes Soho House now in Mumbai! Zoe Ball heavily pregnant backstage in the dance area at Glastonbury Invented Camp Bestival for their family lifestyle How parents love Camp Bestival Lisa’s love of On Blackheath festival The most amazing Daft Punk pool parties in Miami Accidentally breaking someone’s leg by pushing them in the pool Drinking unidentified green liquid in Santiago de Cuba Fearing for his safety in Sao Paolo, Brazil Getting married on a beach in Scotland An incredible wildwest spaghetti western hotel in Puglia in Italy Borgo Egnazia The Rayavadee Resort in Railay Beach, Krabi, Thailand The ‘fertility cave’ full of with massive penises (see Lisa’s video of this amazing place include the penis cave…) Lisa being attacked by monkeys The incredible feeling of getting married on the beach in Scotland, driving there in a campervan and listening to… well, what will Rob choose for the music question…?
This week we were invited down by Michael and Emily Eavis to see how things are going ahead of this year's Glastonbury, which is returning after a fallow year in 2018.
Starting in the best of places for an a-z with the letter G, it's Glastonbury. After 23 Glastonbury visits, Rob goes down to Worthy Farm to chat to Emily Eavis who drives the Glastonbury ship these days.He finds out where they are at with 2019 planning, and her perspective on planning one of the world's biggest and most loved festivals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week George sits down with Emily Eavis, co-organiser of the world famous Glastonbury Festival. She grew up on Worthy Farm, where the Festival takes place each year, and from her teenage years onwards has played a vital role in every part of the organisation, booking artists across the main stages, coordinating the many different areas and making the magic happen for nearly 200,000 people on site, as well as millions watching live on the BBC. Passionately committed to Glastonbury’s charity partners, Oxfam, Greenpeace and WaterAid, Emily has visited projects in Haiti, Mozambique, South Africa and Japan. This podcast was edited by Warren Borg. The animations and visuals are thanks to Oisin Griffin. Thank you to Josh Sanger and the Closer Artists team. Thanks to Emily for chatting with George. And of course, thank YOU for downloading and supporting this podcast.
With Will Gompertz. Marc Almond and John Harle discuss their new collaboration, The Tyburn Tree, a collection of songs about Gothic London, whose subjects include the Highgate Vampire, Jack The Ripper and the Elizabethan mystic John Dee. 50 years ago the Liverpool Everyman theatre opened its doors to the public for the first time. 40 years ago, Willy Russell provided the theatre with his first big hit play and their first London transfer - John, Paul, George, Ringo... and Bert. As the Everyman re-opens after an extensive three-year building project, Willy Russell discusses the theatre's past. Gemma Bodinetz, Artistic Director of the Everyman and Playhouse theatres, and theatre writer Lyn Gardner discuss what the role of the theatre building should be in the 21st century. Gary Shteyngart, the Russian-born American author, whose books include The Russian Debutante's Handbook and Super Sad True Love Story, has recently released his memoir, Little Failure. Named after the nickname bestowed upon him by his mother, the book documents Gary's childhood in the Soviet Union, his move to America at the age of seven, and his life thereafter as a Russian Jewish immigrant and wannabe writer. Glastonbury was named Best Festival at last night's NME Awards and this morning Dolly Parton announced that she has been booked for this year. Emily Eavis explains how they choose their megastar line-ups and what she intends to do with the festival as she takes a more prominent role in its planning. Producer: Ellie Bury.
Edith's live in Glastonbury with festival-going Mums, and also catches up with organiser Emily Eavis, who recently had her second child. Colin leads a discussion on why so many pregnancies end in C-section, and Beverley Turner is there in the operating theatre when one of our Bump Club Mums gives birth. We also hear from the woman behind the lullaby versions of rock songs we've been playing.