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A government plan announced on July 14, 2026: extension of festival licenses and support for musicians. What this could mean for the drum & bass scene in the UK.
It's been a long time since we've had a positive signal from above, from the UK. For years, British festivals have been struggling: rising insurance costs, electricity expenses, local authorizations dragging on, events closing or postponing. So when the government announces, on July 14, 2026, a plan to extend the duration of festival licenses and support musicians, we look up.
Mixmag puts the news on the front page the same day. It's a government plan - therefore still at the stage of political announcement, with its open questions (specific modalities, implementation schedule, eligibility of events). But the intention is there.
Drum & bass in the UK stands thanks to structuring festival cores: Boomtown, Hospitality on the Beach, Rampage (neighboring Belgian but very British in its lineup), Detonate, not to mention all the mid-sized events that create the territorial network - Bristol, Manchester, Leeds, Sheffield. These intermediate capacities are exactly those that licensing procedures can kill when they become too heavy.
A license extension, concretely, means:
On the "support for musicians" side, we'll have to wait for the details - are we talking about mobility aid (post-Brexit file that has been poisoning UK DJs' European tours since 2021), support for local scenes, devices for emerging artists?
To be continued in our agenda watch. If you are an organizer or artist and this plan concretely changes your plans, write to us.
Patrimonialisation de la scène rave/jungle UK 90s