

Despite the muted, unmoved and generally unenthusiastic crowd The Horrors remained unfathomed as they rattled through a brilliant set. The local acts that showed great potential Get Inuit, Fickle Friends, First Family, Phoria and Fish Tank.Ī band who have always set the bar high in terms of performance and their set at Forgotten Fields was no different.

With the festival being held on the border between Kent and Sussex, the Horizons stage, which promised to be a hotspot for discovering the best in upcoming talent, certainly had its fair share of potential to uncover. Classics like ‘Good Luck’, ‘Jump n Shout’ and ‘Red Alert’ saw the crowd dancing in unison and as the screams of ‘Where’s your head out’ faded away as the set came to a close, everyone left with a smile on their face.

Felix Buxton and Simon Ratcliffe almost took a back seat as various performing artists, entertainers and main-stay singers Vula Malinga and Sharlene Hector took centre stage to create a real carnival atmosphere. The 20 year dance music veterans showcased the best in British electronic music with an exciting and invigorating live set that spanned the rather illustrious career they have enjoyed. The perfect Friday night headliners put on one hell of a party for all the family.
