
Glastonbury Festival is over for another year, but for those who want to relive the experience or catch up on what they missed out on, a selection of highlights from 2025’s edition are available to watch now on BBC iPlayer.
The BBC’s festival broadcasting ran across the weekend, with multiple sets from the Pyramid Stage, The Other Stage, The West Holts Stage, The Park Stage and Woodsies all being shown on people’s TVs at home.
Electronic performances available to watch back include The Prodigy’s set from The Other Stage on Sunday night (29th June). For their first appearance at Worthy Farm since the death of Keith Flint in 2019, the iconic rave act tore through classics like 'Out of Space', ‘Voodoo People’ and 'Firestarter'. The set was dedicated to Flint.
Other electronic sets you can watch include those from Overmono, Floating Points, Four Tet, Caribou, Maribou State and Gary Numan. You can also watch a surprise set from Skepta, who filled in for Deftones at the last minute due to their cancellation, and performances from Loyle Carner, Busta Rhymes, Kae Tempest, Pa Salieu, Pinkpantheress and more.
You can also watch Charli XCX, who played what was arguably one of the most anticipated shows of the festival, headlining the Other Stage on Saturday night, a clash with Pyramid Stage headliner Neil Young, whose set was not streamed.
One of the most talked-about sets of the festival was that of Irish rap group Kneecap, who played to a full-capacity crowd in the Saturday afternoon sunshine on the West Holts stage amidst the controversy surrounding a terror charge being brought against member Mo Chara. While the set was conspicuously absent from the BBC’s broadcasting schedule, it is now available to watch in full online.
The performance by Bob Vylan — who played just before Kneecap on the West Holts stage — was livestreamed by the BBC instead, but sparked significant controversy of its own after the UK duo's frontman led chants of “free, free Palestine” and “death, death to the IDF”. A BBC spokesperson later called the comments "deeply offensive" while Glastonbury organisers also said they were "appalled".
In an Instagram statement captioned “I said what I said”, Bob Vylan wrote: “It is incredibly important that we encourage and inspire future generations to pick up the torch that was passed to us. Let us display to them loudly and visibly the right thing to do when we want and need change. Let them see us marching in the streets, campaigning on ground level, organising online and shouting about it on any and every stage that we are offered. Today it is a change in school dinners, tomorrow it is a change in foreign policy.”
Find all of the sets available to watch back on BBC iPlayer here.