Simple Things returns to Bristol this October for the latest edition of the multi-venue music festival

Simple Things returns to Bristol this October for the latest edition of the multi-venue music festival

Posted on: 02 Oct 2017

Simple Things Festival returns to the city for a cracking showcase of some of the finest musical talent from Friday 20th to Saturday 21st October 2017.

***GET TICKETS HERE***

Simple Things boasts another impressive lineup for 2017, including Leftfield, Omar Souleyman and Shanti Celeste.

 

Returning to Bristol for its seventh year, kicking off on Friday at Motion then shifting to the legendary Colston Hall plus a slew of other local venues, the festival is a flagship event that represents a barnstorming collaboration of some of the region's leading, most esteemed promoters.

 

A joint venture put together by a combination of organisers from Colston Hall, Crack Magazine and the Love Saves The Day team, simple things uses a mixture of established venues and DIY gig spaces to present a celebration of true musical diversity in a genuinely unique configuration.

 

Included in the roster of first-class musical talent are the likes of John Maus, Omar Souleyman, Dre Skull and Kahn & Neek, with plenty to more to be added to the line-up over the coming weeks.  Two of the main headliners will be dance music pioneers Leftfield, who will perform their complete seminal 1995 record 'Leftism', and Mercury-nominated art-rockers Wild Beasts.

 

An incredible weekend of top-notch performer and excellent music - yep, Bristol is the undisputed master of festivals like this - final release tickets are £40 plus booking fee and are available on this link: SIMPLE THINGS 2017 TICKETS.

 

You can find out more about Simple Things, keep up with newly announced acts and purchase tickets via the Crack Magazine website here.

 


Article by:

Jamie Caddick

Jamie is a writer, blogger, journalist, critic, film fan, soundtrack nerd and all-round Bristolian good egg.  He loves the music of Philip Glass, the art of Salvador Dali, the writings of Charles Bukowksi and Hunter S Thompson, the irreverence of Harry Hill, and the timeless, straw-chomping exuberance of The Wurzels.  You can sometimes find him railing against a surging tide of passing cyclists, or gorging himself senseless on the Oriental delights of a Cosmos all-you-can-eat buffet.