Glastonbury Organiser Michael Eavis To Rename Festival For 2019 Site Move

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Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis has addressed speculation over whether the festival will be renamed when it moves location, confirming that a new moniker is be on the cards.

The Eavis family is currently in talks to host the festival at a new site - which has not been revealed - in 2019, which lead many fans to question whether or not it would still be known as Glastonbury.

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Michael Eavis
Dylan Martinez / Reuters

Now, speaking on Glastonbury FM, Michael has revealed that the event would be catchily titled ‘The Glastonbury Festival Team Presents The Variety Bazaar’.

He tells the channel’s host Paul Cannon (via Somerset Live): “That’s a good name don’t you think?

“I’ve been a risk-taker all my life. In 47 years of taking risks, so far touch wood, I haven’t come unstuck. This might be one risk too far, I don’t know.”

After the 2017 event, Glastonbury will take a year off, and if all goes to plan, it will return at the new, mystery spot in 2019.

Michael’s daughter Emily has also taken to Twitter to address the matter, suggesting that the 2019 event should be seen as a new festival in its own right: 

Last month, Michael revealed that the new site is 100 miles from the current Somerset location, adding: “I’m arranging to move the show [but] it would be a huge loss to Somerset if it went there forever.

“We’ve got a wonderful product and what we do, we can do it almost anywhere.

“I love my own farm... I might have to move it eventually. Most people are on side now and it’s a wonderful, wonderful boost for the whole of Somerset and beyond as well.

“I don’t want to lose it forever, no way.”

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Music - Glastonbury Festival 1971 - Worthy FarmTwo Glastonbury festival goers.
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Glastonbury Festival 1971 - Worthy FarmA woman taking a child for a walk at the Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton.
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Glastonbury FestivalGlastonbury, Sommerset - June 1971
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Glastonbury FestivalGlastonbury, Sommerset - June 1971
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Glastonbury FestivalGlastonbury, Sommerset - June 1971
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Glastonbury Festival 1971 - Worthy FarmHitchhikers at the Glastonbury Festival, Worthy Farm, Pilton.
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GLASTONBURY, ENGLAND - JUNE 26: Ellis Cameron, 21 (L) and Iona Bruce, 21 from Scotland pose for a photograph as they arrive at the Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts site at Worthy Farm, in Pilton at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 26, 2013 near Glastonbury, England. Gates opened today at the Somerset diary farm that will be playing host to one of the largest music festivals in the world and this year features headline acts Artic Monkeys, Mumford and Sons and the Rolling Stones. Tickets to the event which is now in its 43rd year sold out in minutes and that was before any of the headline acts had been confirmed. The festival, which started in 1970 when several hundred hippies paid 1 GBP to watch Marc Bolan, now attracts more than 175,000 people over five days. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images) (credit:Getty Images)
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A plastic pyramid shelters the dais and is surrounded by smaller tents of participants at Worthy farm, Pilton, for the Glastonbury festival. June 1971
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Rain clouds gather over the still being constructed Pyramid Stage at the Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts site at Worthy Farm, in Pilton on June 13, 2013 near Glastonbury, England. In a couple of weeks the diary farm in Somerset will be playing host to one of the largest music festivals in the world and this year features headline acts Artic Monkeys, Mumford and Sons and the Rolling Stones. Tickets to the event which is now in its 43rd year sold out in minutes and that was before any of the headline acts had been confirmed. The festival, which started in 1970 when several hundred hippies paid 1 GBP to watch Marc Bolan, now attracts more than 175,000 people over five days.
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Three men dressed as priests walking in the Tent Field22 Jun 1971
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People sit in front of the newly erected tents at the Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts site at Worthy Farm, in Pilton at Worthy Farm, Pilton on June 26, 2013 near Glastonbury, England. Gates opened today at the Somerset diary farm that will be playing host to one of the largest music festivals in the world and this year features headline acts Artic Monkeys, Mumford and Sons and the Rolling Stones. Tickets to the event which is now in its 43rd year sold out in minutes and that was before any of the headline acts had been confirmed. The festival, which started in 1970 when several hundred hippies paid 1 GBP to watch Marc Bolan, now attracts more than 175,000 people over five days.
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Festivalgoer's dance beside the Pyramid stage on the second day of the Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts near Glastonbury, southwest England on June 27, 2013.