Long before “Glasto” became all about high fences, giant video screens, corporate advertising and exorbitant ticket prices (it used to be free!), the events were far simpler – based around the summer solstice, ley lines and as much free love as you could stand. Thankfully, for those of us too young to have experienced such a time, aspiring director Nicolas Roeg popped along to Worthy Farm for the second Glastonbury Fayre in 1971 and recorded those innocent and groundbreaking times for posterity. An audience of just 12,000 revelled in nudity, spirituality, idealism, drug-fuelled hippie dancing, free love in the open fields, impromptu percussion bands, Hare Krishna processions, 70s-style camping, mud wrestling and even a bit of music (including a scorching performance of 'Gimme Some Loving' from Steve Winwood and Traffic). Other musical performances captured in the film include Arthur Brown, Family, Fairport Convention, Gong, Kingdom Come, Melanie, Quintessence, Linda Lewis, Terry Reid, Trumpton and the Riots, Tonto’s Expanding Head Band and Bostik Swastika.