Glastonbury Still Not Sold Out

?With just a day before the gates swing open, Glastonbury festival still has about 3000 tickets left unsold, which means it could be the first time in 15 years that the festival has not sold out in advance. Often blaming the mud in recent years for putting people off, Jay-Z is now the target for the reason of slow sales.

Organiser Michael Eavis said: “There’s a lot at stake. We really do need a good year this year, that’s for sure.”

Last year a total of 137,500 tickets went on sale in April, selling out in an hour and 45 minutes. “There were about 3,000 left this morning,” Mr Eavis told the BBC News website on Tuesday.

“But they are going out slowly. We did about 800 yesterday so we’ll just about scrape home without losing my shirt.”

Scrambling to make himself feel better and those who would normally go, worse, Mr Eavis said the charities that receive money from the festival - Water Aid, Oxfam and Greenpeace - were likely to lose out as a result of any unsold tickets and the rising cost of staging the event.

“The costs have gone up such a lot since we set the [ticket] price,” Mr Eavis said. “The diesel cost has gone up by ?160,000 for the generators and all the tractors.” The event aims to give ?2m to the charities every year. “The charity money will have to be reduced, I think,” he said. “We’ve got ?1m going to charity already, but it’s the second million that’s the problem if we don’t sell out.”

Music fans will arrive at the site from 8am tomorrow, before the music starts on Friday.

Mr Eavis, who founded the festival on his farm 38 years ago, said he was most looking forward to Amy Winehouse’s appearance on Saturday, which was “finally confirmed”. But this year has seen controversy over the choice of Jay-Z to top the bill on Saturday.

Oasis load-mouth Noel Gallagher said it was “wrong” for the event to have a hip-hop headliner. But Mr Eavis responded: “I’m thrilled about it. I think it’s going to be an absolutely brilliant evening.”

The festival had been the victim of the “great British tradition is of kicking down the people who are at the top of their game”, he added.
“We’re at the top of our game, or we have been. So we’re sitting targets for criticism.

“It’s quite natural that we should get a kicking and for some reasons we probably needed it. I’m proving this year that we’re going to bounce back and it’s going to be a vintage Glastonbury year.

“There’s a lot at stake. We really do need a good year this year, that’s for sure, with the weather and everything.”

After mudbaths at the past two festivals, Mr Eavis said the forecast for this year was “fine and dry with one or two spots of rain”.

“We might get 1mm of rain on Saturday, which is just what we need because it is quite dusty at the moment,” he said. “So a short shower from the heavens will be gratefully received.”

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