One of London’s most anticipated electronic festivals is back again this summer with a stacked lineup, fresh stage collabs, and more variety than ever. Field Day 2025 is coming in loud, proud, and genre-fluid, planting its flag at Brockwell Park with six stages ready for some of the most exciting names in global underground music. This year’s return is all about varitey- in energy, genre, and identity. Whether you're chasing the sunrise at a house set or locked into the depths of jungle at 160bpm, there’s a home for you here. The stage partners- Bugged Out!, Corsica Studios, Sisu x Dazed Club, and more, have curated soundscapes that reflect the cutting edge of dance music in 2025.
Field Day’s marquee moment belongs to Peggy Gou, who headlines the festival following the release of her long-awaited debut LP, “I Hear You”. Her set will no doubt be a euphoric, high-gloss tour through house, techno, electro, and pop-laced anthems like “(It Goes Like) Nanana” and “I Believe in Love Again.” From Berlin to Brockwell Park, Gou’s global reign continues, and Field Day is the perfect stage for her hypnotic blend of old-school and next-gen dancefloor heat.
AK SPORTS, the LA/London-based trailblazer, is primed to melt minds with a set that spans hard techno, psy-trance, breakbeat, and beyond. With their Club Madhouse imprint making waves and Boiler Room sets turning heads, AK is an electrifying act on the circuit right now.
Then there’s Bubble Love, the cheeky, high-BPM alias of Ross From Friends, who’s traded in lo-fi melancholia for ecstatic, hands-up house. His new single “Believe” has been tearing through sets all summer, and his Field Day performance promises to be a joyride through character-driven club music.
Closing out the must-see picks is Folamour, the French maestro known for lush, live instrumentation and feel-good funk-disco hybrids. If your festival needs a sunset moment filled with groove, soul, and a whole lot of heart- this is it.
Field Day 2025 is the event this year that you don’t want to miss. Whether you’re there for the dancefloor institutions or the best of electronics emerging artists, it’s a reminder that this festival remains a cornerstone of the UK’s electronic calendar.
See you in the crowd.