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News · 17 July 2026

Blue Reef Festival 2026: How One Man’s Vision Became One of Kent’s Most Loved Independent Festivals

Blue Reef Festival 2026: How One Man’s Vision Became One of Kent’s Most Loved Independent Festivals

What began as an ambitious idea during one of the most uncertain periods in recent history has grown into one of Kent’s most welcoming independent music festivals.

Ahead of this year’s Blue Reef Festival, GlitterBeam welcomed founder Jon to the Auravine Studio and Carole-Anne to talk about the remarkable journey from launching a brand-new festival during the COVID-19 pandemic to creating an event that thousands of music lovers now look forward to every summer.

Launching a festival is never easy. Launching one during a pandemic seemed almost impossible.

Yet that’s exactly what happened.

“We were the last man standing,” Jon recalled, reflecting on the festival’s first year.

Taking a leap when everyone else stopped

Blue Reef Festival was originally planned for 2020, just as the UK was emerging from lockdown restrictions. When government guidance changed once again, many advised Jon to cancel.

Instead, he studied the regulations, invested in additional safety measures and decided to go ahead.

It was a gamble that paid off.

With almost every other event cancelled, Blue Reef became one of the few places where people could safely come together after months of isolation.

Jon compares that moment to the famous scene from Forrest Gump, where Forrest’s shrimp boat is the only one left after a storm.

“We were the only thing that was going on.”

For visitors, it became much more than a music festival. It was a chance to reconnect with friends, dust off camping equipment that had been packed away for months and simply enjoy being around other people again.

Growing the right way

Now preparing for its sixth edition, Blue Reef Festival has grown steadily rather than chasing rapid expansion.

For Jon, that has been a deliberate decision.

Instead of becoming dramatically bigger overnight, each year has been another step forward, allowing the team to learn, improve and develop the event sustainably.

Despite six years of experience, Jon admits there is still plenty to learn.

Running a festival involves far more than booking bands. From licensing and health and safety to marketing, graphic design, negotiations with agents and event management, every year brings new challenges.

Behind it all is a surprisingly small core team.

“It’s really me and my daughter,” Jon explained, alongside what he describes as an “army of volunteers.”

His daughter has been involved since she was just 12 years old, attending meetings and learning every aspect of festival organisation. Now 18, she has already built experience that many people spend years acquiring.

More than just headliners

Blue Reef has welcomed well-known artists including Happy Mondays, Starsailor, Scouting for Girls, Dodgy, The Bluetones and Reef, while this year’s festival is headlined by Kula Shaker.

Jon acknowledges that headline acts help people discover the festival for the first time.

“When people look at a festival, the first thing they see is the headline.”

But, he insists, that’s only part of the story.

Blue Reef isn’t built around celebrity names.

It’s built around atmosphere.

Visitors consistently tell the organisers about the relaxed, friendly and welcoming feeling they experience throughout the weekend.

“It’s about creating a vibe,” Jon said.

“It’s very safe, it’s very friendly, and there’s a hell of a lot of love in that field.”

That philosophy shapes every decision, from ticket pricing to the layout of the site and the overall experience visitors take home.

Championing new music

One of Blue Reef Festival’s defining features is its commitment to emerging artists.

Alongside established names, the festival’s Introducing Stage gives hundreds of unsigned and developing musicians the opportunity to perform before a live festival audience.

For many artists, opportunities like this are increasingly difficult to find.

Jon says the festival receives hundreds of applications each year from musicians hoping to secure a slot.

Supporting new talent remains just as important as booking headline acts.

For music fans, it also means discovering artists they may never have encountered elsewhere.

Keeping festivals accessible

While many festivals have increased ticket prices in response to rising costs, Blue Reef has deliberately kept its prices unchanged from last year.

Jon admits this makes organising the event more difficult financially, but believes affordability is important for visitors facing ongoing cost-of-living pressures.

Rather than maximising profits, the focus remains on delivering an enjoyable weekend where people feel welcome.

That community-first approach extends throughout the festival.

Local suppliers, local businesses and local infrastructure all play an important role in making Blue Reef happen, helping support the surrounding economy while keeping the festival firmly rooted in Kent.

Built by volunteers

Although Jon often becomes the public face of Blue Reef Festival, he was quick to emphasise that the event simply couldn’t happen without its volunteers.

Dozens of people give up their time every year to help build, manage and run the festival.

“If it wasn’t for them, we couldn’t do it.”

Their contribution allows Blue Reef to remain independent while maintaining the welcoming atmosphere that has become its trademark.

Looking ahead

Asked about comparisons with the early days of Glastonbury, Jon was both surprised and flattered.

While he knows Blue Reef still has its own journey ahead, he believes the comparison reflects the festival’s grassroots spirit, relaxed atmosphere and sense of community.

Whether or not it follows a similar path, Blue Reef has already carved out its own identity.

What started as an anniversary celebration for Jon’s former business, Blue Reef Campers, has become one of Kent’s standout independent festivals, proving that passion, persistence and community can turn even the boldest idea into reality.

Blue Reef Festival returns to Loddington Farm near Maidstone on 24 and 25 July, bringing together established artists, emerging talent and music lovers for another weekend celebrating live music, creativity and community.

For tickets and the full line-up, visit bluereeffestival.co.uk.

Watch The Interview in the video below:

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