Mucky Weekender 2026 Line-Up Lands for September Return Article Image
18th March 2026

Mucky Weekender 2026 Line-Up Lands for September Return

Mucky Weekender reveals its 2026 line-up with Goldie, Roni Size, and more set for a genre-spanning weekend at Vicarage Farm this September.

There is always a strange moment at the end of festival season where everything starts to blur together. Big names repeat, stages feel interchangeable, and you are mostly running on habit by that point.

Mucky Weekender has managed to avoid that drift.

The 2026 line-up, now confirmed for 10–12 September at Vicarage Farm, leans into what the festival does well without overcomplicating it. A mix of drum and bass, reggae, breaks, house, and everything in between, but held together by a clear sense of who the weekend is actually for.

Not casual passers-through. People who want to be there.

Goldie and Roni Size, different energies, same weight

At the top of the bill, Goldie brings a live show, which always carries a slightly different kind of tension. The structure opens up more than a DJ set, there is room for things to stretch, and occasionally veer off somewhere unexpected before pulling back into focus.

Alongside that, Roni Size offers a contrast that makes sense once you think about it. His sets tend to sit deeper in the groove, less about dramatic shifts and more about sustained movement. It is a pairing that reflects two sides of the same lineage without forcing a narrative around it.

Both still very capable of moving a crowd without needing to remind anyone why they are on the line-up.

Depth where it counts

Further down, the strength of the weekend becomes clearer.

David Rodigan, Norman Jay MBE, DJ Hype with MC GQ, Doc Scott, Micky Finn. DJs who understand how to build and hold a set properly, not just drop moments. That difference becomes obvious once you are a few hours in, when the energy needs managing rather than forcing.

It is easy to stack a line-up with names. It is harder to build one that actually works across a full weekend.

This leans toward the latter.

Movement between sounds

What stands out is how comfortably the line-up moves between styles without making a point of it. Mr Scruff into Krafty Kuts. The Freestylers into something heavier. Leftfield on DJ duties sitting alongside drum and bass stalwarts.

On paper it should feel disjointed. In practice, it tends to flow once you are on site, moving between stages without that sense of reset you get at larger festivals.

You are not constantly recalibrating. You just carry on.

The rest of it

The “Circus of Freaks” theme returns for 2026, which will likely land somewhere between fully committed and slightly chaotic, as it usually does. Costumes, small bits of performance, things happening around the edges rather than directly in front of you.

It adds texture without taking over.

More importantly, the crowd tends to meet it halfway. People stay open, conversations happen easily, and the whole thing settles into a rhythm that feels more like a shared weekend than a series of headline moments.

End of season, but not an afterthought

There is a temptation to treat September festivals as a final stretch before everything moves indoors. Mucky Weekender does not really come across that way.

The 2026 line-up suggests something more considered. Not bigger for the sake of it, not louder than everything else that came before, but put together with a clear understanding of how people actually move through a weekend like this.

You arrive, you find your pace, and somewhere along the way, it all clicks into place.

That is usually when it works best.

For more info, visit: https://mucky-weekender.co.uk/

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