Glastonbury Festival have well and truly delivered on their promise for a spectacular tribute to late music icon David Bowie.

The music event's world-famous Pyramid Stage is this year crowned with the British legend's famous Aladdin Sane lightning bolt, resulting in a glorious mark of memorial for the talent.

It will tower above this weekend's acts taking to the stage – including headliners Muse, Adele and Coldplay.

A tribute to British musician David Bowie decorating the top of The Pyramid Stage at the Glastonbury Festival of Music and Performing Arts on Worthy Farm near the village of Pilton in Somerset, South West England. Heavy rain in the days leading up to event have created muddy conditions for the festival goers.pinterest
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"Obviously with his relationship with the festival going back so far to 1971, we really wanted to mark it as if it were his stage, because he had such a relationship with Glastonbury," organiser Emily Eavis previously explained.

"We are also doing a Lemmy tribute on the Other stage which is really good but it has to remain a surprise, because if I try to explain what we're trying to make it look like it wouldn't sound half as good as it's going to be!"

And boy, does the tribute to the Motorhead star on the Other Stage look special.

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A picture taken on June 22, 2016 shows a tribute to Motorhead frontman Lemmy decorating the top of The Pyramid Stage at the Glastonbury Festival of Music and Performing Arts on Worthy Farm near the village of Pilton in Somerset, South West England.pinterest
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There are also some special visual tributes to Prince yet to be unveiled, too.

"There will be all sorts of things popping up all the time," Eavis said. "At the moment we've got a few Prince visual tributes and a few late night parties in Block 9 and various other places across the site."

Glastonbury opened its gates yesterday morning (June 22) as the skies poured with rain, causing traffic chaos as festival-goers queued in their vehicles to get on site.

The weather and traffic cleared up by the evening though, with revellers able to enjoy the site and first-night fireworks.