Want to watch Radiohead perform at Glastonbury Festival 2017?
Radiohead will return to headline the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury Festival 2017 at 9.30pm-11.45pm on Friday, June 23.
Radiohead will be preceded by Royal Blood and The xx, and BBC Two will show Radiohead's set in full. This will be 20 years after the BBC first broadcast the band's headline slot at the festival in 1997.
BBC Radio 6's Tom Ravenscroft will be live from Worthy Farm with headline sets from Radiohead on Friday night (9pm-12am) and Foo Fighters on Saturday night (9pm-12am), as well as hosting a Sunday evening show (8pm-10pm). If you can't watch things live, then hop on iPlayer and click on bbc.co.uk/glastonbury for highlights.
The BBC will have the most comprehensive coverage of the festival with shows across BBC Two, BBC Four and BBC Radio 3. TV coverage will be headed up by Alice Levine, Clara Amfo, Huw Stephens, James Ballardie, Jo Whiley, Lauren Laverne, Mark Radcliffe and Nick Grimshaw.
Meanwhile, BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2 and BBC Radio 6 Music will all air shows from Worthy Farm. Then there's iPlayer, which will stream 120 performances from six stages across the festival, all in HD and available to watch on BBC iPlayer, both live and on demand during the festival and for 30 days afterwards.
If you've missed the beginning of the set and have a connected TV, you'll be able to go back to the start of the performance by pressing the red button. And of course, you'll be able to do the same on BBC iPlayer.
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Elsewhere, to celebrate 20 years since BBC Two first broadcast Radiohead's headline set from the Pyramid Stage, they'll devote a whole evening to the set on Friday, June 23.
They'll also do the same for Foo Fighters on Saturday, June 24, Ed Sheeran on Sunday, June 25, and the Bee Gees' Barry Gibb, who'll appear in the Sunday teatime slot.
The festival has now released its full lineup, along with the times and an official EE app which allows you to plan your weekend if you're lucky enough to be attending. They've also announced plans to increase security in the wake of the recent UK terror attacks.
Bob Shennan, Director BBC Radio & Music, said: "Glastonbury on the BBC has become the pop music highlight of the British summer. BBC Music is thrilled to be offering music lovers so many ways to experience the unique atmosphere of the world's most famous music festival – at home or on the move.
"This year we will broadcast 30 hours of TV coverage, as well as live broadcasts on Radio 1, 1Xtra, Radio 2, 6 Music and for the first time, Radio 3. There will be well over a hundred performances streamed online - bringing an unsurpassed range of music to our audience, from multi-million selling headline acts to emerging artists on the BBC Music Introducing stage."
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Laurence Mozafari (he/him) is a multi-award winning journalist, editor, and presenter. A former Editor-in-Chief of Digital Spy, Laurence previously held roles as the site's Editor, Deputy Editor, and Associate Editor focusing on news, social, and video. Laurence hosted the BBC Sounds podcast Obsessed with Peaky Blinders in 2019. He also hosts his own podcast production, Time of My Life, where he interviews fascinating elders about their life lessons, including Only Fools and Horses' Sir David Jason, Star Trek’s George Takei and Bridgerton’s Adjoa Andoh.
Laurence was named Editorial Director – Youth Audience at Reach in early 2025. Prior to joining Digital Spy, he was previously at Bauer Media working as Digital Editor of Heat magazine's website Heatworld.com, and has also worked at and written for Sky, NME, Q magazine, Grazia, Closer, FHM and dedicated careers website GoThinkBig. He secured a first-class BA journalism degree at Staffordshire University, along with several NCTJ qualifications, and now has 14 years' experience in digital publishing covering TV, movies, music, gaming, tech, showbiz, and travel.
Laurence has been a broadcasting contributor on television and radio, including KISS, Heat Radio, BBC Radio London, Radio 5 Live, and BBC Breakfast.
He is also a visiting lecturer at various universities teaching journalism, including City, University of London, Nottingham Trent, Staffordshire University and London Metropolitan. Laurence has won numerous awards in his journalism career, including the BSME Talent Award’s Best Deputy Editor, the PPA's 30 Under 30, and the New Editor and Editor of the Year at the AOP and BSMEs. He led Digital Spy to win PPA's Digital Content Team of the Year twice, along with the British Media Awards’ Brand of the Year in 2021.
Laurence joined the committee for the British Society of Magazine Editors in 2022 and was named vice-chair in 2025. He has since hosted panels with CEOs of Immediate Media and the Media Trust at the PPA Festival, as well as presenting his own radio show on Green Man Radio at Green Man Festival in 2022. Laurence is also a Brits voting academy member.
Laurence has been lucky enough to interview numerous celebrities, actors, and musicians throughout his career. Arnold Schwarzenegger loved his hair, Jimmy Carr loved his coat and Antonio Banderas gave a shout-out to his mum. Laurence has covered set visits for The Witcher on Netflix and Marvel’s Inhumans, he got Daisy Ridley to do a Chewbacca impression and loves Marvel, PlayStation, Glastonbury and craft beer. Linkedin















