The final names joining Massive Attack at their LIDO Festival headline show have been shared. Check out the details below.
The Bristol trip-hop duo will be taking to the stage as headliners on Friday June 6, and it’ll mark their first festival appearance in London in nine years.
As well as performing some of their biggest hits, Robert Del Naja and co. will also continue their groundbreaking work with Act 1.5 to decarbonise live music events. This means, thanks to an ongoing partnership with Ecotricity, their LIDO set will be entirely powered by battery, significantly reducing carbon emissions and local air pollution.
French electronic band AIR were previously announced as supporting them at the upcoming event, as were Yasiin Bey (formerly known as Mos Def) and The Alchemist – who are set to release an album together under the name FORENSICS – and Tirzah.
Now, the final run of names has been added to the bill. These include upcoming artist from South London, Hunny, who is signed to Warner Records & The Coalition and has already made waves with a sold-out residency at The HAC in 2024.
Everything Is Recorded – an ingenious project by record producer Richard Russell – joins the line-up too, as does Palestinian musical 47SOUL, which blends influences from hip-hop, electronica, folk and more.
Mad Professor is also set to perform on June 6, and has collaborated several times with Massive Attack in the past. He also worked as a producer on ‘No Protection’ – a remix of the collective’s mega second album, ‘Protection’ – in 1995, as well as teaming up with the group for the release of ‘Massive Attack vs Mad Professor Part II (Mezzanine Remix Tapes ’98)’ in 2019.
Completing the line-up is Bristol pioneer DJ Milo, who is a founding member of the multi-genre sound system called The Wild Bunch and is known for blending genres like funk, reggae, punk, new wave, afrobeat, disco, hip-hop, electro and Chicago house. Find the updated poster below and available tickets here.

The huge London event will follow Massive Attack’s Act 1.5 concert in Bristol last summer (which became the UK’s biggest low-carbon gig ever) and subsequent Act 1.5 “climate action accelerator” shows in Liverpool that featured IDLES and Nile Rodgers.
“To present London’s first ever 100 per cent battery-powered festival day with a dynamic range of artists is an optimum outcome for us,” Del Naja said. “History shows it’s often the combination of art and science that overcomes the greatest challenges we face, so it’s good to see LIDO take learnings from our Act 1.5 event last year and apply those technologies to where they see emissions coming from.”
“Clean productions beginning this journey to normalisation is good news for everyone, but especially for music fans that come to festivals and the local communities that live around them.”
LIDO Festival 2025 will also see headline sets from Charli XCX, London Grammar and Jamie xx. On top of that, LIDO is due to host the new London leg of Outbreak Festival which will be headlined by Turnstile.
Last year, Massive Attack spoke to NME and discussed their ongoing efforts to tackle the climate crisis, as well as how they turned down the chance to play Coachella 2025. Of new music, they said: “We do have some new music which we’ve been sitting on for four years…
“Hopefully we’re going to be able to release it next year and do some gigs. Obviously we’ve set a standard for ourselves now [with Act 1.5], and we’re going to stick with it. To get given that Race to Zero artist recognition. We’ll stick with it.”
Soft Play‘s Laurie Vincent has launched a new band, Big Truck. Check out their first single, ‘Central Reservation Blues’, below.
Big Truck sees Vincent joined by Sam Coppins on drums, Asa Thallon on guitar and Justin Myles on keys.
‘Central Reservation Blues’ comes from an upcoming debut album, though no title or release date has currently been announced.
Departing from the raw, frenetic sounds of Soft Play, the song embraces heartland rock and 80s indie music, drawing on inspiration from The Cure and The Smiths.
Speaking on the track, Vincent says: “I missed my partner’s birthday and my son’s birthday when I was in America. I’m no good at numbers, and I tend to miss those details when we’ve got a big touring operation and things are booked a year in advance. Those birthdays I missed will be remembered forever, whereas I can’t even remember those gigs that I played.”
Listen below.
Big Truck is formed around Vincent and Coppin’s longtime friendship, with the two meeting as part of the Tunbridge Wells music scene 20 years ago.
They’ll play a series of live dates later this year, including a performance at The Great Escape in May. Check out a full list below and find tickets here.
MAY
8 – The Waiting Room, London
15 – The Great Escape, Brighton
23 – Trades Club, Hebden Bridge
28 – The Exchange, Bristol
JUNE
19 – Yes (Pink Room), Manchester
20 – Hangar 34, Liverpool
JULY
4 – Tattoo Convention, Bristol
11 – 2000trees, Cheltenham
17 – Esquires, Bedford
25 – Where Else?, Margate
AUGUST
1 – The Forum, Tunbridge Wells
NME met Soft Play backstage at Reading Festival last year, where they shared details on their new album and hailed Kneecap for inspiring them to speak about Palestine.
“We took too long to come to the forefront, but then going on tour with Kneecap in the US and watching three of the most eloquent people I’ve ever met talk about it onstage fearlessly and educate us, and show that standing up for people that don’t have a voice is so purposeful… The media makes you believe we’re gonna lose everything if we do it, as well, when the reality is the people in the crowd are there with you,” Vincent told us.