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CULTURE

Five music festivals happening in Denmark this summer

Summer is the season of festivals in Denmark, so if you've been patiently waiting for nice weather, exciting line-ups, and being part of energised crowds, here are some events worth knowing about.

Northside Festival
NorthSide is one of many music festivals taking place this summer in Denmark. Photo from 2023: Mikkel Berg Pedersen/Ritzau Scanpix

Northside

Northside is an annual three-day music festival in Eskelunden, Aarhus. With between 35,000 and 40,000 people attending the festival over the course of three days, plus four stages and sideshow events, it is one of the largest music festivals in Denmark.

NorthSide wants to become the most sustainably driven and environmentally conscious festival in the Nordic countries. In 2022, the festival ran on electricity from the grid for the first time and became the first festival in Denmark to go plant-based. 

When: 6th-8th June 2024

2024 Lineup: There’a a wide range of music genres from rock, indie, electronic, to hip-hop. This year’s line up includes Pulp, Massive Attack, Kaytranada, St.Vincent, The Smile, Troye Sivan, Royal Blood, Love Shop.

Tickets: The current price for a three-day ticket is 2,395 kroner. These tickets are substantially cheaper the earlier you book. A day ticket costs 1,295 kroner. A two-day ticket costs 1,995 kroner.

Accommodation: There isn’t any camping or accommodation at the festival, or parking for cars. But the festival is accessible by public transport, walking or bike and there are camping or other accommodation options close by.

Northside Festival

NorthSide in 2023. Photo: Mikkel Berg Pedersen/Ritzau Scanpix

Tinderbox

Based in Odense, Tinderbox hosts a mix of international artists, Danish musicians and electronic music, playing out from Magicbox, the electric stage.

The festival is held in the Tusindårsskoven nature reserve in western Odense, which you can walk to from the city centre.

The festival bills itself as encompassing electronic music, nostalgic 90s in the Groove box, comedy acts, Ferris wheel rides, a champagne hill, local culinary experiences and sustainability.

When: 27th-29th June 2024

2024 Lineup: Raye, Avril Lavigne, David Guetta, Benjamin Ingrosso, Bryan Adams, DK Sashi, Kind Mod Kind, James Arthur, Miss Monique, Kaizers Orchestra.

Tickets: 2,595 kroner for a full three-day pass, 2,295 for a two-day ticket and 1,395 for a one-day ticket. You can also upgrade to a VIP option.

Accommodation: Camping, glamping or something called a sleep box with a foam mattress are the options. Outside of the festival, there’s accommodation in Odense but it gets booked up quickly. Alternatively, there’s camping at Dyrskuepladsen.

Crowds enjoying George Ezra play at Tinderbox in 2023. Photo: Helle Arensbak/Ritzau Scanpix

Vig Festival

This is very much a family festival, over three days in Vig, which is located in the northwestern part of Zealand. The music ranges from rock, pop and blues and there are activities for all ages.

When: 10th-13th July 2024

2024 Lineup: Infernal, Gobs, Zar Paulo, Mads Christian, ISSE, Gabriel Jacobsen, Rasmus Seebach.

Tickets: A one-day ticket costs between 925 kroner and 1,025 kroner depending on the day you attend.

Children up to the age of 11 can enter for free, as long as they are accompanied by a paying adult.

A full festival three-day ticket costs between 1,375 kroner and 1,825 kroner, depending how early/late you buy.

A full festival family ticket for one adult (18+) plus a child aged 12-15, costs 2,125 kroner.

Accommodation: There are various camping options, from the free site, where it’s first come first served and pitch your own tent; to pre-booked and paid for camping sites with or without electricity, or without music. There’s the option for a tent to be pitched for you, which you then take home, or you can stay in a caravan or a room at the nearby højskole.

All options come with varying prices which includes the price of the festival ticket. 

There’s parking on site and a festival shuttle bus.

Smukfest 

Located in a forest in Skanderborg, the name Smukfest comes from its beautiful location. The main stage is set in a national amphitheatre, surrounded by old beech trees.

Running since 1980, the festival is more than music and celebrates being together, with young, old and families all welcome. It sells itself as a festival with social, environmental and economic sustainable values.

The festival is big, second in size to Roskilde, with around 60,000 people attending. There are over 200 acts across 6 stages plus art installation and other activities, over five days.

Smukfest

Smukfest in 2023. Photo:Helle Arensbak/Ritzau Scanpix

When: 4th to 11th August. Smukfest is unusual in that it is a five-day festival with three warm-up days. 

2024 Lineup: The festival includes rock, pop, folk, heavy metal, hip-hop and electronic music.

This year’s artists include Diana Ross, who is performing on Saturday, Example, Sam Smith, The Prodigy, Faithless, The Darkness, VETO, Zara Larsson, Moonjam, Ankerstjerne, Mads Langer, Rasmus Seebach, Sanne Salomonsen with The Antonelli Orchestra, Abba tribute, Queen Machine and the Aarhus Symphony Orchestra.

Tickets: Access to the whole week (partoutbillet) costs 3,495 kroner. This includes being able to camp in your own tent, ride the shuttle bus and use the cloakroom.

A one-day wristband costs between 1,695 kroner and 495 kroner depending on the day. Children’s day tickets cost 150 kroner.

If you’re staying, you pay for accommodation as part of entry.

Accommodation: There’s a variety of places to stay for different budgets and festival goers, in various festival ‘neighbourhoods’.

You can camp on site, or a shuttle-bus away in a forest, stay in a hut or luxury cabin house (5000 kroner), or bring your caravan or camper van on site (950 kroner). There is the option for the festival to set up a tent for you that’s ready and waiting when you arrive and you get to take the tent home with you afterwards. The price for this is 1,200 kroner and 2,400 kroner depending on tent size.

Smukfest

Drew Sycamore playing at Smukfest in 2023 Photo: Helle Arensbak/Ritzau Scanpix

Roskilde 

The big one – in fact the largest music festival in the Nordic countries and one of the largest music festivals in Europe. To give you an idea of scale, the 130,000 festival goers who attend, would rank the festival as Denmark’s fourth largest city. 

Created in 1971 by two high school students and a promoter, it’s now run as a non-profit organisation with approximately 30,000 volunteers.

There are eight stages and around 200 music acts, plus artists, authors, performers, speakers, graffiti artists and architects.

The festival is also famous for its annual naked run on the Saturday. Started in 1999 and organised by Roskilde Festival Radio, runners dash around a fenced-in track around the camp site, completely naked. The male and female winners receive a ticket for the following year’s festival. 

When: Sat 29th June – Sat 6th July 2024 (music starts on Wednesday 3rd July).

2024 Lineup: From rap, pop, alternative rock, neo-soul, jazz, and electronic, there’s a whole range of artists. Danish hip-hop star, Lamin, will open the Orange Stage. Other acts include Foo Fighters, Ice Spice, Omah Lay, Bondshell, Aurora, Gilli, PJ Harvey, Tems, J Hus, Medina, Jane’s Addiction, Overmono. 

Tickets: Full festival tickets cost 2,400 kroner, one day tickets cost 1,200 kroner.

Accommodation: The festival campsite covers nearly 80 hectares (200 acres) and access to it is included in the ticket price. It usually opens on the Saturday afternoon and you can turn up and pitch your tent.

You can upgrade your camping experience with the festivals ‘special camping’, which includes a reserved site, tents that are put up for you that you then take home, quiet camping, tent houses, places to park your motorhome, caravan or an area for those with motorbikes.

There’s also something called Community Camping, where you get to create your own community by applying to a specific area/community beforehand and you give something back by looking after the area and helping with the clean up.

Roskilde Festival

Roskilde Festival 2023 in front of the Orange Stage. Photo: Torben Christensen/Ritzau Scanpix

Member comments

  1. You seem to have forgotten Tønderfest. It is an incredible, fun festival in late August and not to be missed!

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For members

EASTER

(At least) six things for adults and kids to do in Denmark this Easter

From a giant flea market to Peppa Pig at Legoland to an open-air museum recreating Easters past, here are some of the best activities and events going on in Denmark this Easter holiday.

(At least) six things for adults and kids to do in Denmark this Easter

Danes enjoy one of the longest Easter holiday weekends with three extra public holidays.

While many shops and services are closed (and some open) at Easter, there are plenty of events going on for you to consider if you have time off.

We’ve picked out a selection of family-friendly and other options below.

READ ALSO: What’s open and what’s closed in Denmark over Easter weekend?

Giant flea market outside Copenhagen

If you enjoy whiling away the weekend looking for a bargain or antique, you might be interested in taking it up a level at a giant flea market at the Bella Center conference centre and hotel, just outside Copenhagen.

Given its size, there’s likely to be a lot on offer and you might find anything from an antique piece of Danish design to vintage clothing or toys.

The flea market, “Loppemarked i Bella”, costs 40 kroner to enter and children under 12 go free. It is open from 10am on both Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.

More information on the event’s website.

Den Gamle By, Aarhus 

Den Gamle By, the open air museum in Aarhus where actors bring historic houses to life, goes big on Easter, with the staff recreating Danish Easter traditions throughout the ages and an Easter lunch on Saturday.

There are plenty of activities for kids here too, including Easter egg hunts in each of the historical periods represented by the museum’s “quarters”, storytelling and arts and crafts to make traditional Danish Easter decorations.

READ ALSO: Danish word of the day: Gækkebrev

It is open every day of the holiday. 

See Aarhus from above 

For a more modern take on Aarhus, you could head to the top of the 142-metre Aarhus Øje, which towers above the new developments in the east of the city at the harbour.

On Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, the building – which also houses exhibitions about the harbour and city of Aarhus – has a special Easter programme in collaboration with Aarhus Sea Rangers. It’s not regular egg hunting fare – you can take part in crab racing, fold and decorate a Viking ship and listen to tales of Vikings in the harbour.

More information and ticket reservation here.

Peppa Pig at Legoland

The Legoland theme park at Billund in central Jutland recently reopened for its 2024 season with a new feature that is sure to be exciting for families – the smaller members in particular.

A new collaboration between the hugely popular kids’ television show Peppa Pig and Lego Duplo means that the Danish Legoland park now has its first Peppa Pig area.

A global phenomenon among families with 3-6 year old children, the British preschool animated television series has been airing for 20 years, across 10 seasons in over 180 territories. It has been praised for its positive influence on children’s social and emotional development.

Legoland Billund’s new Peppa Pig area includes elements from the upcoming Peppa Duplo range as well as the universe from the popular kids’ show.

Activities include a live act puppet theatre with a puppet Duplo version of Peppa and her little brother George.

Visitors can also take a picture at Peppa’s house, hop into the Pig family’s red car, climb aboard Grandpa Pig’s boat, play in Peppa’s Treehouse, and, of course, jump in muddy puddles.

Legoland is open throughout the Easter weekend.

Famous kids’ illustrator featured in Copenhagen exhibit

The Copenhagen Contemporary art museum currently has an exhibition of the works of illustrator and author Jakob Martin Strids, who is most famous for the hugely popular Danish children’s’ story Den fantastiske bus (The Fantastic Bus).

Original drawings from the book, a Danish folk favourite, form the bulk of the exhibition, which runs until September.

Lego and cardboard versions of the bus itself are also part of the exhibit, while kids can crawl into a giant pear known from the stories. Reading and drawing zones provide the chance for a bit of quiet time.

Copenhagen Contemporary is located on Refshaleøen close to the Reffen street food market, so you there’s plenty of choice if you’re hungry after you visit.

Reffen

Speaking of Reffen, the popular industrial-harbour-turned-hip-restaurant-and-bar-destination has plenty on its own schedule for the Easter weekend, as it begins to warm up again after the quiet winter months.

There’s an “Easter Bunny’s Popular Easter Hunt”, meaning nine large Easter eggs which you can find placed around the street food market, which provide the clues to solve a “mystery word”. You can win a chocolate egg if you’re lucky.

The beer garden has a creative workshop and face painting for kids on Maundy Thursday, while the wine bar Drueta is hosting orange wine tasting to an “Easter Beats” soundtrack in the evening.

You can also relax at Reffen on Easter Monday with a game of petanque, a special lunch and relaxing music.

The full programme (in English) can be found here.

Visit the animals at Frilandmuseet

At Frilandsmuseet, a popular open-air museum in Kongens Lyngby north of Copenhagen, you can see the fluffy Easter lambs, as well as hens and rabbits.

The museum has a great selection of old Danish buildings, artefacts and glimpses into the country’s agricultural past. On top of this, the Easter programme includes meeting the Påskehare (Easter Bunny) as well as egg races and various other kids’ activities.

The programme runs throughout Easter (including Easter Monday) and entry is free for children. More information can be found on the National Museum’s website.

Other museums

Many museums in Denmark remain open throughout the Easter period, although some either extend or shorten their opening hours. 

Museums open as normal

Denmark’s National Museum, in Copenhagen, is closed on Easter Monday, as it is on all Mondays, but otherwise open. Copenhagen’s Botanical Gardens, which are part of the National Museum, are however open on Easter Monday. 

 The Danish Architecture Centre in Copenhagen is open every day of Easter. 

The Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde is open as usual from 10am to 4pm throughout Easter. 

Museums with shorter opening hours

Copenhagen’s Glyptoteket art gallery is closed on Easter Monday, as it is on all Mondays, and closed at 5pm on Maundy Thursday rather than the usual 9pm. 

The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art north of Copenhagen has shorter weekend opening hours on all days of the Easter holiday, opening from 11am to 6pm. 

Museums with longer opening hours

The Moesgaard Musum, outside Aarhus, which features the world’s best preserved bog man, is open until 7pm rather than the usual 5pm on all the days of the Easter holiday, and is open, as usual, to 9pm on Easter Saturday. 

The ARoS Aarhus Art Museum is opening specially on Easter Monday between 10am and 9pm, and is open as normal on all the other days of Easter.  

The Design Museum in Copenhagen, which is normally closed on Mondays, is open on Easter Monday. 

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