Taking place in July each year at Hillsborough Park, the festival presents some of the biggest names in music, from a broad spectrum of genres.
The Streets, Noel Gallagher, Public Enemy, Little Simz, Annie Mac, Sam Fender, Nile Rodgers & Chic, Catfish and The Bottlemen, Royal Blood, Primal Scream, Madness, The Libertines, All Saints, Basement Jaxx, Clean Bandit, De La Soul and Kasabian are just a handful of the acts that have played the Tramlines stage over the years.
The festival also continues to draw on the strength of Sheffield’s prolific music scene, with many local bands and artists appearing on the bill each year. In addition to the enormous diversity of music on offer across several outdoor stages, the festival also presents a full comedy line up, open air cinema, kid’s activities, dance tents and a host of street food.
Much in the spirit of where the festival started, The Fringe At Tramlines is a free programme of music and activities which takes places on the same weekend as the main festival. With live stages in outdoor spaces across Sheffield City Centre and performances in many of the pubs, bars and music venues, it continues the festival atmosphere beyond the main event. tramlines.org.uk
The 16th edition of Tramlines will see Paolo Nutini, Jamie T and Snow Patrol headlining The Sarah Nulty Main Stage, each making their debut appearance at the 40,000-capacity event.
Key headline support comes from Bombay Bicycle Club, Tom Grennan and Sheffield legends, The Human League.
Other artists and bands performing over the weekend include The Charlatans, Holly Humberstone, Yard Act, Annie Mac, Maximo Park, The Snuts and Example, plus many more.
2024
Founded in 2009, Tramlines first existed as a free multi-venue festival, mixing outdoor stages and city centre venues including The Leadmill, O2 Academy, The Foundry, Sheffield Cathedral, Millennium Gallery, Sheffield City Hall and Yellow Arch Studios.
It was a huge success and the festival continued to grow in popularity for several years, before needing to expand beyond this original format.
In 2015, the festival made a move from the city centre to Sheffield’s Ponderosa Park, where it stayed for three years, before moving to its current home at Hillsborough Park in 2018. While Tramlines has grown to a ticketed event, it remains one of the best value music festivals in the UK and beyond.