16/05/2026
We will never die! 👽
A documentary tracing the radical roots of the UK’s ’90s free party movement is returning to streaming this month.
Free Party: A Folk History will be available to watch for 30 days from May 21 through Eventive, with a wider release on mainstream streaming platforms expected later in the year. The 2026 version also includes newly added footage.
The film looks back at one of the most important underground movements in British dance music history, when ravers, sound systems, travellers and DIY crews helped build a scene outside the commercial club circuit.
The documentary features key free party collectives including Spiral Tribe, Circus Warp and Nottingham’s DiY Sound System, alongside archive footage and the wider social and political history surrounding the movement.
Its streaming release also carries a deeper historical weight. The film was originally released around the anniversary of Castlemorton, the legendary week-long 1992 rave often seen as a turning point in UK rave culture, and also marks the legacy of the 1985 Battle of the Beanfield.
Castlemorton became one of the most notorious illegal raves in British history, while the free party movement later became closely linked to the political backlash that helped shape the Criminal Justice Act in 1994.
A portion of proceeds from the streaming release will go to Refugee Community Kitchen, as well as contributors who helped compile the archive footage. Remaining profits will support future projects.
For anyone who thinks rave was only about clubs, lasers and big-name DJs, this documentary tells a different story.
Before dance music became an industry, this was sound systems in fields, word-of-mouth directions, DIY culture, police pressure, politics, freedom and thousands of people chasing something outside the mainstream.
Free Party: A Folk History is less nostalgia and more a reminder of where a huge part of modern rave culture really came from.
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