Truly, Madly, Deeply Vale is a 2004 television documentary produced by David Nolan for Granada Television,[1] about the history of the Deeply Vale Festivals which ran from 1976 to 1979 in the North West of England.
[2][3] The programme makers tracked down many of the musicians who played there, including Mark E. Smith of the Fall, Steve Hillage and Vini Reilly of the Durutti Column.
The hour-long programme is an elaborate pastiche of the film Woodstock and is largely presented in split-screen.
It follows the efforts of festival organisers as they attempted a Glastonbury for the north, while the British musical landscape was changing from progressive rock to punk.
This article relating to a non-fiction television series in the United Kingdom is a stub.