After 13 years, the haven for those who find music festivals too mainstream or sleeping in tents beneath them, shuddered to a close this weekend across two stages.

More than 40 artists, ranging from the obscure to the reformed to returning favourites, sent the much-loved if often undersubscribed and overstretched festival off with a bang.

Highlights included DJ Edan’s funk cut-ups on Friday, Ty Segall’s acoustic but thrashy breakdowns on Sunday, and a stirring, deafening set from Mogwai, closing with Mogwai Fear Satan, the last track ever to grace a UK ATP event. Elsewhere the likes of Hookworms, F*** Buttons, Shellac and the under-rated White Fence wowed the bohemian/insane crowd with equal parts tremendous volume and dizzying musical ability.

Sadly, for those lucky enough to live in Sussex with the festival on the doorstep, future residential ATPs will spring up in Iceland and even Turkey, if the programme was to be believed. But anyone who’d been to one of these gatherings since their inception here – or in the sister site at Minehead – knew ATP remained forever a UK-based experience, like no other. RIP.