Some of the hundreds of performers and guests who took part in Nambassa activities included: •
Split Enz, Nambassa 1979, relaunching their career with a new line-up. •
The Little River Band, Nambassa 1979, with
Glenn Shorrock. •
Skyhooks, Nambassa 1978, like Split Enz, Australia's early developers of theatre rock and costume extravaganza. •
John Mayall, Nambassa 1981. Pioneer of
British blues in the 1960s and 1970s. •
Dizzy Gillespie, Nambassa 1981. •
Sonny Terry and
Brownie McGhee, Nambassa 1981. Early black American blues exponents who influenced the 1960s music revolution. •
Charlie Daniels, Nambassa 1981. •
Barry McGuire Nambassa 1979. Famous for the 1960s international smash hit "
Eve of Destruction". •
Kevin Borich, Nambassa 1981. New Zealander formerly of
the La De Da's and an Australian Blues Foundation Hall of Famer. •
Topp Twins, Nambassa 1979 and 1981. •
Limbs Dance Company, Nambassa 1978, 1979 and 1981. Internationally known NZ dance troupe. •
Alan Clay, Nambassa 1979 and 1981. Children's entertainer, author and international arts coordinator. •
Hello Sailor, Waikino 1977. •
Th' Dudes, Waikino 1977. Featuring a youthful
Dave Dobbyn, then nurtured by Charlie Gray from the Island of Real café. •
Citizen Band ex Split Enz. Performed
Good Morning Citizens. •
Alastair Riddell, Nambassa 1978. •
Midge Marsden, Nambassa 1978 and 1979. •
Beaver, Nambassa 1978. •
Golden Harvest, Nambassa 1979. •
Andy Anderson, Nambassa 1978 and 1979. Musician and actor. dance •
The Plague, Nambassa 1979 and 1981. Performed naked but covered in paint in 1979. •
Mahana. A travelling
Māori theatrical rock band whose
rock opera depicts the trials and tribulations of early white colonisation of New Zealand. Showcased at the
Nambassa Winter Show 1978 and the Nambassa festivals 1978, 1979 and 1981. Produced by John Tucker. •
Billy TK, Nambassa 1979 and 1981. •
John Hore-Grenell, Nambassa 1978 and 1979. • The
Rodger Fox Big Band, Nambassa 1981. •
Gary McCormick, Nambassa 1978, '79 and '81. Poet and comedian. •
Sam Hunt, Nambassa 1979. Poet.
Cultural guests •
Stephen Gaskin, Nambassa 1978, 1979 and 1981. Co-founder of "
The Farm", an internationally known
spiritual community in Summertown,
Tennessee. Stephen Gaskin was a
Green Party presidential primary candidate in the US elections of 2000. He and wife
Ina May Gaskin, plus other farm residents, made the annual pilgrimage to Nambassa. •
Swami Satchidananda, Nambassa 1979. Known among the 1960s counterculture as the man who opened the original
Woodstock festival of 1969, and as the sage from India who introduced the art of
Yoga to the west. •
Ina May Gaskin, Nambassa 1978 and 1981. Widely credited with having created the modern
home birth movement and helping to inspire the renaissance of
midwifery in the United States. •
Eileen Caddy Nambassa 1981. Eileen co-founded the
Findhorn spiritual community in
Scotland in 1962. Her
workshops and discussions on
Findhorn Foundation were well received. •
Richard Alpert, aka Baba Ram Dass, Nambassa 1981. Richard Alpert was a professor of
psychology at
Harvard University who became well known for researching the effects of
LSD, working closely with Dr.
Timothy Leary. At Nambassa there was standing room only for Ram Dass' diverse lecturers on meditation and health. • Chief
Oren Lyons, Nambassa 1981. Lyons is a Native American, a traditional faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the
Onondaga (tribe) Council of Chiefs of the
Hau de no sau. He conducted lectures and coordinated with Māori
land rights activists, sharing his Native American land rights experiences. •
Jim Cairns, Nambassa 1981. Former deputy
Prime Minister of Australia and Labor Treasurer in the Australian government who opposed Australia's involvement in the
Vietnam War and in 1970 led a protest against the war. He resigned from parliament in 1977 to devote his life to the
counter-cultural movement. • The
Twin Oaks Community eco community from
Louisa County, Virginia sent a delegation of six people to the 1981 Nambassa five-day celebration. Their workshop contributions were well received. •
Eva Rickard, Nambassa 1979. Vocal agitator for return of
Raglan golf course land to the Tainui Awhiro people from whom it was taken during World War II. Gave a number of powerful lectures, on aerial railway and the main stage. Nambassa is sympathetic towards many
indigenous Māori land claims. •
Tim Shadbolt, Nambassa 1978, 1979 and 1981. Political activist and workshop participant. In the 1970s, he founded a commune and concrete cooperative at Huia. He wrote an autobiography,
Bullshit and Jellybeans. ==Arts, self-sufficiency and healing arts workshops==