It’s time to forget about Brexit by running away to a field and getting on it for four days.

I suggest packing a tent, a crate and some wellies, and hitting the weekend hard.Thankfully, the next two weekends have you covered in that regard.

Tomorrow, the bohemian extravaganza that is the Kelburn Garden Party kicks off at Kelburn Castle. It’s hard to imagine a more picturesque setting for four days of madness than the lush grounds of this graffiti-swathed Ayrshire château.

Highlights across the weekend include Bristol’s Kelvin 373 and Gardna, a duo spitting out big, bassy dancehall and reggae, the eclectic Oxford maven James Lavelle (whose bespoke AV show should be pretty special), and Scots funk, soul, disco and hip-hop dons Shaka Loves You. There’s also supreme local talent in the bafflingly brilliant Girobabies, the incomparable Colonel Mustard & the Dijon 5, and rising synthpop duo Happy Meals.

Those of the slightly loopy, flower child outlook will find lots to love: this is most definitely a festival that’s more about the experience than the acts… but the acts are pretty great, too.

• Kelburn Garden Party, tomorrow – Monday, Kelburn Castle, £114

iNCEPT Summer Special

The Lebanese deep techno DJ Nicole Moudaber headlines this intense 11-hour party at SWG3 on Saturday. Her story is one of the most interesting in dance music: after growing up in Africa and the Middle East, she moved to New York, put on NY disco parties in Beirut and ended up in Ibiza, as a resident in Space alongside Carl Cox. Moudaber made her Sub Club debut in 2014 at Return to Mono, and recently hosted her own enormous stage at EDC New York. She is an unstoppable force, and the crowd at SWG3 come Saturday night are certainly not going to be immovable. Fraser Stuart and Nick McPheat complete the after dark warehouse lineup. By day, the terrace has local beatmakers Lindsay Green and Kendal Baird, Subbie resident Theo Kottis, and Londoners Dense & Pika pumping out UK house and techno.

• iNCEPT Summer Special, Saturday, SWG3, 3pm – 2am, £25

Numbers

"I'm really trying to do something different," Oscar Powell told Resident Advisor last year. No kidding. Powell’s music is inventive, leftfield, downright ridiculous. It’s like nothing you’ve ever heard before. As a 16-year-old he discovered drum and bass, then started buying records and going to clubs. A pretty standard DJ backstory all round. Then Powell discovered post-punk and everything changed. "I remember the first time I heard Suicide it was like the thing I'd been searching for in contemporary electronic music but never quite found," he told Fact. The elements of chaos present in that genre are audible in his recent work, which is a shrieking, stomping, maximalist mess – in the best way possible, of course. He’s supported at the Subbie tomorrow night by Pangaea and Numbers resident Spencer.

• Numbers, tomorrow, Sub Club, 11pm – 3am, £10

Vic Galloway

Vic Galloway is one of the most important figures in new Scottish music: a tireless champion of the unsigned and a renowned broadcaster, his ear for a tune knows no bounds when it comes to genre. Whether scouting for Scotland’s latest indie success story, writing about Dundee’s underground psych scene in his book Songs in the Key of Fife, or – in this case – spinning reggae and dub records to a basement club full of discerning clubbers, Galloway does it in style, and with assured aplomb. This is a rare chance to see him in such a setting, so take this chance to witness a true master at work. If he isn’t there already, then he is surely in line for national treasure status.

• Walk n Skank with Vic Galloway, tonight, The Berkeley Suite, 11pm – 3am, £5