The moment Zimbabwean vocalist group Siyaya got the party started with their bright costumes and energetic dancing, I knew I was in love. I dashed from the Open Air stage to the Siam tent, from African drum workshops to Flying Things and Funny Hats stalls, pausing periodically for liquid sustenance, organic udon and donuts. I grooved to reggae by old-guard Jamaican Ernest Ranglin and new-guard UK master Finley Quaye. I watched drunken Algerian rebel-rocker Rachid Taha smoking Gitanes and swigging whisky on stage, and shimmied to the Egyptian rhythms of Hamid Baroudi. I marched to the beat of 20 samba drummers, was brought to my knees by Bassekou Kouyate&rsquos traditional Mali blues, alternately wept and jigged to the melodic tales of Norwegian-Scottish Fribo and marvelled at the fan-wielding kung-fu monks. I heard French-Occitane acapella singing, Kiwi breakbeat, an all-women, all-powerful Japanese drumming troupe and African and Latin sounds up the wahoo.