Posts Tagged ‘Desert Trip Festival’

For many attendees, Bob Dylan’s opening set for the Rolling Stones on the Friday was the show most likely to skip (evidently, as quite a few seats remained empty throughout). That may sound preposterous to anyone who hasn’t caught him in the last decade or so, but those with experience know that his voice has diminished mostly to a low growl, he doesn’t pick up the guitar much (he didn’t once this weekend, either singing hands-free or manning the organ) and he won’t allow videographers to display a clear shot of his face , effectively distancing himself from a massive audience like Desert Trip’s 75,000 per day.

But those who slept on it should be feeling some deep regret. Not only because it was one of his better performances in recent years – his enunciation felt intentionally clearer and stronger, even managing a couple legitimately pretty croons on “Tangled Up in Blue” – but also because it was his second appearance since receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature the day before. The latter fact alone made it one of the most important gigs of his 57-year (!) career, and therefore as historically significant on its own as the entire Desert Trip affair.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqDzOTXZGOk

Dylan – recently awarded the Nobel Prize of Literature – performed “Like A Rolling Stone” for the first time in nearly three years. The performance of the Highway 61 Revisited track also came before the Rolling Stones themselves took the stage at the Indio, California mega-fest.

Dylan last performed “Like a Rolling Stone” at a November 2013 gig in Rome, Italy. After spending this summer touring in support of his recent pair of Sinatra-indebted LPs with set lists that heavily leaned on Dylan’s 2010s recordings Dylan has dipped back into his Sixties catalog for the Desert Trip shows,

Yet Dylan never overtly acknowledged the honor throughout his 2-hour greatest hits run, which kicked off with a field full of sweet-smelling smoke signals (with set opener “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35”) and saw the 75-year-old slipping in a few rock star moves and jams mid-set (some Robert Plant-esque mic stand lifts on “Love Sick” and Elvis-inspired hip wiggles during outlaw-toned organ-guitar riff duels with axeman Charlie Sexton). Notable, however, was the alternate encore: instead of the epic “Masters of War,” which capped Weekend 1, we got the iconic “Like a Rolling Stone” followed by the Cy Coleman/Jospeh McCarthy-penned Sinatra classic “Why Try to Change Me Now.”

It was the latter ballad that resonated the most poignantly. It’s a slow-burner, and perhaps the antithesis of what most of these diehard classic rock fans might’ve favored for a closer. But as he sang the final chorus echoing the tune’s title  – genuinely sweet and clear – it felt like a rebuke to all the naysayers: Sure, Dylan has made some adjustments to his songs’ styles as he and his voice have aged, but his poetry and its impact remain timeless, with or without a Nobel nod.

INDIO, CA - OCTOBER 15: Musician Paul McCartney performs during Desert Trip at The Empire Polo Club on October 15, 2016 in Indio, California. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Desert Trip)

The so-called “Oldchella,” which also featured The Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, Neil Young and Bob Dylan, attracted fans of all ages and generations, and earned its promoter, Goldenvoice — the same company behind Coachella — a reported $160 million. The biggest question on fans’ minds by the end of Sunday night was: Who will they book next year?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HKpNgQvF9lI

Anyone who’s seen the British knight knows: Sir Paul McCartney and his band are always sharp live, routinely turning in nearly three hours’ worth of live music, abounding with tons of Beatles, Wings and solo faves, touching and comical stories, and impressive pyro (“Live and Let Die” marked the weekend’s ultimate fireworks burst). He didn’t change his set too much from weekend to weekend, but he did swap out “Can’t Buy Me Love” with an invigorating rendition of “Got To Get You into My Life” early in the set, and traded relative rarity “I Wanna Be Your Man” for “Birthday” in the encore, plus a quick take on Little Richard’s “Rip It Up” (“Saturday night … I couldn’t resist,” he said, referencing the relevant lyrics).

Besides, other measures were taken to illuminate the night’s significance: In addition to honoring his former wife Linda before “Maybe I’m Amazed,” he dedicated the song to two of their children, Mary and Stella McCartney, both present at the show; Later, he invited “the queen of Barbados,” Rihanna, out to sing her part on “FourFiveSeconds” (she sang live, and sounded fantastic); in two instances, he asked the audience to howl at the moon, “for the coyotes”; and he brought out Neil Young to handle John Lennon’s parts on “A Day in the Life” and the Plastic Ono Band’s “Give Peace a Chance,” then howl cheek-to-cheek via one mic on “Why Don’t We Do It in the Road” and finish with a solo so insane that Young broke all six of his strings.

Yes, the latter special guest run also occurred during weekend one, but those final string-busting notes yielded a profound sense of urgency – perhaps because it was likely the last time an on-stage collaboration between McCartney and Young will ever happen again, barring awards or tribute shows – that blew any other version of that tune out of the water.

poster-indio-desrt-jam-oct-2016

PAUL McCARTNEY rocked the Desert Trip Festival this weekend at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California ~ October 8th, 2016. Paul McCartney led the Coachella Valley in a joyous journey down memory lane on the second day of Desert Trip Festival.

Neil Young joined Paul McCartney for “A Day in the Life”,”Give Peace a Chance”, & “Why Don’t We Do it in the Road”. 

McCartney – boyish as ever, delighted to be on the Coachella stage again. he headlined the original music festival in 2009, and has attended every year since. This new addition to the Coachella Valley has been dubbed “Oldchella” – given that the average age of the musicians is 72. But McCartney was undaunted.

Filmed across the two Desert Trip weekends, the video gives you a great insight into just how huge and special those shows were. We had a great view from the front of the stage, but check out the drone footage showing off the scale of the festival. We still pinch ourselves that we were actually there!

“We’re going to have a party, Liverpool style,” he told the 75,000-strong crowd, who were dancing and singing Beatles songs even before he came onto stage. Blending Beatles songs with new material – “some old songs, new ones, and in between ones,” he said – McCartney delivered a deeply personal reflection on five decades in the music industry.

He told anecdotes about Jimi Hendrix and Eric Clapton, and joked about going to Russia and performing Back in the USSR – mimicking the heavily-accented English of the Russian defence minister, who told him after the show that Love Me Do was the first record he bought. He spoke movingly of Linda McCartney and John Lennon, with Lennon’s face featured heavily in the images broadcast on the screen behind him.

After whipping the crowd into a frenzy with Let It Be, a firework-filled spectacular of Live and Let Die, and then the epic sing-a-long to Hey Jude, McCartney left the stage – then came back for more.

“Still feel like rocking?” the 72-year-old asked. It was 12:10am; he had come on stage two and a half hours earlier.

But the Coachella crowd yelled for more; McCartney delivered a Stones tribute, performing I Wanna Be Your Man – a song Lennon and McCartney wrote for the band. And on he played, seeming never to want to leave the stage.

See the setlist for the other songs Macca performed in this epic show.

No set felt more crucial this weekend than Neil Young’s on Saturday at sundown, achieved as much by its perfectly timed moments as its political impact (his anti-Monsanto organic seed free-for-all was hilarious) and sheer sonic force. Save for a 6-song solo acoustic intro (which kicked off at Golden Hour with “After the Gold Rush” and “Heart of Gold”), Young was in full-on guitar god mode, playing louder and more furiously than anyone in the Stones or Dylan’s band the previous evening. And his backing outfit, the Promise of the Real (featuring Willie Nelson’s sons Lukas and Micah) was no less mind-blowing. During extended jams (Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s “Helpless,” Crazy Horse’s “Powderfinger” and 17-minute epic “Cowgirl in the Sand”), Lukas went head-to-head with the 70-year-old master, channeling a bit of his dad’s erratic picking, some Jimi Hendrix-esque freakouts and Stevie Ray Vaughan’s finesse.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8I5Vt-5ZtsY

Clearly, the younger fellas keep Young on his toes. And they had a blast in the process, particularly apparent when Young joked “We only have so many songs,” then pulling out a set list the size of a small human, allowing the camera to grab a close-up while his finger teased over more than 100 possible tunes like a Ouija board needle running rampant. It was a badass rock star move that revealed just how impressive this band is – they’ve rehearsed for countless classic cuts.

But Young owed his overall one-up to the moon, which rose – full and almost-orange like a humongous, cratered pumpkin – as the sun set behind the mountains opposite it. Of course, he had a hand in its impact: “Harvest Moon” appeared one song sooner than it did Weekend 1 – while the moon was at its biggest and brightest, like a second blazing sun – so that it hung just above the stage as Young crooned “But there’s a full moon risin’/ Let’s go dancin’ in the light/ We know where the music’s playin’/ Let’s go out and feel the night.” As wizard, astronomer, living legend – effortlessly encompassing a bit of each – Young’s music imbued the desolate desert with magic, vitality and harmony.

INDIO, CA - OCTOBER 15: Musicians Lukas Nelson, Corey McCormick and Neil Young of Neil Young & Promise of the Real perform onstage during Desert Trip at The Empire Polo Club on October 15, 2016 in Indio, California. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Desert Trip)

Out in the Californian desert, six legendary bands have gathered to perform music that has wowed the world for five decades, in a concert dubbed “Oldchella”.

“Tonight we’re not going to do any age jokes,” said 73-year-old Sir Mick Jagger, taking to the stage with his fellow Rolling Stones. “But welcome to the Palm Springs retirement home for ageing English gentlemen.”

The 75,000-strong crowd erupted, whooping in delight. With an average age of 51 themselves, they were in on the joke, and simply thrilled to see the greats: Bob Dylan, who opened for The Stones on Friday, and Neil Young and Paul McCartney due to perform on Saturday. On Sunday, the festival closes with Roger Waters and The Who – meaning that of the six acts, only Minnesota-born Dylan and Young, a Canadian, were not British.  It is the first time they have all performed at the same event.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3WyQoXumRg

More than 50 years after “I Wanna Be Your Man,” the Rolling Stones are once again singing Beatles songs. Last night at the Desert Trip Festival in Indio, Calif., by covering “Come Together,” .
Admitting it was “strange,” Mick Jagger said, “We’re gonna do a cover song of some sort of unknown beat group. [I] think you might remember. We’re gonna try a cover of one of their tunes.” Then he asked, “Are you ready?” three times and launched into the Abbey Road chestnut, which also featured a harmonica solo from the singer in the outro. the band’s nightly variations on its songs, with an endless cat’s-cradle of exchanges between Keith Richards and Ron Wood on guitars over Charlie Watts’s impeccable drums and Darryl Jones’s bass. Richards usually has the gut-level rhythm parts while Ronnie Wood takes the smoother high filigrees and slide-guitar wails. But there’s plenty of overlapping territory where anything can happen.
Paul McCartney, who is alos performing at the same festival, according to Yahoo! Music, witnessed the Stones’ set from a VIP box and pumped his fist during “Come Together,” plays Desert Trip tonight. Let’s see if he repays the favour. Desert Trip, produced by the company behind the Coachella Festival and held in the same place — but with a much less strenuous schedule and setup, including reserved seats with padded chairs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQiFVMvd5z0

The Stones’ 20-song set also included “Ride ‘Em on Down,” a 1955 single by Eddie Taylor, which was played at their first-ever performance, at London’s Marquee Club in July 1962. “Ride ‘Em on Down,” will appear on their upcoming collection of blues songs, Blue & Lonesome. The album, which was recorded live in the studio with no overdubs over three days and features Eric Clapton on two songs, will be released December 2nd.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsv27YNj904

Bob Dylan served as the opening act, delivering 16 songs that saw him perform seven songs from his post-Time Out of Mind comeback, although nothing from his two recent collections of standards. He closed with “Ballad of a Thin Man” from Highway 61 Revisited and encored with “Masters of War,” from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.

The Rolling Stones, Desert Trip, Oct. 7th, 2016

Setlist
1. “Start Me Up:
2. “You Got Me Rocking”
3. “Out of Control”
4. “Ride ‘Em on Down”
5. “Mixed Emotions”
6. “Wild Horses”
7. “It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll (But I Like It)”
8. “Come Together”
9. “Tumbling Dice”
10. “Honky Tonk Women”
11. “Slipping Away”
12. “Little T&A”
13. “Midnight Rambler”
14. “Miss You”
15. “Gimme Shelter”
16. “Sympathy for the Devil”
17. “Brown Sugar”
18. “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”
Encore
19. “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”
20. “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”