Posts Tagged ‘Glastonbury’

Sunday at Glastonbury delivered a distinct British flavour courtesy of The Who.  Closing Glastonbury 2015, Pete Townsend took to the stage alongside Roger Daltrey in full arm-swinging glory, brandishing his guitar with intent. He more than delivered with a two-hour set of vintage rock at its best that pleased a crowd made up of almost as many teen faces as those belonging to the over-40s.

The weather was on side for the last, and arguably most important, slot of the weekend. As the sun began its last descent over Worthy Farm, Daltrey and Townsend launched into a set of tracks made to get people singing along. With many here having missed out on more than a few hours sleep, “Pinball Wizard” and “Who’s Next” gave weary revellers one last excuse to let loose. “My Generation” was never going to be anything but a weekend highlight and on tonight’s performance, The Who earned themselves a place in the pantheon of big-hitting Glastonbury greats.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mn5OSqa_ZYE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn8qs3a8gL4

Dedicating “Pictures of Lily” to Paul Weller, who had played an earlier set, Daltrey stamped Glastonbury 2015 with a proud watermark that read ‘British rock’. While 15-minute guitar solos can often come across as self-indulgent, tonight they made for a celebration enjoyed as much by the crowd as the band.

They do this by rolling out the hits in quick succession: Who Are You, The Seeker, Pictures of Lily, Behind Blue Eyes. My Generation now comes with an odd, slow little coda in place of the old explosive, Keith Moon-fuelled ending that’s presumably there to circumvent the inevitable question of what a 71-year-old man is doing singing the line about hoping he dies before he gets old: “My generation, we’re still here today.” From a projection at the back of the stage, the young Moon stares down, doe-eyed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a956QT-PCsM

Roger Daltrey can still swing a microphone around with considerable panache, but his voice is rougher than it was. Even so, it still has a powerful belligerence about it that matches the sound of Townshend’s guitar and brings out the distrust and paranoia at the heart of I Can See for Miles. The guitarist seems a bit underwhelmed by the set. “It could have been better,” he says, before a version of Won’t Get Fooled Again that sounds great. The band didn’t get to soundcheck, he complains, although frankly no one would have known if he hadn’t mentioned it.

The Who were unhappy at the sound quality in their headlining set at The Glastonbury Festival

The Sixties band, who are fronted by guitarist Pete Townshend and lead singer Roger Daltrey, were the main attraction of the festival on the closing night,

Townshend repeatedly complained about the sound, shouting to backstage “it’s f—–g cr-p, before Daltrey pulled over a plastic screen and knocked over microphones so they could hear the drums better.

 

A booster shot from Justin Hayward-Young and cohorts has been a while coming, as befits a band on their third album and feeling the need to shake things up a little. They began their journey as scuffed underdogs, blamming out dirty romances like Post Break-Up Sex and Blow It Up with the early support of Zane Lowe (who named their early demo If You Wanna the Hottest Record In The World).

That sound grew steadily more muscular and strong with the arrival of the albums What Did You Expect From The Vaccines? and Come of Age, and they soon started gathering a huge following, climbing the running order of the In New Music We Trust stages of 2011 and 2012’s Big Weekends and graduating from the Other Stage at Glastonbury 2011 to the Pyramid Stage in 2013. And now, with the eventual delivery of that widescreen third album English Graffiti, they’re a highly polished pop machine. Better inoculate than never.

1.- Wreckin’ Bar (Ra Ra Ra) 2.- Dream Lover 3.- Wetsuit 4.- All In White 5.- Post Break-Up Sex 6.- Melody Calling 7.- No Hope (Acoustic) 8.- Teenage Icon 9.- 20/20 10.- Give Me A Sign 11.- I Always Knew 12.- If You Wanna 13.- Nørgaard

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hw4mI-zfJU8

Sharon Van Etten performs I Don’t Want To Let You Down at Glastonbury 2015.

Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter Sharon Van Etten was so good on Later… with Jools Holland in 2012, she got invited back onto the show last year – and excelled again. In 2012, she played Give Out from her third album, Tramp – something of a breakthrough record – which she followed in 2014 with an equally well-received fourth album, Are We There.

As Sharon Van Etten, who grew up in New Jersey, explained to Lauren Laverne last December, much of her music is inspired by heartbreak, resulting in songs that are measured, mesmerising and entirely lacking in affectation. Check her BBC Music artist page to hear Marc Riley plays clips from a 2013 session and make sure you’re right up front for her debut Glastonbury appearance – her live performances are intoxicating.

Visit the Glastonbury website at http://bbc.co.uk/glastonburyfor more videos and photos

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rfX1O8km1w

Ben Howard Live Glastonbury 2015 –
Apparently he was ill during this set, but hey ho it’s pretty good, West Country guitarist and singer Ben Howard and his band take the Saturday sundown set on the Other Stage, followed by something different from Canadian EDM super-DJ Deadmau5.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ROQFP8VVVEI

The Waterboys perform The Whole Of The Moon at Glastonbury 2015. Never mind the Libertines, Mike Scott is the original wandering minstrel poet songwriter, and he has the back catalogue to prove it.Visit the Glastonbury website at http://bbc.co.uk/glastonbury for more videos and photos

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BW9IMIlaaR0

Wolf Alice performs Bros at Glastonbury 2015. Visit the Glastonbury website at http://www.bbc.co.uk/glastonbury for more videos and photos,

It’s been an exciting 12 months for Wolf Alice since they messed with many a young mind from the John Peel stage at last year’s Glastonbury, with an assault on the senses that was bookended by a blazing cover of Chris Isaak’s Wicked Game, and singer Ellie’s psychedelic pink dress. Having built up a formidable fanbase based on a pair of fine EPs and a lot of hard gigging, they proved to be a worthy addition to the BBC’s Sound of 2015 longlist.

Then there was the piledriving single Giant Peach – a former Zane Lowe Hottest Record in the World – which boasted the kind of riff that could level Stonehenge. And of course they finished and released their debut album My Love Is Cool, giving fans at this year’s festival roughly three days to learn the proper versions of all the songs they’ll have been howling along to at gigs. Watch ‘em roar!

2015

 

James Bay plays a special set at Glastonbury 2015. Visit the Glastonbury website at http://bbc.co.uk/glastonbury for more videos and photos,

James Bay is one of the biggest musical success stories of the past 12 months, He’s been applauded by music experts and fans alike, having won the BRIT Critic’s Choice Award for 2015 and come second in the BBC’s Sound of 2015 poll; his debut hit Hold Back The River left an indelible mark on the charts across Europe and beyond, his album Chaos and the Calm is doing likewise, and he just tore the tent pegs out of the ground at the In New Music We Trust stage at this year’s Radio 1 Big Weekend.

It’s all a long way from his scuffling start as a singer-songwriter putting out EPs of fresh hand-made material every few months. And as with every ‘overnight’ success, there were a few big stepping stones along the way. The first being the crucial early support from BBC Introducing, then the support slots with Tom Odell and Hozier (not to mention the Rolling Stones). Or the time he stood in at short notice for a poorly Lana Del Rey in the Live Lounge—at the drop of a hat, you might say—and ended up trending worldwide on Twitter.

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

Father John Misty performs Chateau Lobby #4 (In C For Two Virgins) at Glastonbury 2015. Visit the Glastonbury website at http://bbc.co.uk/glastonbury for more videos and photos.

Glastonbury and folk rock go together like bees and honey and there’s no finer practitioner of the genre around today than Father John Misty, aka Josh Tillman. As J. Tillman, he released a slew of celebrated solo records between 2003 and 2010 before becoming Father John Misty and breaking through with 2015’s acclaimed “I Love You, Honeybear”, which includes stand-out track Bored In The USA.

The Maryland-born singer-songwriter played the 6 Music Festival in February this year, as well as a session for Lauren Laverne. A former member of Fleet Foxes, he’ll be more than familiar with Glastonbury – except this time he’s taking the plaudits alone.

 

 

After months of teasing, and idiotic controversy about some of their headliners, the Glastonbury organizers have announced the festival’s full lineup, and it’s stacked. Joining headliners Kanye West and Foo Fighters, we have Florence + the Machine, Patti Smith, Pharrell Williams, The Chemical Brothers, Alt-J, Mary J. Blige, Alabama Shakes, FKA twigs, Run The Jewels, Father John Misty, Jamie xx, Sharon Van Etten, Flying Lotus, Todd Terje, Charli XCX, Hot Chip, Death Cab For Cutie, Perfume Genius, and many, many more. It all goes down on June 24th to 28th.

Arcade Fire and their superb set that headlined on Sunday night at the Coachella festival will be bringing the show to headline Glastonbury later this year the set includes songs from the current fourth album REFLEKTOR