VIDEO OF THE DAY - ISAAC'S AIRCRAFT - CHEW THE FAT
Showing posts with label open.air. Show all posts
Showing posts with label open.air. Show all posts

14 April 2010

Glastonbury 2010 Line Up Revealed

The most famous festival in the world proved that it can still pack a punch at 40, as Glastonbury organisers tonight revealed that controversial rapper Snoop Dogg, would be joining Dizzee Rascal, The Flaming Lips and the Pet Shop Boys at this year's celebratory event.

The rapper will play alongside confirmed headliners U2, Muse and Stevie Wonder and will be joined by Vampire Weekend, one of the hottest bands of 2010, the festival confirmed to the Guardian tonight.

Festival founder Michael Eavis, 75, was audibly excited about the line up when he spoke exclusively to the Guardian. "This is it! It is the most staggering line-up to match the 40-year reputation of the festival," he said. "I have been trying to get U2 to play at the festival since 1982, and Muse have never headlined here although they have played before."

Friday night on the Pyramid stage promises Willie Nelson, Snoop Dogg and Vampire weekend before Dizzee Rascal gets the crowd jumping for headliners U2. Saturday will see Jackson Brown, Seasick Steve and the Scissor sisters before Muse take to the stage while Sunday will feature hard rocker Slash, Ray Davies and Jack Johnson before Faithless whip the crowd into a frenzy for soul legend Stevie Wonder.

The rock-solid confirmation of the headliners will come as little surprise, since all the top names were revealed earlier this year, but the inclusion of Snoop – the biggest rapper to play the festival after Jay-Z's triumphant performance in 2008 – will provide a talking point for festival-goers as they prepare for the ultimate Glastonbury party.

Eavis said that after Jay-Z's controversial but ultimately lauded performance the festival had been keen to have another urban artist of equal standing. "Jay-Z worked so well, that when we heard it was a possibility that Snoop Dogg could do it we went to work."

Snoop was infamously banned from playing in the UK until earlier this year following a mass brawl at Heathrow airport in 2006. The rapper and five members of his entourage were arrested, leading immigration officials to claim his presence in the UK risked provoking violent crime and refuse him a visa for a tour.

The ban was lifted in 2008, but the UK Border agency challenged the decision, causing Snoop to criticise the British legal system in his own inimitable way. "It's not the fans, it's just a few people in white wigs and members of parliament," he reportedly said. "They got a problem because the law is from the 1800s."

Eavis dismissed any concerns about the rapper's chequered history. "We never pass judgment on the people who play here; we hire them for their musical ability. We are only interested in their music and what they will bring to the festival. We never compromise on that," he said.

He was particularly excited about seeing respected electronica giants Faithless, who will be warm up the Pyramid stage before Stevie Wonder closes the festival on Sunday evening. Eavis said: "Faithless are a fantastic festival band, they have an amazing ability to get people jumping up and down, raising their hands in the air and smiling. It will be fantastic."

Highlights from the Other Stage include Florence and the Machine, Hot Chip and The Flaming Lips on Friday, Editors and Pet Shop Boys on Saturday and LCD Soundsystem, MGMT and Orbital on Sunday. Groove Armada and Mumford and Sons, the XX and Julian Casablancas will play the John Peel stage.

Gathering artists for the 40th Glastonbury had been easier than usual, he said, admitting that the act he was most "wobbly-kneed" about was Willie Nelson. "Everybody just wanted to get involved this year."

And the music is just one of many treats that the festival has in store for Glastonbury goers, he promised. The after-dark madness that congregates around the fantasy areas of Shangri-la, Trash City and Arcadia will be given more room than ever this year, with the festival ploughing in an extra £200,000 into the area, increasing its size by 10 acres. "The extra space is about the size of Trafalgar Square," said Eavis. "People love the diversity and avant-garde nature of it and this year it will be better than ever."

Paul Stokes, associate editor of NME, said the line-up proved "the unique place Glastonbury occupies in not only the hearts of the British festival going public, but also the world's most influential music artists".

Only Glastonbury could put "credible acts" like Casablancas, Vampire Weekend and The National alongside pops acts like Scissor Sisters, he said. "Elsewhere it would seem 'try-hard' but all we've been taking about it since we heard the rumours like the showdown between U2 and Flaming Lips on Friday night like it's the most natural thing in the world."

The scope of the festival also revealed its international pulling power, he said. "Someone like Snoop would rarely share a bill at an event he isn't headlining – or better still, running – yet the moment his UK visa issues were worked out he's booked a slot at Glastonbury. He's seen what it's done for Jay-Z's international career – taking him from being the biggest rapper in the US to the biggest in the world – and wants in."

Paul Rees, editor of Q magazine called the lineup "rock-solid Glastonbury". "It's got classic artists, emerging talent and much more breadth besides. I rather fancy there will be some special surprises too, it being the 40th anniversary. All that is required now is some sun."

• See the lineup in full here

3 April 2010

The Maccabees, Crystal Castles and Blondie join Rockness Festival line-up



The Maccabees, Crystal Castles and Blondie have been added to this year's Rockness Festival line-up.

Tinie Tempha, Fergie and Dananananaykroyd have also joined the bill for the three day bash, which takes place over the weekend of June 11-13.

They join previously announced headliners The Strokes, Pendulum, Leftfield and Fatboy Slim.

The line-up for the festival so far is:

2 Many DJs
Aeroplane
Alabama 3
Annie Mac
A Skillz
Barry Ashworth
Benki Boko
Bookashade
Boom Monk Ben
Boys Noize
Blondie
B-Tone
Chase & Status
Club 75
Crystal Castles
Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip
Dave Clarke
David E Sugar
Dananananaykroyd
Doves
Derrick May
Edit Select
Enter Shikari
Fatboy Slim
Fergie
Fenech Soler
Freestylers
Fridge Magnets
Friendly Fires
Gary Beck
General Jimmy
Goldielocks
Hadouken!
High Contrast
Ian Brown
Kids On Bridges
Japanese Popstars
Leftfield
Luca
Mark Knight
Norman Jay
Optimo
Pendulum
Plan B
Petebox
Pmcq
Rob Da Bank
Soulwax
Sensu
Subculture
Tango In The Attic
The Bloody Beetroots
The Cuban Brothers
The Coronas
The Dub Pistols
The Macabees
Tinie Tempah
The Strokes
Starsmith
Vampire Weekend
Vector Lovers
Vendor Defendor
Vitalic

1 April 2010

Kris Kristofferson headlines Cambridge Folk Festival




Country singer Kris Kristofferson will headline this summer's Cambridge Folk Festival supported by 10,000 Maniacs vocalist Natalie Merchant.

The event from 29 July to 1 August has an American feel with bluesman Seasick Steve, Oregon's Pink Martini and bluegrass singer Kathy Mattea starring.

But a wide range of international acts are also on the bill.

Malian singer Rokia Traore, Irish accordionist Sharon Shannon stars with rockabilly singer Imelda May.

There will be a variety of traditional and modern British acts.

English folk singer Seth Lakeman, acoustic duo Show Of Hands and folk big-band The Unusual Suspects are also to perform.

The Imagined Village bring English traditional compositions while The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain re-work rock 'n' roll, punk, jazz and classical music.

30 March 2010

Bangor New Music festival

Bangor New Music festival, held under the auspices of the university's School of Music, celebrated its 10th anniversary with its most ambitious programme to date, and no concert signalled the event's energy and range better than the one given by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and featuring three firsts.

The school boasts three notable composers – Pwyll ap Siôn, Andrew Lewis and Guto Puw – and works by them made up the challenging first half. Ap Siôn's Gwales, dating from 1995, pays homage to the late William Mathias, under whose aegis music flourished at Bangor. Building on fragments quoted from Mozart's Requiem, the work depicts a journey towards the mythical island of Gwales.

In the first of the new pieces, Andrew Lewis also took us on a journey, this time in and out of consciousness. Number Nine Dream explored the first movement of Mahler's Ninth Symphony through the hazy veil of the contemporary electro-acoustic sound-world, making for an absorbing aural experience.

Hologram, by Guto Puw, BBCNOW's resident composer, exists emphatically in the present, with his ascetic approach to structure balanced by a sensuous engagement with sound. It was delivered with startling clarity by the conductor Grant Llewellyn.

Wales is the spiritual home of the composer Adrian Williams, and the contemplative, questioning vein that its landscape has permitted him to articulate was reflected in his Cello Concerto, premiered here by Raphael Wallfisch. The concerto seeks to reconcile in its single long span an introverted, blues-inflected expressiveness with a freer, unselfconsciously flowing idiom. It was indicative of Williams's instinctive ability to communicate directly that this was so warmly received by the audience.