• trickylens
    2 years ago

    I love Yusef/Cat Stevens. One of the truly great songwriters. I'm a big fan of early seventies Elton John output. I will defend Debbie Harry to my dying day, as perhaps the greatest ever female front person to a band, and with more than enough credit in the bank to last a lifetime.

    Festivals are events to celebrate the known, with the widest possible appreciative crowd. They are by definition for music that's over the hill. I don't get the critical appraisal. What were you hoping for in a field of hundreds of thousands?

  • Simonhelp_outline
    2 years ago

    I realise there’s other stuff elsewhere on the bill and Sunday I has become a bit of an oldies day but it seems a bit sad to me that the three headline acts were Elton John, Guns and Roses and The Arctic Monkeys (who seem like newcomers to me but released their first album 17 years ago).

    All seems very conservative.

  • dj_bobbinspanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago
  • JimShadypanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Festivals are pretty good value to be honest. I'm paying the best part of £200 to see Blur and Pulp in the next month, but Glastonbury was what? £350? Probably see 10-15 bands over the festival. Plus festivals have never been just about the music. I'd elaborate, but I'm sure you know what I mean.

  • Gurupanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    It’s a bit of an all-you-can eat multi-cuisine buffet in musical terms.

    Watching bands is personal choice. I’m not a massive fan of outdoor and stadia for bands I really want to see. Firstly the sound is never great and secondly you end up watching the screens because you can’t really see the band unless you get there several hours early (and I’m not organised enough). I prefer it more intimate: big enough that you can get blown away but small enough that you are right in it. I was never a massive fan of Blur until I saw them at Paradise in Boston. Smaller venue (1000 people). I’ve seen Radiohead quite a few times, outdoors and stadia but the best was at the Roundhouse in Camden.

    Re the elaboration. It’s goes without saying I’m also far too old to be wondering around a large space with lots of strange people whilst off my tits. There would be several grounds on which I would get arrested.

  • Psychobelpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    If you're paying that much to see Blur and Pulp then you thoroughly deserve the unlubed corporate bitty ramming you're going to get.

  • noodlehelp_outline
    2 years ago

    Elton John is an incredible talent. And not only because of what he made out of Bernie Taupin’s excruciable lyrics.

    Festivals are fun. The big ones are mainly bad (Glasto excluded, unless you’re going to listen to the headliners in which case… yeah… sub-optimal) smaller ones are great to see a bunch of acts that you wouldn’t otherwise, and for a good price. It’s something I miss. Australia has a few, but because the European summer festival circuit is so rich, loads of great bands can be seen because either they are European based, or happy to travel from the US because they can play enough to make it worthwhile. The antipodes can’t sustain that kind of thing. Shame, really. We have the weather for it, but not the people. Back in the day I’d go to three or four a year (mainly UK, but a few trips to Primavera in Barcelona) and, tbh, though the summer there used to be at least half a dozen under consideration.. dunno if things are as good now as they were, mind. I think Green Man is still going in Wales, that was always brilliant.

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    First time I went to Glastonbury the headliners were New Order, Elvis Costello and Van Morrison (who had released his first album 19 years before).

    If the headliner had released their first album fifty-three years ago, like Elton John, it would have been released in 1934. In 1934, George Formby was still two years away from releasing When I'm Cleaning Windows.

  • trickylens
    2 years ago

    Conclusive proof that modern music is shit?

  • Russlens
    2 years ago

    It's funny to see a bunch of middle aged men complaining about the Glastonbury lineup, when the vast majority of you wouldn't buy a ticket if you were given the opportunity to handpick the lineup.

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    If I was involved in picking the line-up, I would expect to get a free ticket.

  • JimShadypanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    What is a bitty ramming, and why am I going to get it at a gig?

  • Gurupanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    I think I said as much.

  • Muswellpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    love the Paradise Club, great venue.

  • Nottingham_Floristpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Saw Dirty Den there in the late 80s.

  • Psychobelpanorama_fish_eye
    2 years ago

    Was meant to be Botty but Bitty works well.

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