Under a blazing Chicago sun, Arcade Fire made good on the buzz surrounding their just-released debut album, Funeral, and turned in an epic breakthrough performance. Also on hand: Diddy, who rocked a bucket hat and played hypeman. To cap what had already been a guest-packed Ultra 2015, Skrillex enlisted pals like Jack Ü collaborator Diplo, Canadian singer Kiesza and pop superstar Justin Bieber to deliver a headline-hogging performance. It was a moment for the band and the festival to take stock of how much the world had changed since the dawn of the alt-rock revolution. In their only major North American show of 2007, the Seattle grunge survivors mixed hits like “Even Flow” and “Do the Evolution” with covers of Pink Floyd and Neil Young classics. Following a disappointing performance on April 11, the duo crushed it seven days later, packing hits like “B.O.B.,” “So Fresh, So Clean,” and “Hey Ya” into a tight, thrilling set.įifteen years after playing a daytime slot on the second Lollapalooza tour, Pearl Jam presided over Chicago’s Grant Park like the stadium champs they’d become. Damon Albarn and the gang turned in a career-spanning set that culminated with an emotional encore run-through of “The Universal.” Albarn got a little misty-eyed, and the crowd sang its bloody guts out.Ītlanta’s kings of boundary-pushing hip-hop launched their reunion tour at Coachella, and luckily, they had two weekends to hone their act. The unlikely collaborators followed Zep classics “Good Times, Bad Times” and “Dazed and Confused” (the latter 25 minutes long!) with a funky encore medley that combined Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” with the Isley Brothers’ “It’s Your Thing” and Sly Stone’s “I Want to Take You Higher.” The term “power trio” is rarely so apt.Īfter a series of intimate warm-up gigs, Britpop heroes Blur proved they could still command the main stage at Glastonbury, a festival they’d last headlined 11 years earlier. These jam sessions sometimes bring together loads of musicians from different backgrounds, but in 2007, it was just Questlove, Ben Harper, and iconic Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. How many of these were you lucky enough to see in person - and tell your grandkids about someday?ĭuring his red-hot set at Coachella 2015, Jack White asked the audience to remember that “music is sacred.” Lest anyone doubted the mystical power of guitar, bass, and drums, the enigmatic Detroit rocker regaled the crowd with solo jams, side-project cuts and such White Stripes chestnuts as “Hotel Yorba” and “Dead Leaves And the Dirty Ground.” Fans summoned White back to the stage for an encore by singing the hook from “Seven Nation Army,” a tune he used to conclude his set in triumphant fashion.īonnaroo is known as the jammiest of America’s major festivals, and the annual “Superjam” has become one of the event’s signature attractions. Spanning a half-century, from Monterey Pop to the present, the 50 greatest performances in the history of music festivals prove that some things are worth sloshing through a giant muddy field to see. And yet some musicians rise to the challenge and create moments that resonate long after everyone has gone home. Most artists don’t get as much time as they’re used to, and they’re forced to play for audiences that haven’t necessarily turned up specifically to see them. Music festivals aren’t always conducive to great performances.
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