Didn't feel quite as awful this morning, but it was the
hottest day of the weekend so far, the blazing sun burnt my face and legs, but
I did at least meet some lovely people while drinking about a gallon of Pimm's.
The
Mothers Earth Experiment (6.4/10) and
Flamingods (7.2) were both already
blowing minds with trippy jazz rock in the earlier hours. I much preferred the
later, whose fusion of acid rock and Asian beats give me an idea of how a
Hawkwind/Shpongle* collaboration might sound.
Khurangbin's (6) gentle
Tarantino-ish instrumental rock was a nice respite from the blazing sun. While
The Mariachi's (8.4) were hilarious. They said that they realised
early on that
they could ruin any song, and announced that their next song was a 'Scottish
song with a very Mexican Rhythm'. Their set was a mix of mostly 80's pop songs,
so everyone could sing along.
Paradise Bangkok International Mowlam Band (7.6) were every bit as fantastic
live as I thought they'd be. Coming all the way from Thailand and bringing
their totally unique sound and weird and wonderful instruments with them. Their
music was totally infectious and incredibly funky, and they built up the speed
and energy with each song. A lot of fans had turned up for
Matt Berry and The
Maypoles (5.6). A man of many talents, who is most famous for his comedic
acting** but lesser known for his music. I don't think there is any pastiche,
but if there is it is a loving one of the 1970's Canterbury scene. His band are
very talented and they have some lovely songs, but ultimately it is strictly
for fans of 70's soft-prog and fans of his other work.
The Zombies (9.2) were
fantastic, they sound incredible for a band into their 50th year and they are
true English
gentlemen, but also aware of their own importance. They told us
which songs charted and which didn't, the history of Odessy and Oracle and who
their famous fans were, without seeming even slightly egotistical. They proved
to be more than just a one album wonder with a set that spanned decades and
included solo work and songs by Argent. 'Time of the season' and She's not
there' were obvious highlights but so was Argent's 'Hold your head up'. As
usual (for Lunar that is) a procession of drummers, brass bands, people in
animal masks and flame jugglers, walked around the site and gave a cloaked Matt
Berry the honour of dropping the torch.
Super Furry Animals (7.6) had the final
headline set of the weekend. A lot of the 90+ minutes dragged for me. I didn't
care for most of the acoustic tunes.
But the highlights, Such as the occasional
drops of Dn'B, Gruff Rhys singing through a power rangers helmet and the three
guitarists lifting their instruments to the sky. Throughout the set they were
funny and pretended to play a new song called 'earth' which was actually just a
strange audience participation section where we all out our hands on our heads
and waved our fingers. The electro-rock masterpiece 'the man don't give a fuck'
lasted about 20 minutes. They waved a placars with messages such as 'thanks for
the lasers' ,'lasers hate austerity', and 'resist phoney encores' before
leaving the stage, leaving one of them to play a short DJ set of strange techno
noise before coming back on in their yeti suits, to finish the show. SFA's are
experts at putting on a show.
*Google them
**The IT Crowd, Mighty Boosh, Toast Of London, House Of
Fools, Garth Merengi's Darkplace...