Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Lightning warning cuts Iggy Pop set short at Cruel World

- By Peter Larsen plarsen@scng.com

Iggy Pop had been on stage at Cruel World Festival long enough to lose his shirt — which really takes him no time at all — when midway through his sixth song on Saturday his sound was cut.

Severe weather was heading toward the festival grounds in Pasadena, an announcer's voice told the crowd. Everyone needed to evacuate immediatel­y.

As this sank in, the mood at the Brookside at the Rose Bowl golf course shifted from confusion to shock and anger to tears.

On Sunday, festival promoter Goldenvoic­e announced that Siouxsie, Iggy Pop and Gary Numan, who also played Saturday, would return to the festival grounds Sunday to perform for previously ticketed fans. Siouxsie would play an extended set, not just the hour she was originally given, in what will be her only North American performanc­e of the year. Parking would be free.

So what happened Saturday night? Lightning had been seen in the distance as Iggy sang “Raw Power” a few songs earlier. That had prompted the Pasadena Fire Department, after storm warnings from the National Weather Service, to pull the plug on Pop and the Human League, who were playing on a separate stage at the same time.

Worst of all, headliner Siouxsie, the final performer that a majority of the crowd was there to see, would not be allowed to sing a note on Saturday in what was supposed to be her first United States show in 15 years.

“She's not going to leave her fans,” said Steffine Aguirre of Alta Loma, one of the hundreds of Siouxsie fans in disbelief as crews dismantled Iggy's equipment half an hour later. “We're not going to leave until they take us off the property.”

A good day

Until the weather dealt a cruel blow to Cruel World, the day had been a gorgeous celebratio­n for young punks, old New Wavers, and goths of indetermin­ation age, there to enjoy the best of the alternativ­e rock that arrived in the late `70s and `80s.

Iggy Pop, who played three Los Angeles shows in April, was in top form through the five-and-a-half songs that fans got before the night ended. He'd been singing “The Passenger,” his 1977 song that Siouxsie and the Banshees had a cover hit with a decade later when the show abruptly ended at 9:12 p.m. Saturday.

At the same time, the synth-rock band the Human League was midway into its set on the other end of the festival ground. They'd sounded good on the first few songs, including “Mirror Man,” before we headed for Iggy, and had been playing “The Lebanon” when their night also finished.

“Well, that was a strange evening,” the band wrote in a Facebook post on Sunday morning to express their disappoint­ment at not being able to finish their set. “We know a lot of people did not and probably still don't understand this decision but, having been in this situation once before, we can tell you that a lightning storm at an outdoor festival is no joke.”

A few minutes earlier, Billy Idol had closed down the second stage with a rousing performanc­e that celebrated his long career from his days in the punk band Generation X — the Gen X song “One Hundred Punks” was part of his set — as well as the bigger hits of his solo career in the early `80s. Idol shared the spotlight with guitarist Steve Stevens, his longtime musical partner, and had a huge crowd singing along to songs such as

“Rebel Yell” and “White Wedding.”

Love and Rockets returned three-quarters of Bauhaus to the Cruel World main stage a year after that band, which also includes singer Peter Murphy, played the festival. Love and Rockets, which veers from darker goth tones more to alternativ­e rock, sounded terrific on songs including “Kundalini Express,” “No New Tale to Tell,” and “So Alive.” They looked great too: singer-guitarist Daniel Ash wore a crimson red-sequined suit, bassist-singer David J looked dapper in a suit of magenta, and drummer Kevin Haskins — well, drummers gotta be comfortabl­e, don't they?

Echo & the Bunnymen were booked to play Cruel World in 2022 until visa issues scotched those plans. Singer Ian McCulloch & Co. sounded terrific on classic Bunnymen tracks including “Bring on the Dancing Horses,” “The Cutter,” and “The Killing Moon.” Unlike Love and Rockets, who presented a visually rich show on the main stage right after them, Echo and the Bunnymen made the confoundin­g decision not to be shown on the video screens, which in a festival setting means the vast majority of fans see only tiny figures on a distant stage. Sigh.

Before that twilight set, Squeeze played a wonderful set at golden hour on the second stage, racing through the beautiful melodies and witty lyrics of songs such as “Hourglass,” “If I Didn't Love You,” and “Pulling Mussels (From the Shell).” Singer-guitarist Glenn Tilbrook was in tiptop form — his voice truly is ageless — though his singing and songwritin­g partner Chris Difford was missing from the stage, probably due to the band's last-minute booking as a replacemen­t for Adam Ant.

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