The Guardian (USA)

Paul McCartney confirmed as Glastonbur­y 2020 headliner

- Ben Beaumont-Thomas

Paul McCartney is the first artist to be confirmed as a Pyramid stage headliner at the Glastonbur­y festival in 2020.

Organiser Emily Eavis described the booking as “an absolute dream come true. There really was no one that we wanted more for the 50th anniversar­y”.

McCartney, who will perform on the festival’s Saturday night, had teased the performanc­e earlier in the day on Twitter, with juxtaposed images of composer Philip Glass, actor Emma Stone and rock’n’roller Chuck Berry: GlassStone-Berry, or Glastonbur­y. He said in another tweet that he was “excited to be part of your anniversar­y celebratio­ns. See ya next summer!”

He will turn 78 the week before his performanc­e, making him the oldest Pyramid stage headliner ever – beating Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones, who was 73 when the band played in 2013. Other Pyramid performers further down the bill have been older, though, like 85-year-old BB King in 2011, and Burt Bacharach, who was 87 when he played in 2015.

He joins a group of artists to have headlined more than once: Arctic Monkeys, David Bowie, Elvis Costello, Peter Gabriel, Van Morrison, Muse, Oasis, Pulp, Radiohead, REM and the Who. The Cure and Coldplay hold the record with four headline slots, but despite the latter band releasing a new album this week, Chris Martin told an Australian

radio show earlier this month: “We won’t be playing at Glastonbur­y 50 – although I’ll probably be there because I love going.”

McCartney had been one of the most strongly rumoured names to headline the landmark edition of the festival. In April, Glastonbur­y founder Michael Eavis said he hoped McCartney would play again, “hopefully for the 50th”. In September, McCartney said in a Radio 2 interview: “People are saying that it will be good if I did it, so I’m starting to think about whether I can or whether it would be a good thing … It’s starting to become some remote kind of possibilit­y.”

He is only the second artist to be confirmed for the festival, following the announceme­nt of another septuagena­rian, 75-year-old Diana Ross, as the Sunday teatime “legend” performanc­e on the Pyramid.

McCartney has headlined once before, in 2004, when he played a mammoth 33-song set spanning the Beatles, Wings and his solo material, including two encores. It featured a segment paying tribute to his Beatles bandmates, with Here Today – his 1982 song that poignantly addressed John Lennon in the wake of his death – segueing into George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass, and Yellow Submarine, originally sung by Ringo Starr. There was also an outing for In Spite of All the Danger, a song he recorded in 1958 with Harrison and Lennon in preBeatles band the Quarrymen.

The Guardian’s Alexis Petridis said of that performanc­e: “Paul McCartney looked surprising­ly nervous. His between-song patter wobbled a tightrope between charming and excruciati­ng.

There was much talk of ley lines and ‘vibes’. He displayed a worrying tendency to adopt a cod-Jamaican accent. It scarcely mattered: his back catalogue is unimpeacha­ble, his voice fantastic.”

As the first headliner to be announced, McCartney is a rather more safe and crowd-pleasing choice than the one for this year’s festival, Stormzy: only the third rapper to headline the festival, and the first black British solo artist. His set was universall­y well-received, silencing some earlier grumbles that with only one album to his name, he didn’t have the catalogue to headline.

No such problems for McCartney, who has long been touring perhaps the most beloved songbook in pop history. He last played the UK in December 2018, following the release of his 17th solo album, Egypt Station, where he worked with contempora­ry pop songwriter­s and producers like Ryan Tedder (Beyoncé, Taylor Swift) and Greg Kurstin (Adele, Lily Allen). In summer 2019, he toured stadiums across North America, performing with Ringo Starr at the final date at Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles.

In September, he also published his second children’s book, Hey Grandude!, a picture book illustrate­d by Kathryn Durst about a grandfathe­r taking his grandchild­ren on magical adventures.

With McCartney confirmed for Glastonbur­y, some will be hoping for more of a curveball Pyramid booking for Friday or Sunday nights. Among the rumoured artists are heritage acts who have never appeared before, like Fleetwood Mac and Madonna, as well as younger, edgier performers like Kendrick Lamar, the 1975 and Foals. Fans of Taylor Swift have spotted a conspicuou­s gap in her summer touring schedule over Glastonbur­y weekend, while the Chemical Brothers, who headlined the Other stage this year and the Pyramid in 2000, sparked rumours in October after band member Ed Simons posted an image of the Pyramid stage under constructi­on with the caption “Soundcheck”.

In October, Liam Gallagher expressed a desire to play, but said: “I’m not arsed about headlining … A little small gig in a little sweaty tent will do me, man.”

Many hoped Elton John would include Glastonbur­y in the itinerary of his final ever world tour, but it now looks unlikely. He recently announced five new US dates, including ones on the Friday and Saturday nights of the Glastonbur­y festival.

 ??  ?? On the long and winding road to Glastonbur­y ... Paul McCartney.
On the long and winding road to Glastonbur­y ... Paul McCartney.
 ??  ?? Paul McCartney performing at Glastonbur­y 2004. Photograph: Tim Rooke/REX/ Shuttersto­ck
Paul McCartney performing at Glastonbur­y 2004. Photograph: Tim Rooke/REX/ Shuttersto­ck

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