D'Angelo lights up Bonnaroo in initial U.S. performance in additional than a decade
D'Angelo is back.
The reclusive R&B singer created his initial live U.S. look in twelve years at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts competition early Sunday morning, shocking some thousand fans throughout Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's Superjam session. "I've been waiting twelve years to mention this — girls and gentlemen, D'Angelo!," Thompson said because the crowd roared. (See exclusive photos of the competition here.)
It was his initial U.S. show since 2000 and a prelude to an look at July's Essence Music competition and a eu tour with several of identical players who backed him Sunday morning. D'Angelo played live in Europe earlier this year.
D'Angelo and his all-star band powered through a 90-minute jam session Sunday morning that included Jimi Hendrix's "Have You Ever Been to electrical Ladyland," Parliament Funkadelic's "Funky greenback Bill," Led Zeppelin's "What Is and What ought to Never Be" and also the Beatles' "She Came in Through the toilet Window," however no new music.
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D'Angelo worked from lyric sheets and also the band place along a six-hour preparation Saturday before the Roots, Thompson's regular band, played a gig on Bonnaroo's biggest stage. When the gang chanted "One additional song! another song!" once the set, Thompson told fans they hadn't learned any others to play.
Asked if he would have an interest in an interview once the show, D'Angelo said "not nonetheless." His solely recent public comments were created in a very GQ article last month.
Dressed in a black tank prime and jeans with a black and white bandanna wrapped around his dreadlocks, D'Angelo was visibly reserved at the beginning of the set. however he warmed up, kicking into high gear throughout the Zeppelin portion of the show. Switching between keyboards and his guitar, D'Angelo's solely verbal interaction with the gang came close to the top of the night when he shouted: "Do y'all need us to travel home yet?"
Thompson, sipping a cup of orange juice, was still fired up once the show. "Man, i would like to travel to Disneyland, right?" he said. "I've been dreaming regarding this."
Thompson said he had an ulterior motive for luring his friend to Manchester. He needed to prove D'Angelo was still in fighting form. "I needed him to check that," he said. "That's a inexperienced lightweight. Me doing it wasn't, like, running out of jam partners. Me doing it absolutely was essentially showing him, 'Look, you're thus missed you don't even notice what proportion you're missed,' hoping that this may be the adrenaline boost that may finally get him to show his record into the label. It's done, it's good. I played on it. i do know it's good. currently it's simply time to let his youngsters go and show it to the globe. That's what I'm here for."
D'Angelo makes first US look in twelve years
The Red Hot Chili Peppers dominated Day 3 of Bonnaroo last night in Manchester, Tennesee, topping a bill stacked with old-school rock acts starting from unhealthy Brains to Alice Cooper, dubstep superstar Skrillex and a suprise performance by re-emerging soul singer D'Angelo.
The aesthetic antidote to Radiohead, who stuck principally to their moodier, more moderen material on Friday night, the Chili Peppers aimed merely to please, treating the party-ready Bonnaroo trustworthy to an onslaught of hits, as well as "Give It Away," "Scar Tissue," "By the Way" and "Under the Bridge."
As with previous Bonnaroo headliners like Stevie marvel, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and also the Police, the fest's objective in booking bands just like the Chilis is to unite an eclectic audience around collective moments of stadium-sized sing-along nostalgia. That mission was accomplished varied times throughout the recently inducted Rock and Roll Hall of Famers' performance, albeit the tunes they dug up weren't all that recent. They solely played one choice from their initial decade along — their 1989 cowl of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground." The set's most crowd-pleasing moments came throughout decade-or-so-old cuts just like the staccato single "Can't Stop" and comeback anthem "Californication."
Bonnaroo is choked with often-unfounded rumors, however a significant one turned out to real this year: D'Angelo marked his initial U.S. look in additional than a decade at the Questlove-organized late-night Super Jam. "I've been waiting twelve years to mention this," Questlove said at the start of his set, that set out well past midnight. "Ladies and gentlemen, D'Angelo." sporting a black tank prime and a series and searching insanely buff, D'Angelo showed no rust. He appeared perfectly snug jamming on the keys, rocking back and forth and letting his swish falsetto run wild on covers like Funkadelic's "Hit it and Quit It," Led Zeppelin's "What Is and What ought to Never Be" and a wildly entertaining wrestle the Beatles "She Came in Through the toilet Window," where he grooved, held a backup singer animatedly and at one purpose punched a beach ball into the air, laughing. once the song, D'Angelo stretched his arm like he'd simply finished a difficult workout and grinned – it absolutely was clear his mojo is stronger than ever.
"This is what we tend to used to try and do at the studio. We'd simply undergo the catalog of all my favorite songs. What you are literally seeing is that the method, us jamming here tonight," Questlove said. His assembled band additionally included the Roots' bassist Pino Palladino, guitarist Captain Kirk Douglas, keyboardist James Poyser and also the Time guitarist Jesse Johnson. They took the gang into a world of deep funk, performing the songs as psychedelic wide-open jams. the gang chanted fiercely for another song at the top, however Questlove came to the stage and said that they had regretfully run out of fabric. "We do not know any further songs. we tend to were literally cramming of these songs in six hours," he admitted.
On hand to represent music's zeitgeist, not its legacy, Skrillex crammed glow-stick lobbers into the that Stage space and well into the center of Centeroo, because the asymmetrically-coiffed DJ-producer held complete management over the gang from within his onstage spaceship. From anywhere else close to or at intervals Centeroo, it should have gave the impression of God was losing a fiercely contested game of decision of Duty. Twelve hours earlier, DC hardcore legends unhealthy Brains played That Tent, that served as a form of an aggro-rock stage on Saturday, hosting Flogging Molly, Alice Cooper and Danzig. wanting oddly like Leon Russell, singer H.R. emerged sporting long white hair, a white suit and prime hat, because the band furiously blazed its means through hardcore classics like "Pay to Cum" and "Sailin' On" together with some sludgy, Nineties-style metal and, of course, some reggae.
Over the course of 3 costume changes, Santigold rolled through hits from her 2007 debut and her recently-released second LP throughout an early-evening set at the What Stage, backed by 3 Devo-looking dudes in white flat-top wigs. Pandemonium briefly broke out when the Philadelphia avant-pop singer urged members of the audience to bumrush the stage and dance throughout her song "Creator." What began as some frenzied fans running up the wings of the stage quickly became thousands jumping the barricades, pushing in hundreds-strong huddles against a really penetrable forcefield of concert security. "I told them it could not be contained!" the singer said once the song finished and also the crowd finally backed off.
Glenn Danzig took a rather totally different approach in attempting to urge to grasp his audience. At around seven p.m., soon once beginning his Danzig Legacy show at That Tent, the famously muscle-bound punk and metal singer, apparently leery of getting his image taken, jumped off the aspect of the stage to physically confront a press photographer. Security intervened, and Danzig retreated to his dressing space in a very huff. Luckily, he came onstage and totally killed a double shot of Danzig headbangers and Misfits shout-alongs, in what was simply the loudest show of the competition thus far.
One of the foremost anticipated shows of the competition, Alice Cooper's did not disappoint. His That Tent stage was cartoonishly doctored-up to appear sort of a horror show (or an Eighties music video stage), because the shock-rocker played what gave the impression of all of his hits, from "Eighteen" and "Poison" to the night's final crowd-pleaser, "Feed My Frankenstein." There was no shortage of visual attractiveness, either, as Cooper thrust his crutches within the air and had his bandmates battle inflatable Frankensteins.
The night ended with the Wu-Tang Clan's GZA performing his hip-hop masterpiece Liquid Swords backed by Latin-funk ensemble Grupo Fantasma. The rapper sounded as genius as ever, his on-point flow all the additional intensified by the band's absolute ability to recapture and add spirited embellishment to his classics. sadly, it began to rain simply as GZA was paying tribute to his fallen bandmate Ol' Dirty Bastard with a canopy of "Shimmy Shimmy Ya." Combined with the show's absurdly late 2:30 a.m. begin time (for a 90-minute show!), the weather amendment meant that fewer individuals got see this epic pairing than ought to have.
The reunited Beach Boys, Bon Iver, the Shins, Phish and additional can shut out Bonnaroo on Sunday.
D'Angelo is back.
The reclusive R&B singer created his initial live U.S. look in twelve years at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts competition early Sunday morning, shocking some thousand fans throughout Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's Superjam session. "I've been waiting twelve years to mention this — girls and gentlemen, D'Angelo!," Thompson said because the crowd roared. (See exclusive photos of the competition here.)
It was his initial U.S. show since 2000 and a prelude to an look at July's Essence Music competition and a eu tour with several of identical players who backed him Sunday morning. D'Angelo played live in Europe earlier this year.
D'Angelo and his all-star band powered through a 90-minute jam session Sunday morning that included Jimi Hendrix's "Have You Ever Been to electrical Ladyland," Parliament Funkadelic's "Funky greenback Bill," Led Zeppelin's "What Is and What ought to Never Be" and also the Beatles' "She Came in Through the toilet Window," however no new music.
Get additional EW: Subscribe to the magazine for less than 33¢ an issue!
D'Angelo worked from lyric sheets and also the band place along a six-hour preparation Saturday before the Roots, Thompson's regular band, played a gig on Bonnaroo's biggest stage. When the gang chanted "One additional song! another song!" once the set, Thompson told fans they hadn't learned any others to play.
Asked if he would have an interest in an interview once the show, D'Angelo said "not nonetheless." His solely recent public comments were created in a very GQ article last month.
Dressed in a black tank prime and jeans with a black and white bandanna wrapped around his dreadlocks, D'Angelo was visibly reserved at the beginning of the set. however he warmed up, kicking into high gear throughout the Zeppelin portion of the show. Switching between keyboards and his guitar, D'Angelo's solely verbal interaction with the gang came close to the top of the night when he shouted: "Do y'all need us to travel home yet?"
Thompson, sipping a cup of orange juice, was still fired up once the show. "Man, i would like to travel to Disneyland, right?" he said. "I've been dreaming regarding this."
Thompson said he had an ulterior motive for luring his friend to Manchester. He needed to prove D'Angelo was still in fighting form. "I needed him to check that," he said. "That's a inexperienced lightweight. Me doing it wasn't, like, running out of jam partners. Me doing it absolutely was essentially showing him, 'Look, you're thus missed you don't even notice what proportion you're missed,' hoping that this may be the adrenaline boost that may finally get him to show his record into the label. It's done, it's good. I played on it. i do know it's good. currently it's simply time to let his youngsters go and show it to the globe. That's what I'm here for."
D'Angelo makes first US look in twelve years
The Red Hot Chili Peppers dominated Day 3 of Bonnaroo last night in Manchester, Tennesee, topping a bill stacked with old-school rock acts starting from unhealthy Brains to Alice Cooper, dubstep superstar Skrillex and a suprise performance by re-emerging soul singer D'Angelo.
The aesthetic antidote to Radiohead, who stuck principally to their moodier, more moderen material on Friday night, the Chili Peppers aimed merely to please, treating the party-ready Bonnaroo trustworthy to an onslaught of hits, as well as "Give It Away," "Scar Tissue," "By the Way" and "Under the Bridge."
As with previous Bonnaroo headliners like Stevie marvel, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty and also the Police, the fest's objective in booking bands just like the Chilis is to unite an eclectic audience around collective moments of stadium-sized sing-along nostalgia. That mission was accomplished varied times throughout the recently inducted Rock and Roll Hall of Famers' performance, albeit the tunes they dug up weren't all that recent. They solely played one choice from their initial decade along — their 1989 cowl of Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground." The set's most crowd-pleasing moments came throughout decade-or-so-old cuts just like the staccato single "Can't Stop" and comeback anthem "Californication."
Bonnaroo is choked with often-unfounded rumors, however a significant one turned out to real this year: D'Angelo marked his initial U.S. look in additional than a decade at the Questlove-organized late-night Super Jam. "I've been waiting twelve years to mention this," Questlove said at the start of his set, that set out well past midnight. "Ladies and gentlemen, D'Angelo." sporting a black tank prime and a series and searching insanely buff, D'Angelo showed no rust. He appeared perfectly snug jamming on the keys, rocking back and forth and letting his swish falsetto run wild on covers like Funkadelic's "Hit it and Quit It," Led Zeppelin's "What Is and What ought to Never Be" and a wildly entertaining wrestle the Beatles "She Came in Through the toilet Window," where he grooved, held a backup singer animatedly and at one purpose punched a beach ball into the air, laughing. once the song, D'Angelo stretched his arm like he'd simply finished a difficult workout and grinned – it absolutely was clear his mojo is stronger than ever.
"This is what we tend to used to try and do at the studio. We'd simply undergo the catalog of all my favorite songs. What you are literally seeing is that the method, us jamming here tonight," Questlove said. His assembled band additionally included the Roots' bassist Pino Palladino, guitarist Captain Kirk Douglas, keyboardist James Poyser and also the Time guitarist Jesse Johnson. They took the gang into a world of deep funk, performing the songs as psychedelic wide-open jams. the gang chanted fiercely for another song at the top, however Questlove came to the stage and said that they had regretfully run out of fabric. "We do not know any further songs. we tend to were literally cramming of these songs in six hours," he admitted.
On hand to represent music's zeitgeist, not its legacy, Skrillex crammed glow-stick lobbers into the that Stage space and well into the center of Centeroo, because the asymmetrically-coiffed DJ-producer held complete management over the gang from within his onstage spaceship. From anywhere else close to or at intervals Centeroo, it should have gave the impression of God was losing a fiercely contested game of decision of Duty. Twelve hours earlier, DC hardcore legends unhealthy Brains played That Tent, that served as a form of an aggro-rock stage on Saturday, hosting Flogging Molly, Alice Cooper and Danzig. wanting oddly like Leon Russell, singer H.R. emerged sporting long white hair, a white suit and prime hat, because the band furiously blazed its means through hardcore classics like "Pay to Cum" and "Sailin' On" together with some sludgy, Nineties-style metal and, of course, some reggae.
Over the course of 3 costume changes, Santigold rolled through hits from her 2007 debut and her recently-released second LP throughout an early-evening set at the What Stage, backed by 3 Devo-looking dudes in white flat-top wigs. Pandemonium briefly broke out when the Philadelphia avant-pop singer urged members of the audience to bumrush the stage and dance throughout her song "Creator." What began as some frenzied fans running up the wings of the stage quickly became thousands jumping the barricades, pushing in hundreds-strong huddles against a really penetrable forcefield of concert security. "I told them it could not be contained!" the singer said once the song finished and also the crowd finally backed off.
Glenn Danzig took a rather totally different approach in attempting to urge to grasp his audience. At around seven p.m., soon once beginning his Danzig Legacy show at That Tent, the famously muscle-bound punk and metal singer, apparently leery of getting his image taken, jumped off the aspect of the stage to physically confront a press photographer. Security intervened, and Danzig retreated to his dressing space in a very huff. Luckily, he came onstage and totally killed a double shot of Danzig headbangers and Misfits shout-alongs, in what was simply the loudest show of the competition thus far.
One of the foremost anticipated shows of the competition, Alice Cooper's did not disappoint. His That Tent stage was cartoonishly doctored-up to appear sort of a horror show (or an Eighties music video stage), because the shock-rocker played what gave the impression of all of his hits, from "Eighteen" and "Poison" to the night's final crowd-pleaser, "Feed My Frankenstein." There was no shortage of visual attractiveness, either, as Cooper thrust his crutches within the air and had his bandmates battle inflatable Frankensteins.
The night ended with the Wu-Tang Clan's GZA performing his hip-hop masterpiece Liquid Swords backed by Latin-funk ensemble Grupo Fantasma. The rapper sounded as genius as ever, his on-point flow all the additional intensified by the band's absolute ability to recapture and add spirited embellishment to his classics. sadly, it began to rain simply as GZA was paying tribute to his fallen bandmate Ol' Dirty Bastard with a canopy of "Shimmy Shimmy Ya." Combined with the show's absurdly late 2:30 a.m. begin time (for a 90-minute show!), the weather amendment meant that fewer individuals got see this epic pairing than ought to have.
The reunited Beach Boys, Bon Iver, the Shins, Phish and additional can shut out Bonnaroo on Sunday.