Elly Roberts reviews
EMI Records
- Cert:
- Cat.no: 5444009
- Running time: 130 minutes
- Year: 1994-2004
- Pressing: 2005
- Region(s): All, PAL
- Sound: Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1, DTS 5.1
- Languages: English
- Subtitles: English
- Widescreen: 16:9
- Disc Format: DVD 9
- Price: £19.99
- Music: 10/10; DVD: 6/10
- Extras:Approx 40 minutes: A visit to the Glastonbury Greenfields, Glastonburyby Air, Interview with Michael & Jean Eavis in 1995, GlastonburyFayre: exclusive footage from the 1971 film, Photo Gallery
Thirty thousand fans voted via a poll on the official festival site for this tracklisting:what an excellent choice they made.Twenty snippets from a decade of worldrenowned Glastonbury festival in Somerset between 1994 and 2004.
This fantastic none chronological running order of the best ofGlasto-Blasto featuring the cream of the ever evolving roster of British andAmerican artists. Since its beginnings in 1971, which you can experience onthe extras (Glastonbury Fayre) the event has embraced not only seminal rockacts, but has branched out into Dance,World Music, Jazz, Folk etc. Its a shamethat some the lesser known acts such as Nitin Sawney dont get a look-in asI can recall some great performances, especially a mesmerising jazzed-up AtThe River by Groove Armada.
Fresh-faced Scottish combo Franz Ferdinand kick-off the proceedings withtheir riff-ladened Matinee from their award-winning album.
Travis, the band that opened the door for the mellow pop revival, display aband overtaken by Coldplay and Keane. Dance outfit Faithless raise theatmosphere, but theyre not as hot a band as you might think. Their repetitivebeats border on tedium.
Thankfully, the Manics are on top form with A Design For Life, arguably therock anthem of the 90s as James Dean Bradfield roars out each lyric.
Richard Hall aka Moby, the genre-bending maverick, delivers a neuvo-Gospelclassic – Why Does My Heart Feels So Bad, with huge backup singer DianeCharlemagne giving the best performance on the DVD. Robbie does his usualthing on Angels, but only serves to prove the song is mightier than thesinger. Elsewhere, dance band Basement Jaxx are always good value for money, asare hip-hop funk-blending Fun Lovin Criminals. It hits a low when Blurtrash-out a dire This Is a Low.
Rock festivals need a big one, and THE festival song prize goes to TheLevellers for a blistering rendition of their debut single of 1991 – One Wayas the throng goes nuts. McCartney rounds it off with a stirring Hey Jude.
Extras are not spectacular by any means. Theres a 1995 interview with Mikeand Jean Eavis, the farmers who provide the land. The aerial footage serves nomore a purpose than showing the expansive site littered with tents andbodies. Archive footage from 1971 simply shows revellers in various states ofhappines – some in the nude during the post-hippy period.
The full list of tracks included are :
1. Matinee – Franz Ferdinand (2004)
2. Driftwood – Travis (2000)
3. We Come 1 – Faithless (2002)
4. A Design For Life – Manic Street Preachers (1999)
5. Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad – Moby (2000)
6. Angels – Robbie Williams (1998)
7. Pumping On Your Stereo – Supergrass (2003)
8. Shining Light – Ash (2002)
9. One Way – Levellers (1994)
10. Rocks – Primal Scream (2003)11. Connection – Elastica (1995)
12. Hey Boy Hey Girl – The Chemical Brothers (2000)
13. Good Luck – Basement Jaxx (2004)
14. Yellow – Coldplay (2002)
15. Scooby Snacks – Fun LovinCriminals (1999)
16. Breathe – Prodigy (1997)
17. This Is A Low – Blur (1994)
18. The Crawl – Placebo (1998)
19. Karma Police – Radiohead (1997)
20. Hey Jude – Paul McCartney (2004)
Elly Roberts passed away in 2011, but he was a man who was so passionate about all types of music and loved meeting his musical heroes, such as Mick Hucknall at a book signing at the Trafford Centre, Manchester in 2007.
A former teacher and also a music journalist, DJ and radio presenter on local community station Calon FM, plus appearances on BBC Radio Wales, BBC Radio Cymru and BBC Radio 2, Elly started doing reviews for DVDfever.co.uk in 2004 and he did the majority of the CD and concerts reviews on the website.
I know also that he loved getting away for the summer to Spain and I hope that wherever he is now he is enjoying the hot sunshine and, as one of his friends has said on his Facebook page, that he is interviewing his musical heroes.