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Tuesday June 16, 10:06 AM
Bonnaroo music fest's top 10 moments
MANCHESTER, Tenn. (Billboard) - After four days embedded in
the Bonnaroo experience out in Manchester, Tenn., June 11-14,
Billboard's correspondents picked the highlights of this year's
fetival from Trent Reznor's big announcement to Bruce
Springsteen and Phish's jam and much more.
10. The Beastie Boys show some New York love by bringing
out fellow city MC Nas for a run through "Too Many Rappers"
from the Boys' upcoming "Hot Sauce Committee."
9. MGMT's ecstatic brand of psychedelic pop draws immense
crowds to That Tent for a late-night set on Saturday. Thousands
sweat, shake and shout along to "Electric Feel" at 3 a.m.
8. Wilco guitarist Nels Cline sends numerous songs into
exultant territory as the sun moves low on the pre-Bruce
Saturday night. The band's three-guitar,
roots-group-gone-to-outer-space setup shines on intricate,
emotional compositions like "Impossible Germany."
7. The Rev. Al Green, 63, shines on the main stage with
shimmering versions of classics "Let's Stay Together" and "Here
I Am," but he drives his voices into those crazy lovely upper
registers on "Lay It Down" and floors the crowd, working up a
sweat and giving out roses.
6. Warren Haynes, who is a member of 75% of all jam bands
currently operating in America, drives his Gov't Mule through a
fiesta of Saturday afternoon covers, including "Helter
Skelter," Radiohead's "Creep," "Southern Man" with the
magnificently-voiced Grace Potter, and a gorgeous take on U2's
"One."
5. A tutu-sporting David Byrne dives in to a series of
interpretive dance routines with his company of white-clad
backup dancers, reprising the "big suit" moment from "Stop
Making Sense" and grooving through a trio of songs from seminal
Talking Heads album "Remain in Light."
4. The Drive-By Truckers back southern soul man Booker T.
Jones on a three-song blast of Patterson Hood's Molly
Hatchet-referencing autobiography "Let There Be Rock," a
Jones-powered cover of "Hey Ya" that got the sweaty crowd
sweatier and a ramshackle-train run through "I Can't Turn You
Loose" that added up to a sprawling yet complete trifecta of
Southern rock.
3. What began as a performance by Ilo and the Coral Reefer
All-Stars turned into half of a full-on Jimmy Buffett
performance, with the head Parrothead delivering
"Margaritaville," "Fins," "A Pirate Looks at 40" and more to a
noontime crowd on Saturday, certainly well earlier than
Buffett's used to taking stages. For his part, the young Cape
Verde native Ilo -- who 48 hours prior to the festival was
still in customs, unsure if he could get to America -- proved a
worthy sidekick, delivering three songs of gently rolling world
music-infused pop-rock.
2. Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor announces during his
band's post-Bruce slot that the Bonnaroo appearance would be
his band's last U.S. show ever. Reznor thanks the crowd "for
all the years" but is, unsurprisingly, not forthcoming with any
further details.
1. The megapowers collide: Bruce Springsteen joins Phish on
Sunday night for a three-song surprise set of "Mustang Sally"
and Springsteen's own "Bobby Jean" and "Glory Days," the latter
song's second What Stage performance in two nights. Springsteen
lays down the groundwork; Trey Anastasio doodles circles and
designs over the top. Unprecedented, and not to be forgotten.
Guest Star of the Fest: Jay Weinberg, 18-year-old son of E
Street drummer Max, who stepped in for Dad midway through
Springsteen's set and killed it. Jay drove "Radio Nowhere" at
well over the speed limit, and brought a style that was looser
and heavier to everything from "Lonesome Day" to "Born to Run."
Kid taught himself drums four years ago, now he's in the E
Street Band. Nice work, Dad.
Line of the Festival: "Anybody ready for some m-----f---in'
Phish?" - Snoop Dogg, closing his Sunday night performance.
Least Likely Gospel Cameo Ever In The History of Time:
After taking cracks at the theoretical Bonnaroo odor, her work
with animals and hippies in general, Triumph the Insult Comic
Dog joins Neko Case on - no, really - "Swing Low, Sweet
Chariot."
Choice covers: Erykah Badu ("Rapper's Delight" and NWA's
"Gangsta Gangsta"), Snoop Dogg ("Jump Around"), Neko Case
(Harry Nilsson's "Don't Forget Me"), MGMT (Til Tuesday's
"Voices Carry"), Gov't Mule (U2's "One," Radiohead's "Creep,"
Neil Young's "Southern Man").
(Editing by Dean Gooodman at Reuters)
(please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on
http://blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)
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