• Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
My Art Investor
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art
Artists

Avril Lavigne review, Glastonbury 2024: Another artist plonked on far too small a stage

June 30, 2024 4 Mins Read


Roisin O’Connor’s

Sign up to Roisin O’Connor’s free weekly newsletter Now Hear This for the inside track on all things music

Get our Now Hear This email for free

There comes a point at Glastonbury 2024 where it becomes easier to give up about a mile away from the stage.

Much like Sugababes’ overcrowded set, the grouchy, nostalgic pop-punk queen Avril Lavigne is one of the festival’s must-see acts, yet is shoved on a too-small stage in front of an overwhelming sea of people. Janelle Monae, over on the Pyramid Stage at the exact same time, is the unlucky recipient of poor planning – a genius pop star performing to a barely-there crowd. It’s not great.

In difficult circumstances, crowd-control at Glastonbury do a brilliant job, keeping everyone safe and herding thousands of people in front of the Other Stage and the surrounding areas. Everybody seems to be able to see, and – unlike the Sugababes over at West Holts on Thursday – there are no reports of people being told to back away. Lavigne herself is overwhelmed.

“I can’t believe it’s taken me 22 years to play Glastonbury,” she says. “It’s about time.”

This is a brilliant show, but Glastonbury must learn lessons from a year that has vastly underestimated the appeal of pop nostalgia, and overestimated the interest in many performing over at the Pyramid.

That said, there is something incredibly special about being, more or less, a million miles away from the Other Stage and singing in unison with a small country of people in their late twenties and early thirties, to whom Lavigne is something of a god.

Lavigne retains the laconic performance style that has always defined her
Lavigne retains the laconic performance style that has always defined her (Getty)

All of us stuffed at the back of the crowd, near the food vendors and the toilets, know absolutely every word of an artist who, for all the cynical mockery she experienced at the beginning of her early fame, directly spoke to a generation.

“Did anyone here have a copy of my first album, Let Go?,” Lavigne asks at one point. It takes some resistance for the crowd to not scream back, “Duh”.

Lavigne is now 39, but retains the laconic, vaguely petulant performance style that has always defined her. She moves slowly across the stage, sings powerfully but largely statically. “Here’s to never growing up”, she once sang. She was at least being honest.

“Girlfriend” kicks things off with bratty brilliance, before Lavigne segues into “What the Hell”, another mid-career track about as synonymous with a particular moment in time as a My Chemical Romance patch and far too much brain power spent ranking the Wentz brothers.

Amazon Music logo

Enjoy unlimited access to 70 million ad-free songs and podcasts with Amazon Music

Sign up now for a 30-day free trial

Sign up

Amazon Music logo

Enjoy unlimited access to 70 million ad-free songs and podcasts with Amazon Music

Sign up now for a 30-day free trial

Sign up

There are more sing-alongs to the evocative rock ballad “My Happy Ending”, and a massive, audible “aww” when the beautiful strings first kick in for “I’m with You”, one of those formidable gut-wrenchers comfortably sitting in the new millennium power ballad canon.

Avril Lavigne kicks up a storm on the Other Stage at Glastonbury Festival 2024
Avril Lavigne kicks up a storm on the Other Stage at Glastonbury Festival 2024 (Getty Images)

There is a rich power to the plainness of Lavigne’s lyrics, which resist flowery metaphor in favour of direct translation of commonplace woe: “Isn’t anyone trying to find me?/ Won’t somebody come take me home?” she sings on “I’m with You”.

“It’s a damn cold night / Trying to figure out this life…”

She’s never been considered much of a songwriter, or even particularly important in the grand scheme of coming-of-age music, but it’d be lovely if her Glastonbury set serves as a reminder of her appeal and her importance.

“Sk8r Boi” – that genius combination of head-banging brilliance and deep Y2K cringe – brings the set to a close, Lavigne grinning from ear to ear. Even pop-punk’s greatest miserabilist can’t resist the joy radiating from this crowd.



Source link

Share Article

Other Articles

Previous

Ethical super savings found invested in controversial weapons manufacturers

Next

Banksy claims migrant boat artwork in crowd at Glastonbury | Ents & Arts News

Next
June 30, 2024

Banksy claims migrant boat artwork in crowd at Glastonbury | Ents & Arts News

Previous
June 30, 2024

Ethical super savings found invested in controversial weapons manufacturers

No Comment! Be the first one.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

A way to remember a great artist 🥺✨ LOOK: The Baguio City Public Information Office dedicated to post a collection of photos by their late colleague, Neil Clark Ongchangco, nightly at 10 p.m. Neil served as the office’s official photographer since 2020 until his – facebook.com
April 14, 2026

A way to remember a great artist 🥺✨ LOOK: The Baguio City Public Information Office dedicated to...

"Trust me, the music that he's into, it’ll make your songs be like Mary Had a Little Lamb." How Sopranos legend Stevie Van Zandt persuaded Bruce Springsteen to take a chance on future Slipknot drummer Jay Weinberg – Louder
April 13, 2026

“Trust me, the music that he’s into, it’ll make your songs be like Mary Had a Little...

ASFA students win big in national Scholastic Art & Writing Awards
April 13, 2026

ASFA students Jack Adams (left), Siene Peroulas (top right), Maya Jeffcoat (middle right) and Zuzu...

“I began writing a song in my head about the drudgery of being an astronaut. An entire verse fell out of my mind and onto the page”: The classic song that transformed Elton John into a global superstar – MusicRadar
April 13, 2026

“I began writing a song in my head about the drudgery of being an astronaut. An entire verse fell...

“Is it cool if I bring some rock royalty on the stage right now?”: Billy Corgan suffers mic malfunction as he makes his first ever appearance at Coachella alongside Sombr to sing a Smashing Pumpkins classic – MusicRadar
April 13, 2026

“Is it cool if I bring some rock royalty on the stage right now?”: Billy Corgan suffers mic...

Related Posts

A way to remember a great artist 🥺✨ LOOK: The Baguio City Public Information Office dedicated to post a collection of photos by their late colleague, Neil Clark Ongchangco, nightly at 10 p.m. Neil served as the office’s official photographer since 2020 until his – facebook.com

April 14, 2026

A way to remember a great artist 🥺✨ LOOK: The Baguio City Public Information Office dedicated to...

"Trust me, the music that he's into, it’ll make your songs be like Mary Had a Little Lamb." How Sopranos legend Stevie Van Zandt persuaded Bruce Springsteen to take a chance on future Slipknot drummer Jay Weinberg – Louder

April 13, 2026

“Trust me, the music that he’s into, it’ll make your songs be like Mary Had a Little...

“I began writing a song in my head about the drudgery of being an astronaut. An entire verse fell out of my mind and onto the page”: The classic song that transformed Elton John into a global superstar – MusicRadar

April 13, 2026

“I began writing a song in my head about the drudgery of being an astronaut. An entire verse fell...

“Is it cool if I bring some rock royalty on the stage right now?”: Billy Corgan suffers mic malfunction as he makes his first ever appearance at Coachella alongside Sombr to sing a Smashing Pumpkins classic – MusicRadar

April 13, 2026

“Is it cool if I bring some rock royalty on the stage right now?”: Billy Corgan suffers mic...

© 2024, My Art Investor, All Rights Reserved.

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art