Friday at Glastonbury with Lorde, CMAT, Wet Leg, secret sets and more – follow it live!

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"Glastonbury Festival Highlights: Horsegirl, CMAT, and Lorde Lead Day's Performances"

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At Glastonbury, the Chicago indie trio Horsegirl kicked off the day at the Park stage with a lighthearted exchange with the audience, asking if they liked camping before revealing they were staying in a hotel. Their music, however, quickly captivated the crowd, showcasing a blend of influences reminiscent of Stereolab with a steady motorik rhythm. Their performance included tracks from their acclaimed second album, 'Phonetics On and On', characterized by bright bass notes and tuneful, wordless hooks that evoke a sense of childlike wonder. The repeated lyrics in songs like 'In Twos' resonated with an emotional depth, capturing the essence of perseverance, setting a gentle yet uplifting tone as the festival day unfolded. Meanwhile, excitement was building for Lorde’s performance at the Woodsies stage, which had already reached capacity due to her new album release, 'Virgin', coinciding with the festival.

The atmosphere at Glastonbury was charged with anticipation, particularly for CMAT's highly awaited set on the Pyramid stage, as fans celebrated what they called the 'Summer of CMAT'. This year’s festival also featured memorable experiences like the B2B set by Four Tet and Floating Points at the Sunflower Sound System, where attendees enjoyed an immersive audio experience within a unique dome structure. In the midst of the festivities, some festival-goers were spotted multitasking, managing work obligations even as they enjoyed the music, highlighting the modern blend of leisure and work culture. As Glastonbury prepares for a fallow year in 2026, this year's events promise to leave a lasting impression, with performances from major artists like Lorde, The 1975, and Alanis Morissette still to come.

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Park stage, 11.30“Do you like camping?” one of Horsegirl asks their audience, to a chorus of assent. “Cool. We’re staying an hour away in a hotel.” There’s probably better stage banter to get everyone on side, but thankfully the Chicago indie trio’s actual music is far more endearing.

There’s a Stereolab-ish motorik chug that underpins a number of these tracks, at various tempos from indie-dancing to mopey wandering, including on cuts from utterly superb Cate le Bon-produced second album Phonetics On and On. The bass notes ring out clean and bright, adding crossbeams to the sturdy structure. But all this steadiness is offset by beautiful, tuneful wordless hooks, like the kind a child might idly sing to themselves while fingerpainting – affectingly naive but really tricky to write well. The repeated lyrics are strong too: “And I try / and I try”, they sing on In Twos, quite moving in how they doggedly trudge onwards. As Lorde no doubt takes things straight to 100 over at Woodsies, this set gently eases us up to speed.

Four Tet and Floating Points’ B2B set last night – at Floating Points’ Sunflower Sound System, in Silver Hayes – was one of the most transcendently fun things I’ve seen in a long time. The Guardian’s David Levene snapped some great photos of the space – a bespoke 360-degree soundsystem featuring six gigantic speaker stacks, inside a gigantic dome – last night, although a photo can’t capture the delirious feeling of hearing the beat whizz around you like you’re in a spaceship, as it periodically did last night.

It seems like CMAT’s set on the Pyramid stage this afternoon is one of the weekend’s most-anticipated – more than one of my friends has emphatically declared it the Summer of CMAT. In addition to her powerhouse voice, the rising Irish star is just great for a quote. Check out Alexis Petridis’s interview with her from earlier this month:

Best way to avoid the crowds? Be an A-list musician, it seems: Elle has spotted Charli xcx watching her friend Lorde from the side of the stage, and Safi just saw Carl Cox checking out Fabio and Grooverider.

The intrepid Elle Hunt has identified a few cases of WFG (work from Glastonbury) out in the field.

Of course you’d assume that everyone at Glastonbury today has taken annual leave, but there surely must be some gadabouts who are “working from home” and logging into Gmail to periodically refresh their status. Good on them I say. After all many more will be on leave but obliged to be “on email” from the field. I glimpsed a young woman in the crowd for Lorde furiously responding to messages on Slack. It never rests ...

Hello from Worthy Farm! It’s Glastonbury’s final outing before taking a fallow year in 2026 in order for the site to recuperate, and if Thursday night’s merriment is any indication, the crowd will absolutely be making this one count – here’s hoping we’re not all burnt out by Sunday evening. Today is starting off with a bang: Lorde, who released her fourth album Virgin today, just confirmed via social media that she’s the “TBA” artist opening the Woodsies stage today – and, naturally, that tent is already at capacity. We’ll have a review of that set – and the rest of the day’s acts, including the 1975, Alanis Morrisette and more – very soon.

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Source: The Guardian