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The Boss and Neil Young lead at Glastonbury

Posted 06 27 2009 12:02AM

The Boss and Neil Young lead at Glastonbury

LONDON (AFP) – Veteran legends and are set to rock the , the world-famous celebration of arts and music which gets into full swing Friday.

and daughter Emily have returned to the festival's rock roots after criticism last year when they invited US rapper to play the coveted Saturday night headline spot.

The rapper was blamed for slow ticket sales, but his electrifying performance helped re-establish the festival's reputation and this year's 137,500 tickets were snapped up five months ago.

Eavis, who has overseen Glastonbury's transformation over nearly four decades from a few bands on his farm in southwest England to one of the world's biggest festivals, said this year's headliners would please traditionalists.

"The headliners are thoroughly, thoroughly predictable," the eccentric 73-year-old farmer told the Guardian newspaper before the five-day festival opened Wednesday, leading up to the weekend climax.

Neither Canadian folk-rocker Young, 63, or 59-year-old Springsteen, affectionately known as "The Boss", have played the festival before. British indie-icons Blur will appear after re-forming last December.

Renowned for hosting diverse performers ranging from rock to reggae, African folk to ambient dance and burlesque to breakbeat, the festival remains true to its hippie roots but also welcomes cutting-edge acts.

On the main Pyramid Stage, Young, , and appear on Friday; Springsteen, , and Kasabian play on Saturday; and Blur, Madness, and perform on Sunday.

On the Other Stage, , Ting Tings, Lady Gaga and White Lies play on Friday; , , and Pendulum perform on Saturday; and Prodigy, Glasvegas, and appear on Sunday.

Other stages include the Acoustic Tent, Dance Village, JazzWorld and the for up-and-coming bands.

More leftfield tents and stages host comedy, circus acts, theatre, political discussion, poetry and alternative health treatments.

Other performing areas include Trash City -- "An apocalyptic dream-world straight from the pages of a 2000 AD comic" -- and Shangri-La -- a "retro-futuristic citadel, Bladerunner-inspired city of pleasures gone wrong."

Eavis first organised the festival in 1970, the day after Jim Hendrix died, and fans who came to see acts including and paid one pound each for entry and free milk from the farm.

This year's opened its doors to guests on Wednesday but it will not be until Friday when the live music begins that the tented city will reach its full extent.

Perhaps the biggest worry for visitors to Worthy Farm in the south-west English countryside is not the line-up but the unpredictable British summer weather.

Glastonbury has been regularly beset by torrential downpours -- a deluge in 2005 washed away 500 tents -- knee-deep mud and cases of trench foot in revelers.

The Met Office is cautiously optimistic about this year's chances, but advises that festival goers pack their wellies as showers are possible.

For Eavis, times are gradually changing, as he prepares to hand over fully to daughter Emily in 2012.

"I'm living on top of the hill now, away from the farm," he told the Guardian on the festival site. "So (Emily's) taking over the house, which is nice. A new generation of Eavises can live here."

"I still feel I have an important role to play. Even if I go I'll worry about the drains, the rubbish, the recycling. There will be a gradual process of her taking it over."


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