CorgiRegisteredFriend
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- #641
I used to love The Libertines many years ago, and still give their albums the occasional spin. My sons, 17 and 15, grew up loving them, and were so excited when they announced this Hyde Park reunion thing. We have taken them to loads of gigs, but for them, this was big. So we got 4 tickets, and made it a bit of a family day out (although, in the end, they went off with mates and travelled up earlier than we did. Parents arem't cool).
We arrived in time for Spiritualized, and as usual they were lovely, quiet intros with gospel infused crescendos. I hope Jason is not unwell again - he was sat on a chair throughout the set.
Then, bar break (chaos) and back for The Pogues. Jesus. Shane MacGowan...how is he still alive? A shambling wreck of a man. It was a car crash performance. Awful. Shane didn't appear to open his eyes once, and was bleeding from the nose and mouth.
A hint at what was to come later during their set - they stopped playing as someone had collapsed in the crowd, and needed serious medical attention. This was near my boys, and they saw him being given CPR. I hope he's okay.
Me and Mrs Mahone were, I suppose, 40 yards from the stage. We thought we'd stay there and wait for The Libertines. After twenty minutes or so, we changed our minds. Even half an hour before they came on stage, the crush was getting unbearable. We decided to fight our way back through the crowd (and that took some doing) and watch, basically on the big screen, from a more comfortable place. Our boys, who were not with us, remained near the front.
When the band came on stage, the place went mental. I mean really mental. Moshing was going on way, way back from the stage.
Then they stopped, halfway through Boys In the Band, and their was a palpable sense of worry. The crush at the front was getting dangerous. My sons later told me that they had feared for their lives...about fifty people fell on top of each other and couldn't get up. The band were virtually begging people to move back, almost impossible in a crowd like that. After about a 10 minute delay, they finished the song (!) and continued.
But then, during Time For Heroes, they stopped again, same reason, same amount of time. We were obviously worried about where our sons were, but no signal to text - all I could think was that this was going to be like Hillsborough. It was utterly out of control.
Eventually they got going again, playing, for the most part, a pretty lacklustre set, if truth be told. During the break, people had taken the opportunity to get away from the stage, apparently many people were really scared, and had thought the same as me. So it was crowded around us again - 150 or so yards away.
Near us, there was a crowd infestation of a lighting tower, with people, two of who were naked, dancing around stewards, fighting with them, and finally overwhelming them and climbing up the tower, which started to rock a little...again there was a delay "would you stop climbing the f***ing towers?" Pleaded Carl. Then, a phalanx of stewards rushed through the crowd and forcibly removed them.
I know Libertines gigs were always shambolic, but this was a disaster waiting to happen. We really felt that we were at an event that was going to hit the headlines for all the wrong reasons. The organisers got lucky, and you've got to hope that lessons have been learned.
That does sound pretty shambolic and frightening at the same time. Glad you all made it back home in one piece. I have never been a fan of these huge open air park events- just because of the size of people there and the sound is invariably poor. I saw Radiohead play in one of the London Parks- maybe Clapham Common a few years ago. Nothing kicked off but it was not the best experience.