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The Riverside Stage : Saturday 5th & Sunday 6th July 2008 at the Cornbury Music Festival Oxfordshire
THE RIVERSIDE STAGE - Saturday 5th July 2008
Go to Main Stage | Oxford
Folk Festival Stage | Riverside
Stage
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Nick Lowe [21:00] For Nick
Lowe, it’s always been about quality over quantity. In 2001 he released
The Convincer, seen by many as one of the highlights of a long and illustrious
recording career. After that, though, all went quiet on the studio front.
That changed this year. Once he got back with his steady team of band
mates Bobby Irwin (drums), Geraint Watkins (keyboards) and Steve Donnelly
(guitar), there was no stopping them.
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Carbon Silicon [19:00]
a Garage Rock duo consisting of two punk rock legends: Mick Jones formerly
of The Clash and former Generation X member Tony James. The band formed
around 2002. The band was described by critic Alan McGee as "...the
Stones jamming with a laptop," as they make extensive use of samples
in their recordings and live shows.
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Eric Bibb [17:00] "A
performance by Eric Bibb is an enriching experience – both musically
and spiritually. Purveying a beautifully realised and deftly accomplished,
soulful and gospel infused, folk- blues, Eric has no problem melding a
traditional rootsy American style with a subtle contemporary sensibility.
As one critic wrote “ Eric’s singing and versatile guitar
playing fuses a variety of genres to become a New World Blues”.Taj
Mahal
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Half Man Half Biscuit [15:00]
"A band as savage as they were whimsical, Half Man Half Biscuit provided
an unexpected dessert for those British post-punk teenagers who lamented
the demise of bands with bite. Nigel Blackwell's inimitable songwriting
on the minutiae of life, football and TV celebs quickly garnered cult
status, particularly live, where fans could eagerly chant back his wise
words." (Patrick Thorne)
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The Beat [13:00]
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The Love Trousers [11:00] first stepped
gingerly onto the rock and roll stage in the late '80s claiming their robust
reworkings of 60s garage rock and punk were better than the originals
(mercifully most of the audience were too young to know they hadn¹t).
They go well with a cow pie and a pint of woolly ale. |
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