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Your front-row pass to who the performers will be watching at Glastonbury

3 days ago
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Hello from Worthy Farm, home to Glastonbury festival! As is tradition, this newsletter is coming to you from a sparsely apportioned cabin behind the festival’s legendary Pyramid stage, which this weekend will feature headline sets from The 1975, Neil Young and Olivia Rodrigo.The festival proper is kicking off right about now, though really it has been whirring away for two days already.The official opening was on Wednesday night: a circus spectacular on the Pyramid stage featuring jugglers, drummers, fire-flinging dancers and a bloke doing handstands on a fairy-light-strewn bike suspended above the audience.The extravaganza came courtesy of the talented folk from Glastonbury’s theatre and circus fields, who were tasked with opening the festival for the first time since the early 90s.(Incidentally, the Theatre and Circus Fields have a pretty remarkable origin story: in 1971 Winston Churchill’s granddaughter Arabella was being relentlessly hounded by the paparazzi in London, having created a bit of a stink by daring to speak out against the Vietnam war.

She legged it to Somerset, and there helped one of her father Randolph’s former employees, Andrew Kerr, and some farmer named Michael Eavis, launch a certain summer festival,Churchill would devise the Theatre and Circus fields a decade later and handled their running until her death in 2007,You’d imagine she would have been thrilled to see her charges back doing their daredevil stuff on the Pyramid,)The theatre and circus folk will be doing their thing all weekend, part of the more than 3,000-strong army of performers at this year’s festival,As ever the Guardian is your one-stop shop for coverage of the biggest and best of those performances.

All manner of goodies have already been published: an interview with the band Keir Starmer wants banned from the festival, Kneecap; music editor Ben Beaumont-Thomas’s tips for the best acts to see this year; Glasto returnees, including Billy Bragg and Kate Nash, recalling their festival debuts; and, most importantly of all for those of you at home, an exhaustive viewing guide.Then, all weekend we’ll have news, reviews, galleries, features and of course the big Glastonbury liveblog, which runs from lunchtime to after midnight today, tomorrow and Sunday.That will be topped off on Monday by a special Glastonbury edition of the Guardian’s G2 newspaper supplement, with a full exhaustive review of the festival.Drink it all in because next year Glastonbury takes a year off, to allow the farm to recover from hundreds of thousands of people stomping all over it.I’m dreading it already, but let’s worry about that later and make the most of this year first.

To help maximise your enjoyment of the festival, whether on site or at home, we’ve asked some of this year’s performers to share the one act they’re most excited to see this year …Tom Odell | Eternally boyish indie pop singer songwriter“I’m such a huge fan of CMAT – Ciara is an incredible artist and such a fun person to be around,She supported me last year in Amsterdam at the Ziggo Dome, and we all ended up getting incredibly drunk in the backstage bar afterwards,I’m so happy to see her absolutely smashing it right now, and I can’t wait to watch her perform on the Pyramid Stage!”Tom Odell plays Woodsies 9pm, SaturdayLambrini Girls | Sardonic, sweary Brighton punk trio“I’m really looking forward to see Turnstile take the Other Stage [4:30 PM Sunday],They’re undeniably one of the most hyped bands right now, and it’s for good reason,Their live shows are beautifully orchestrated chaos.

I really respect their willingness to evolve.They’ve pushed the boundaries of hardcore, embracing pop and indie influences without losing their edge.It’s ruffled some feathers because a lot of hardcore fans want to gatekeep hardcore – and that is what I love most about it.Punk was never meant to be exclusive, Turnstile are making it accessible for everyone!”Lambrini Girls play Left Field, 7.50pm SaturdaySign up to The GuideGet our weekly pop culture email, free in your inbox every Fridayafter newsletter promotionBillie Marten | Soulful jazz folk, straight from Yorkshire“There are oodles of treats to watch this weekend; Four Tet, Father John Misty, Amyl and the Sniffers, Nilüfer Yanya, Jalen Ngonda … but it’s all about Beth Gibbons for me.

What a hero! I grew up listening to her aching vocals on the Portishead records, and then her solo work.Mysteries is a masterpiece in writing, structure and production.Having never seen her live, only through the shiny barrier of YouTube and TV, I am totally ready for one hell of an arresting performance.Long reign Beth!” Billie plays the Acoustic Stage, 5pm today.Ros Atkins | BBC analysis editor and rave master“My head’s spinning from the array of DJs I’d like to see.

But one time I won’t be listening to them is 3,15 on Saturday afternoon,Instead, I’ll be at the Greenpeace stage,Last year, I was a guest on Huw Stephens’ Roundtable on BBC 6 Music and one of the songs we reviewed was Antarctica by Divorce,It stopped me in my tracks and I’ve been a fan ever since.

There’s a brilliant creativity and range to their songwriting and sound; I also find their tracks really affecting – in a good way! I’ve not seen Divorce live and plan to put that right.Emotions may run high.”Ros played the Stonebridge bar on Thursday.You can listen to The Festival is Here, his Glastonbury-themed collaboration with Crissy Criss, hereIf you want to read the complete version of this newsletter please subscribe to receive The Guide in your inbox every Friday
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Carlos Alcaraz escapes first-round scare as Fabio Fognini tests his limits

Carlos Alcaraz said he was proud to have squeezed into the second round after struggling with his nerves and the heat on Centre Court during his dramatic five-set win against Fabio Fognini on Monday.In searing temperatures, Alcaraz started his pursuit of a third consecutive Wimbledon title by outlasting the veteran Italian 7-5, 6-7 (1), 7-5, 2-6, 6-1 after 4hr 37min on-court.“I’m getting mature and I know how to deal with some situations,” the Spaniard said. “I always say that the champions always find a way. I really want to see myself in that [list] of champions

about 6 hours ago
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Emma Raducanu too strong for teenager Mimi Xu in British battle

“Come on Britain!” echoed through the sweltering 32C heat on No 1 Court as Emma Raducanu defeated Mimi Xu in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3. The all-British clash featured two players – attired similarly in matching outfits and golf visors – who captivated the home crowd.While Raducanu has been a fan favourite since her fairytale 2021 US Open triumph, the grand slam ­debutant Xu, ranked No 300 in the world, has impressed in junior circuits and shown significant promise on the senior tour.“It was an interesting dynamic today,” Raducanu said. “It is really awkward playing a Brit, especially someone younger

about 7 hours ago
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Farewell tradition, hello robots: Wimbledon adjusts to life without line judges

Sometimes progress registers simply as absence, and so it was on the opening day of Wimbledon this year when the pursuit of greater accuracy led to the disappearance of the tournament’s famous line judges.Electronic line calls are now in operation in SW19, bringing the championships into line with the grand slam tournaments in Melbourne and New York and also the ATP Tour. The French Open still uses line judges. But the shift to camera‑based, AI‑enhanced decision-making cuts deeper at Wimbledon, where up to 300 line judges have been a colourful part of the tournament’s ensemble cast for the past 147 years.With protests outside the gates (albeit with tongue in cheek) and ambivalence among fans, there were also unexpected reactions from players to the changes

about 8 hours ago
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Sibley hits 305 as Surrey break run record: county cricket day two – as it happened

On and on went big bad Dom. Past 200, past his highest previous score, past 250 and, with a sprinted single that left him spreadeagled in the Oval dust, to 300.Sibley clambered to his feet, raised his bat and soaked up the warm applause for a mammoth effort of concentration: 28 fours, two sixes and 472 balls of toil as the mercury rose. He joins an elite club of triple-centurions for Surrey at the Oval, in Mark Ramprakash, Kevin Pietersen, Bobby Abel, Jack Hobbs and Tom Hayward. At the other end, Dan Lawrence shimmied 174 and Will Jacks 119 as Surrey set their record first-class score, finally putting Durham out of their misery at 820 for nine

about 8 hours ago
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Wimbledon diary: strawberry sandwiches, pricey rackets and Oliver Tarvet’s expenses

“Where are the strawberries and cream?” was among the more unexpected questions for one of Wimbledon’s army of volunteer stewards as the crowd streamed through the gates on Monday morning, given that the answer is “absolutely everywhere you look”. It was a different story, though, at the local branch of Marks & Spencer, where 300 packs of the chain’s specially commissioned strawberry & crème sandwich, a staple food for influencers on Instagram and TikTok in recent days, ran out shortly after 9am. A sample did make it into the media room, however, and while strawberries “paired with whipped cream cheese on sweetened bread” might sound like the losing team’s product idea on week two of The Apprentice, it has to be said … it’s very edible.There was an air of genteel bedlam in the main Wimbledon shop as the first wave of merch-hungry tennis fans poured through the doors in search of SW19-branded booty. The demand for hats and towels was, not surprisingly, rather stronger than that for sweatshirts and hoodies, and no one at all seemed inclined to lug around one of the giant tennis rackets – designed to be hung on the wall, apparently – that are the most expensive single items in the shop at £600 a pop

about 9 hours ago
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Mystery swirls around Bumrah as unchanged England overlook Archer for second Test

One of the many delights of leafy south Birmingham is when an international cricket team is in town and residents stumble across them training on the Colts Ground at Edgbaston. Folks could be heading for a stroll in Cannon Hill Park, or their weekly shop at Aldi, only to suddenly find themselves watching Jasprit Bumrah let fly.Sadly, the fences were covered with tarpaulins after some hecklers over the weekend. There was a decent subplot playing out inside as India trained, too, over whether Bumrah will play the sold-out second Test that starts . Having bowled these past few days, the man himself offered a passing “hopefully”

about 10 hours ago
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1 July changes: minimum wage, Centrelink payments, parental leave, road fines and everything else coming for the 2025-26 financial year

about 3 hours ago
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UK food delivery firms step up checks after claims of illegal workers

about 8 hours ago
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Gov.uk smartphone app to launch with limited functionality

about 5 hours ago
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China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match

about 9 hours ago
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Katie Boulter rounds off Britain’s opening day in the sun at Wimbledon

about 5 hours ago
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Wimbledon 2025 day one: Raducanu eases through, Alcaraz survives huge scare – as it happened

about 5 hours ago