logo
Glastonbury Festival organisers cancel major rock band's set

Glastonbury Festival organisers cancel major rock band's set

Yahoo7 hours ago

GLASTONBURY Festival organisers have been 'forced' to cancel the set of a major rock band this year.
Deftones, who were set to perform on the Other Stage tonight (June 27), will no longer be performing due to an illness in the band.
READ MORE: Who is playing at Glastonbury 2025 today? Saturday line-up
READ MORE: Best and funniest flags at Glastonbury 2025 - so far
Rapper Skepta will now play on the Other Stage and Ezra Collective's set will run frim 7pm-8:15pm.
A spokesperson from Glastonbury Festival said, "Deftones have been forced to cancel tonight's Other Stage performance due to illness in the band.
"Skepta will kindly step in, taking the stage at 9pm.
"Ezra Collective's set will now run from 7-8:15pm. We wish Deftones a speedy recovery."
Speaking before his set, Skepta said: "Let's go!! No crew, no production, but am ready to shut Glastonbury down. Victory lap time. Pre-Big Smoke 2025."
Skepta has just released his new single 'Victory Lap' and is expected to perform it as part of his Glastonbury performance.
The UK rapper has over 10 million monthly listeners via Spotify. He will play the Other Stage from 9pm-9:30pm tonight (June 28).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LeAnn Rimes' teeth fall out out mid-concert during performance in Washington
LeAnn Rimes' teeth fall out out mid-concert during performance in Washington

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

LeAnn Rimes' teeth fall out out mid-concert during performance in Washington

LeAnn Rimes took it in stride after experiencing an unfortunate onstage mishap during one of her recent concerts. The 42-year-old singer suddenly walked off-stage last Saturday while performing at the Skagit Valley Casino & Resort in Bow, Washington. The following day, Rimes shared a candid video on Instagram in which she revealed that her teeth had fallen out when she was singing her 1996 hit "One Way Ticket." "This is the most epic example of how the show must go on," Rimes began her clip. "Last night, I was onstage in the middle of 'One Way Ticket' and I felt something pop in my mouth." "If you've been around, you know that I've had a lot of dental surgeries, and I have a bridge in front, and it fell out in the middle of my song last night," she continued. Rimes said she struggled a lot growing up in the public eye. The two-time Grammy Award winner admitted that she "panicked" and ran to the side of the stage where she "popped" her bridge back in before returning to continue her performance. "I just had to get real with everybody and tell them exactly what was happening, or else I would have had to walk off stage," Rimes explained. "For the rest of the show… I was literally like this pushing my teeth in, like, every couple of lines," she added as she pressed her thumb on her mouth. Rimes said she realized that singing some of her songs was particularly difficult due to the challenging syllables in the lyrics. "Like 'Can't Fight the Moonlight,' they completely fell again in my mouth," the singer recalled with a laugh. "It was the most epic experience ever." "I don't usually have firsts in my career. That was a first and hopefully a last," she said. Rimes, who gave a second performance at the same venue on Sunday, jokingly issued a warning to her concert-goers in case she suffered another dental malfunction. "I hope my teeth stay in tonight," Rimes said. "We shall see. The front row, get ready for something to fly out. Yeah, if you catch them, please return them." "Just keeping it real," she added. "Like I said, there wasn't a f------ thing I could do about it except either walk off or just hold my teeth in and sing, so I just ran with it." Rimes explained that she hoped her confession would comfort other artists if they suffered similar misfortunes in the future. "In case anybody has an issue on stage ever and feels embarrassed by it, just watch this video again and it'll remind you that the show can go on even in the midst of sheer utter embarrassment," she said. "You just gotta be real with people." According to Billboard, Rimes has a long history of dental issues and has had 29 surgeries. The outlet reported that the "How Do I Live Without You" hitmaker sued her former dentist for malpractice in 2013, claiming that she suffered from chronic pain and medical complications after getting veneers.

5 things people miss from Suffolk life 20 years ago
5 things people miss from Suffolk life 20 years ago

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

5 things people miss from Suffolk life 20 years ago

Life in Suffolk certainly looks different today than it did 20 years ago. Over the past two decades the internet has grown, a new monarch ascended to the throne and beloved brands have disappeared on the High Street. But many people still reminisce about what once was. Here are five things people would bring back from life in Suffolk 20 years ago. Local bank branches have closed across Suffolk (Image: Jerry Turner) With the rise in online and mobile banking, many industry giants have closed their branches across the country. Earlier this month, Natwest announced it would be closing its banks in Sudbury and Newmarket in September. READ MORE: A look back as Willis building celebrates 50 years Debenhams closed its stores in 2021 (Image: Lucy Taylor) While some big brands remain on our high streets alongside newer retailers, many big names from 20 years ago are no longer around. One much-loved shop people want to bring back is Woolworths, which closes all of its stores across the UK in 2009, while others want ToysRUs and Debenhams to return. Many families enjoyed days out at the roller skate rink (Image: Newsquest) Although it closed just over two decades ago in 2001, some people in Bury St Edmunds want to have the roller skate rink return. Located on Station Hill, it was known as a great place for parties and entertainment for the whole family. READ MORE: Archive pictures show changes in popular seaside town Ipswich Airport opened in 1928 (Image: Andy Abbott) Since its opening in the late 1920s, the airport in Ipswich was the gateway to the world for many people living in Suffolk. The decision to close Ipswich Airport in 1996 sparked a huge public outcry, with demonstrations, public meetings and "save the airport" posters plastered across the town. Under 18s night at Liquid nightclub (Image: Newsquest) Many people will have memories of going on a night out with friends to clubs and bars across the county. Some of the busiest places to be were Liquid and Hollywoods in Ipswich, and Club Brazillia in Bury St Edmunds.

28 Years Later: 17 Behind-The-Scenes Secrets You Probably Didn't Know
28 Years Later: 17 Behind-The-Scenes Secrets You Probably Didn't Know

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

28 Years Later: 17 Behind-The-Scenes Secrets You Probably Didn't Know

28 Years Later has been in cinemas for just over a week, but it's fast becoming one of the most talked-about cinematic events of the year. Landing rave reviews from critics and a great reception at the box office, the long-awaited latest instalment in Danny Boyle's iconic post-apocalyptic horror franchise has most definitely lived up to the hype. Starring Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ralph Fiennes and newcomer Alfie Williams, the third instalment in the series follows a survivor community living on an island, before some of the group leave to uncover the secrets and horrors that lie on the mainland. And this is only the first in a whole new trilogy continuing the story, with sequel 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple having already been shot and due for release early next year. To tide you over before then, though, here are 17 behind-the-scenes secrets about how the new movie was made… The Oscar-winning director famously shot 2002's 28 Days Later on digital cameras, giving the movie its distinctive grainy look and kinetic urgency. But for the new sequel 28 Years Later, the Trainspotting director went for something a little different. According to IGN, certain sequences were shot with iPhones, sometimes using as many as 20 at a time. Danny described that method of shooting with a rig as 'basically a poor man's bullet time', referencing the iconic slow-mo effect pioneered by The Matrix. 'Wherever, it gives you 180 degrees of vision of an action, and in the editing you can select any choice from it, either a conventional one-camera perspective or make your way instantly around reality, time-slicing the subject, jumping forward or backward for emphasis,' he said. 'As it's a horror movie, we use it for the violent scenes to emphasise their impact.' While the director outlined the technical reasoning for shooting on iPhones, there was also another important consideration that motivated his decision-making. 'Filming with iPhones allowed us to move without huge amounts of equipment,' Danny told Wired in an interview. 'A lot of Northumbria looks like it would have looked 1,000 years ago. So we were able to move quickly and lightly to areas of the countryside that we wanted to retain their lack of human imprint.' While this was seemingly partly a creative decision, it feels like a particularly significant choice from the director, whose 2000 movie The Beach infamously drove tourists to the picturesque Thai island where it was filmed and caused significant coral reef damage. View this post on Instagram A post shared by 28 Years Later (@28yearslatermovie) 28 Years Later's grim Bone Temple site featuring a towering pyre of human skulls took around six months to construct, with the design team using over 250,000 replica bones and 5,500 skulls, according to Time Out. This set was located in Redmire, a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, with production designer Carson McColl claiming: 'There was something about that location that felt that it's remained unchanged for a long, long time'. It may have come as a bit of a surprise to cinemagoers to see Northumberland's famous Sycamore Gap tree briefly featured in one scene, given that it was felled in an act of vandalism in 2023, resulting in two men being found guilty of two counts of criminal damage. Standing for over 150 years, it was made internationally famous in 1991's Robin Hood: Prince in Thieves starring Kevin Costner. However, as 28 Years Later only began shooting in May of last year, The Beach director revealed how he recreated the tree with the help of some special effects. Speaking to Sky News, he explained: 'It had already been destroyed by the time we came to film, so we recreated it for the same reasons that you see the Queen in this… all the things that have happened to us in the last 28 years have not happened.' The tree stump still stands, which could take another 150 years to return to its former glory. 'So we've recreated it deliberately to say that it was still growing… which is a wonderful tribute,' Danny added. Speaking at a Newcastle gala screening in June, the director hailed the North East region of England as a 'magic' place to make movies. Not only did he describe the area's landscapes as 'spectacular', he revealed that one location in particular drew him up North for 28 Years Later. 'The first reason we're here is Holy Island,' he explained, according to Cultured North East, referring to the island also known as Lindisfarne. 'It's a wonderful premise for a story, and the idea of a tidal causeway island is captivating. People get that idea very quickly,' he continued. 'So in many ways it's the perfect setting for this kind of film and this kind of idea.' It goes without saying that Danny Boyle's movies are iconic for their music choices, from Underworld's Born Slippy in Trainspotting to A.R. Rahman's Jai Ho in Slumdog Millionaire. Of course, the music for 28 Years Later was never going to be an afterthought. Scottish hip-hop group Young Fathers were tasked with this mighty responsibility, with Danny describing them as 'sort of like the Beach Boys, but so hardcore' in an interview with Rolling Stone UK. 'It was a huge risk because they'd never done a movie before and it's that thing with any pop group, are you gonna trust the whole movie to them? But you go yeah! Yeah!' Can you remember the last time a movie trailer sent chills down your spine like this one did? The terrifying chant that you hear in the teaser – which also features briefly in the film – is a recitation of the poem Boots by Rudyard Kipling. Kipling's poem was first published in 1903 and was intended to capture the monotony of soldiers marching in war, while the recording used in 28 Years Later is more than 100 years old, recorded in 1915 by the actor Taylor Holmes. Holmes' recitation of the poem starts quite formulaic, but grows more frenzied by the end, and is considered so disturbing that it has even been used by the American military to train soldiers to resist psychological torture, used in what is called SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape) schools. Director Danny knew that they'd found the right vibe for the trailer as soon as he heard the chilling poem for himself. 'And then we watched the first trailer that Sony sent us – Alex [Garland] and I remember it vividly – and there was this [recording] on it, and we were like, 'Fucking hell!' It was startling in its power,' Danny told Variety. 'The trailer is a very good trailer, but there was something more than that about that [recording], about that tune, about that poem. We tried it in our archive sequence, and it was like it was made for it.' The recording made its way into the trailer on the suggestion of Megan Barbour, then director of music at the Buddha Jones agency, who knew the recording via someone who had actually been in the SERE training. 'We wanted to work off the strength of the visuals and didn't want a lot of dialogue,' David Fruchbom, Sony EVP of global creative advertising, told Variety. 'Buddha Jones [submitted] three different teaser trailers, and the one that had 'Boots' was clearly the way to go.' With more than 80% of the film being shot at North East locations including Holy Island, Hexham and Waskerley in County Durham, 28 Years Later provided an opportunity for locals to be in the movie. Among extras was Hexham town councillor Roger Higgin, who told the Hexham Courant: 'It was a great experience, and it's fabulous that so much of the region provided the locations and the cast. I'm confident it'll be an amazing film.' Another extra called Peter Thompson put himself forward for the opportunity because he heard casting was looking for runners and cyclists. 'I do a lot of cycling around South West Northumberland,' he shared, being chosen as one of the 'infected'. A supermarket worker called Laura Fulguzi was stacking shelves in Asda when she got the message that she'd been selected, according to the BBC. With the movie taking place nearly three decades after the rage virus infected society in his original story, Danny highlighted the logic behind one very key detail. 'I mean, if you're recently infected, you'd have some clothes, but if you've been infected for a long time, the clothes would just disintegrate with the way that you behave,' he told People. In other words, the infected are naked. However due to the presence of now 14-year-old Alfie Williams in the movie, fully naked actors were not allowed on set under the Child Sex Offences Act. 'We never knew that going in, it was a nightmare,' Danny added. 'Interestingly, because there was a 12-year-old boy on set, you're not allowed for anybody to be naked, not really naked, so they look naked, but it's all prosthetics,' he elaborated. That only came to light during a conversation with the intimacy coordinator on the set. 'So it's like, 'Oh my God,' so we had to make everybody prosthetic genitals.' When the trailer for 28 Years Later arrived, excited fans believed they had spotted an infected character who bore an uncanny resemblance to Cillian Murphy – who, of course, starred as bicycle courier Jim in 28 Days Later. Before this was debunked, the internet ran wild with fan theories, suggesting that his character had succumbed to the virus in the new version of the story. Speaking to Empire, Danny admitted that he waved away concerns that people might mistake the mystery character for Cillian. 'I showed my girlfriend the trailer and she said, 'People will think that's Cillian.' I said, 'Don't be silly,'' he said. 'I ignored her. So I've eaten a bit of humble pie since.' First there was 28 Days Later, then 28 Weeks Later (directed by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, while Danny stayed on as executive producer). Surely the logical sequel would be 28 Months Later? Well, that was definitely a possibility at one point. 'There was a time when Months was absolutely on the table,' writer Alex Garland told Polygon. He even wrote a script under that name, but his relationship with the director became rocky after they worked together on the 2007 movie Sunshine together, before they later patched things up again. Speaking to NME in a 2022 interview for the anniversary of 28 Days Later, Cillian himself noted that completing the trilogy could be tricky: 'I think there's a problem with that, in that I'm 20 years older…' However they seem to have solved that problem by going with Years, instead, but we don't know how much was carried over between scripts. It might be the last movie you'd expect to influence a zombie thriller in 2025, but Ken Loach's iconic 1969 coming-of-age drama Kes was a big inspiration to writer Alex Garland. 'I ripped off this film called Kes, a very unexpected thing to rip off in a zombie movie,' he explained in an interview with ScreenRant. 'The script I delivered and Kes, both focused on the experience of a young lad, and because I am ripping it off, I wanna direct people to the source material.' We know scouser Jodie Comer is a master of accents, but when it came to playing a Geordie in 28 Years Later, she turned to inspiration in a very unlikely place. Speaking in an interview with Elle last year, the Killing Eve star revealed that she'd been watching old clips of Cheryl Tweedy from ber X Factor days to prepare. Jimmy Savile and 28 Years Later are two things you would never expect to find in the same sentence. Yet, in the new movie there's a truly wild twist that references the disgraced media personality (yes, seriously). At the end of the film, 28 Years Later introduces Jack O'Connell as cult leader Sir Jimmy Crystal. Jimmy and his followers can be seen wearing white-blond wigs and tracksuits, bearing a striking resemblance to the late presenter who, after his death in 2011, was accused of sexually abusing hundreds of people, including children. According to Danny, that's completely intentional, explaining to Business Insider: 'He's as much to do with pop culture as he is to do with sportswear, to do with cricket, to do with the honours system. 'It's all kind of twisting in this partial remembrance, clinging onto things and then recreating them as an image for followers.' 'He's a kaleidoscope, isn't he?' writer Alex noted, referring to the movie character. 'A sort of trippy, fucked up kaleidoscope.' Early on in the film, we see a young Jimmy watching Teletubbies in a group of children before the 'infected' break in and wreak havoc. As he makes his escape, the boy contemplates bringing a Power Rangers toy with him, but ultimately leaves it behind. When we see Jimmy and his followers, many have pointed out that their fight sequences references both Teletubbies and Power Rangers in a crossover no one could have predicted. After years of speculation about whether the 28 Days Later franchise would be revived at all, Danny Boyle has since confirmed his plans for a brand new trilogy. The next film, 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, was actually filmed back-to-back with the new movie, and is currently slated to come out 16 January 2026. The Marvels writer Nia DaCosta will be directing that one in place of Danny (who is staying on as a producer), with Alex Garland having once again written the script. Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, Danny explained that it would have been 'insane not to' shoot consecutively, due to practical and financial considerations. 28 Years Later is in cinemas now. 28 Years Later 'Alpha' Chi Lewis-Parry Answers Everyone's 1 Big Question About The Film 28 Years Later Director Explains Why New Film Reverses Major Plot Point From Previous Sequel 28 Years Later Viewers Are Still In Shock From That Teletubbies Callback In The Wild Final Scene

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store