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Glastonbury 2025 Livestream: How to Watch Sets From Olivia Rodrigo to Noah Kahan Online
Glastonbury 2025 Livestream: How to Watch Sets From Olivia Rodrigo to Noah Kahan Online

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Glastonbury 2025 Livestream: How to Watch Sets From Olivia Rodrigo to Noah Kahan Online

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. Glastonbury has finally kicked off, 55 years since it first rocked Somerset back in 1970. This year, Charli XCX, Olivia Rodrigo, Doechii, Rod Stewart, and Noah Kahan fans are in for a treat this weekend, as the artists headline Glastonbury 2025. The 1975, Gracie Abrams, Alanis Morissette, and Raye are also among those playing the annual British music festival this year, which will livestream on the BBC. More from Rolling Stone A 2022 Book Claimed That Anna Wintour Could Have Left 'Vogue' to Become An Ambassador if Hillary Clinton Won the Election Kai's First Solo U.S. Tour: How to Get Tickets Online Before They Sell Out How to Watch Mexico Gold Cup Soccer Games Online Without Cable Stream: ExpressVPN, NordVPN Channel: BBC iPlayer, BBC One Dates: June 27 — June 29, 2025 Although Neil Young is scheduled to perform at this year's music festival, fans won't get the chance to watch his set online this time. 'At the artist's request, we won't be live streaming Neil Young's set,' a BBC spokesperson recently told the Telegraph. 'Our plans, including those for our TV highlights shows and on-demand coverage, continue to be finalized right up to and during the festival.' Fans who can't make it across the pond to attend this year's Glasto can tune in from home, thanks to a few simple streaming hacks. Read on for how to watch Glastonbury 2025 online. Select sets from Glastonbury 2025, including Rodrigo, Charli, and Kahan, will be available to stream on BBC iPlayer and BBC One. Not sure how to get the channel online? You'll need one of the virtual private networks (VPNs) below. 30-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE GEt ExpressVPN from $3.49/month Want to stream your favorite Glastonbury headliners online? You can watch the BBC iPlayer online with a virtual private network like ExpressVPN. It's one of our top picks for the best VPNs for anyone using the internet. Plans currently start at $3.49/month (normally $12.99/month), for a 73% total savings. Subscriptions come with a 30-day money-back guarantee. With the two-year plan, you'll get four months of use for free. SAVE 70% Get NordVPN From $3.39/month Another VPN that we recommend for streaming Glastonbury 2025 sets online from anywhere in the world is NordVPN. It comes with its own 30-day money-back guarantee, with a NordVPN Basic subscription starting at $3.39/month. For an extra dollar, you can get NordVPN Plus for $4.39/month, which comes with an Amazon gift card ($20 value), along with threat protection, a data breach scanner, and ad-blocking features. Once you connect to a VPN UK-based server, you can watch BBC iPlayer. Along with acts like The 1975, Young, Charli XCX, and Doechii, Glastonbury 2025's lineup also includes sets from Ezra Collective, Amyl and the Sniffers, Beth Gibbons, Biffy Clyro, Maribou State, Four Tet, Wet Leg, The Prodigy, Jorja Smith, and The Libertines. Best of Rolling Stone The Best Audiophile Turntables for Your Home Audio System

Lorde's new album 'Virgin' is messy, emotional, and perfectly suited for the moment
Lorde's new album 'Virgin' is messy, emotional, and perfectly suited for the moment

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Business Insider

Lorde's new album 'Virgin' is messy, emotional, and perfectly suited for the moment

For most of us, the first words we heard come out of Lorde's mouth took the shape of a disavowal: "I've never seen a diamond in the flesh." Lorde wrote "Royals" in 30 minutes when she was 15 years old. Growing up in New Zealand, disillusioned with materialism and flex culture — especially in the US — she proudly cast herself as a distant observer. She saw, she understood, but she didn't participate. This posture resonated with millions. "Royals" topped the Billboard Hot 100, where it remained for nine weeks. The smash hit was later certified diamond and won two Grammy Awards, including song of the year. Lorde has spent much of her career being portrayed as elusive and infallible by fans and media outlets alike. She tends to release an album every four years, and in between, she retreats from the spotlight. Even her stage name (Lorde's real name is Ella Yelich-O'Connor) evokes an office that's separate and superior. But a lot has changed since "Royals" was released as a single in 2013, just a few years after Instagram was launched. At the time, the platform was generally used for sharing one perfectly posed (and heavily filtered) photo at a time. Now, Instagram timelines look much less curated, with the savviest social media enthusiasts sharing unrefined "photo dumps" and spontaneous Instagram Stories instead. Pop culture has tilted dramatically in favor of relatability, transparency, and authenticity, too. Consumers no longer demand polish, poise, or aloof nonchalance from celebrities. "Mess is in," DJ Louie XIV, music critic and host of the Pop Pantheon podcast, recently told me while discussing the state of pop music. Several of last year's biggest hits corroborate his thesis: Taylor Swift embraced chaos and lust in writing " The Tortured Poets Department," and it became the best-selling album of her career. Chappell Roan canceled concerts, shared off-the-cuff videos on TikTok, scolded photographers on red carpets, and then won best new artist at the Grammys. Charli XCX's summer-defining album " Brat" — which the singer described as "my flaws, my fuck ups, my ego all rolled into one" — offers perhaps the clearest example of how this aesthetic has taken over. "Even Charli's outfits are tattered. She can't sing except in autotune. The whole album is about emotional messiness," Louie said. Charli XCX even recruited Lorde for a remix of the track "Girl, So Confusing," to hash out their long-simmering tension in real time. For the new wave of pop stars, he added, fans "seeing the seams is a plus." Lorde's journey from 'Royals' to 'Virgin' reflects a cultural shift Lorde has surely noticed this trend because there's plenty of mess in her fourth album, "Virgin," released on Friday. Gone is the detached, enigmatic attitude from Lorde's debut album, when she insisted, "I'm kind of over getting told to throw my hands up in the air, so there." Now, she won't only throw her hands up, but she'll admit to getting them dirty, just like the rest of us. Lorde has said that "Virgin" represents a sort of rebirth — a newfound willingness to follow her gut and experience the world without a protective veil. The album's 11 tracks tackle an array of knotty topics, from enjoying unprotected sex ("Clearblue") and yearning for her mother's approval ("Favourite Daughter") to dabbling with drugs ("What Was That") and struggling with an eating disorder ("Broken Glass"). Lorde's honest lyricism is punctuated with palpable details: a discarded at-home pregnancy test, a dead uncle whom she resembles, blown-up pupils, and rotting teeth. These images make her life feel real and human. "Mystique is dead," she sings bluntly. This is not to say Lorde has never used personal details in her music. However, her last two albums, " Melodrama" and " Solar Power," offered confessions often cloaked in self-conscious theatrics, metaphor, or irony. When Lorde sang, "I can't feel a thing / I keep looking at my mood ring / Tell me how I'm feeling" in the 2021 single "Mood Ring," she was poking fun at the cult of wellness and the blonde caricature she adopted in the music video. By contrast, when she sings, "Take an aura picture, read it, and tell me who I am" in the new album's opening track, "Hammer," it's clear that she's disclosing a raw moment of self-doubt. (And her habit of taking aura photos in New York City's Chinatown is well-documented.) Lorde's "Virgin" co-producer, Jim-E Stack, told GQ how the duo intentionally added sounds that felt raw or jarring to reflect the author's mindset. With AI and modern technology, he pointed out, it's easy for artists to make perfect-sounding records with no hiccups or texture. And when it comes to art, easy usually translates to boring. "That is what's exciting in music right now, and where innovation is happening: People channeling their imperfections and saying stuff that's a little scary," Stack told the publication. "There [are] definitely songs on Ella's record that are like, 'Whoa, can you say this as a pop star?'" He was right to be concerned; a lesser artist wouldn't be able to pull it off. But Lorde can, she should — and she did.

What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?
What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?

Scotsman

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?

Brat star Charli XCX's set at Glastonbury Festival will be on TV today 🎙 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... BBC has confirmed its TV plans for Glastonbury today. It includes broadcasting Charli XCX's set on the Other Stage. But when exactly can you watch it at home? Brat summer might have come and gone, but you can relive it at Glastonbury Festival this weekend. Charli XCX is set to perform at Worthy Farm in a matter of hours and it won't be one to miss. The pop sensation will be headlining the Other Stage and her set has been picked for coverage on BBC One. The broadcaster has confirmed its TV plans for the weekend here. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad A live stream from five stages will be taking place on iPlayer as well. The Beeb has promised over 90 hours across the whole festival. What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV? Charli XCX (c) at the Grammy Awards in 2025. |for The Recording Academy The BBC's live TV coverage of Saturday at Worthy Farm is due to begin at 5pm today (June 28). Viewers will be able to tune into BBC Two from that time to catch performances throughout the late afternoon and evening. Raye's performance on the Pyramid Stage will kick-off the day's coverage on BBC One. It is on from 9.10pm until 10.10pm and is followed by the evening news. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Charli XCX might not be headlining the Pyramid Stage but the Brat mastermind has been picked for coverage on the Beeb's main channel. It will begin at 10.30pm and continue until 11.40pm. Over on BBC Two, the live coverage will continue from 10.10pm and into the early hours of Sunday morning. The preview on Radio Times mentions Neil Young - who is headlining the Pyramid Stage. Throughout the weekend, BBC iPlayer will have live streams from the five main stages and over 90 hours of coverage is promised. Have you got a story you want to share with our readers? You can now send it to us online via YourWorld at . It's free to use and, once checked, your story will appear on our website and, space allowing, in our newspapers.

What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?
What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?

Scotsman

time3 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV?

Brat star Charli XCX's set at Glastonbury Festival will be on TV today 🎙 Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... BBC has confirmed its TV plans for Glastonbury today. It includes broadcasting Charli XCX's set on the Other Stage. But when exactly can you watch it at home? Brat summer might have come and gone, but you can relive it at Glastonbury Festival this weekend. Charli XCX is set to perform at Worthy Farm in a matter of hours and it won't be one to miss. The pop sensation will be headlining the Other Stage and her set has been picked for coverage on BBC One. The broadcaster has confirmed its TV plans for the weekend here. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad A live stream from five stages will be taking place on iPlayer as well. The Beeb has promised over 90 hours across the whole festival. What time is Charli XCX at Glastonbury on TV? Charli XCX (c) at the Grammy Awards in 2025. |for The Recording Academy The BBC's live TV coverage of Saturday at Worthy Farm is due to begin at 5pm today (June 28). Viewers will be able to tune into BBC Two from that time to catch performances throughout the late afternoon and evening. Raye's performance on the Pyramid Stage will kick-off the day's coverage on BBC One. It is on from 9.10pm until 10.10pm and is followed by the evening news. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Charli XCX might not be headlining the Pyramid Stage but the Brat mastermind has been picked for coverage on the Beeb's main channel. It will begin at 10.30pm and continue until 11.40pm. Over on BBC Two, the live coverage will continue from 10.10pm and into the early hours of Sunday morning. The preview on Radio Times mentions Neil Young - who is headlining the Pyramid Stage. Throughout the weekend, BBC iPlayer will have live streams from the five main stages and over 90 hours of coverage is promised.

Charli XCX fans just learn meaning behind stage name as star plays Glastonbury
Charli XCX fans just learn meaning behind stage name as star plays Glastonbury

Daily Mirror

time4 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

Charli XCX fans just learn meaning behind stage name as star plays Glastonbury

Charli XCX will take to Glastonbury's Other Stage at 10:30pm tonight – so what does her famous stage name actually mean? Here's some fun pop trivia for you to dive into Glastonbury fans are so excited to watch Charli XCX 's set this evening (Saturday, June 28). While some will be doing so in Worthy Farm, others will be tuning into the set on TV. That's because the BBC has decided to show the pop icon instead of Neil Young. The 32-year-old, from Cambridge, soared to new heights in the music industry last year with the release of her album 'Brat', which topped charts in the UK, Ireland, and Australia, and made an impressive debut at number three on the Billboard 200. She is known for hits like 360, 365, Speed Drive, Apple, Official, and not forgetting her earlier bangers Boom Clap, Boys, and Vroom Vroom. ‌ Charli will be taking to the Other Stage between 10:30pm and 11:45pm. Her performance will follow the Deftones and falls just before the midnight curfew. We can't wait for Charli's set tonight, so we've been brushing up on our trivia in the meantime. ‌ One thing many don't know about the songstress, who was born Charlotte Emma Aitchison, is how she got her stage name. So here's everything you need to know. Curious minds took to Reddit to discuss, with one user straightforwardly posing the question: "What does XCX mean in her name?" Speculations flew in with one person suggesting: "Charli 10 100 10." Another added a humorous take: "xylophone, chimichanga, xylophone." Someone else thought it represented "I thought it was excess." Delving deeper into the significance of her moniker, another fan theorised: "I was thinking about the change from Charli XCX to Charli xcx and I have the theory that Charli is going to market herself next as just 'Charli' like other popstars are doing right now (like Jenny, Lisa, Chloe, etc). Changing the XCX to lowercase serves as a transition since we start seeing more the Charli than the xcx. thoughts? Honestly, I would find it sad to let go of the xcx, specially since I already miss hearing X X X c X on her songs." Charli XCX revealed the quirky origin of her stage name during a red carpet interview at the 57th GRAMMY Awards back in February 2015. On the Grammy's website, there's a clip where she's asked if it's true that her stage name was her old MSN messenger handle – a chat service that was all the rage from 1999 to 2013. She confirmed: "I didn't have a manager when I decided on the name. I couldn't think of anything so I just used that. It's my MSN screen name. I'm not going to change it." ‌ Glastonbury line-up on Saturday, June 28 Pyramid Stage - Saturday 28 June Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts: 22:00 - 23:45 Raye: 20:00 - 21:00 Patchwork: 18:00 - 19:00 John Fogerty: 16:30 - 17:30 The Script: 15:00 - 16:00 Brandi Carlile: 13:30 - 14:30 Kaiser Chiefs: 12:00 - 13:00 Other Stage - Saturday 28 June ‌ Charli XCX: 22:30 - 23:45 Deftones: 20:30 - 21:30 Ezra Collective: 18:45 - 19:45 Amyl & The Sniffers: 17:00 - 18:00 Weezer: 15:30 - 16:30 Beabadoobee: 14:00 - 15:00 Good Neighbours: 12:45 - 13:30 Alessi Rose: 11:30 - 12:15 West Holts Stage - Saturday 28 June Doechii: 22:15 - 23:45 Amaarae: 20:30 - 21:30 Greentea Peng: 19:00 - 20:00 Yussef Dayes: 17:30 - 18:30 Kneecap: 16:00 - 17:00 Bob Vylan: 14:30 - 15:30 Nilüfer Yanya: 13:00 - 14:00 Infinity Song: 11:30 - 12:30 ‌ Woodsies - Saturday 28 June Scissor Sisters: 22:30 - 23:45 Tom Odell: 21:00 - 22:00 Father John Misty: 19:30 - 20:30 TV On The Radio: 18:00 - 19:00 Nova Twins: 16:30 - 17:30 Jade: 15:15 - 16:00 Fcukers: 14:00 - 14:45 Sorry: 12:45 - 13:30 The Amazons: 11:30 - 12:15 The Park Stage - Saturday 28 June ‌ Caribou: 23:00 - 00:15 Beth Gibbons: 21:15 - 22:15 TBA: 19:30 - 22:30 Gary Numan: 18:00 - 19:00 Pa Salieu: 16:45 - 17:30 Lucy Dacus: 15:30 - 16:15 Japanese Breakfast: 14:00 - 15:00 Ichiko Aoba: 12:45 - 13:30 Yann Tiersen: 11:10 - 12:10 Acoustic Stage - Saturday 28 June Nick Lowe: 21:30 - 22:45 Hothouse Flowers: 20:00 - 21:00 Jeremy Loops: 18:30 - 19:30 The Coronas: 17:10 - 18:00 The Bluebells: 16:10 - 16:50 Not Completely Unknown: A Celebration Of The Songs Of Bob Dylan: 15:00 - 16:00 Sophie B. Hawkins: 14:00 - 14:40 Oisin Leech: 13:00 - 13:40 Lorraine Nash: 12:10 - 12:40 ‌ Avalon Stage - Saturday 28 June Hard-Fi: 23:10 - 00:20 Tom Walker: 21:40 - 22:40 Rachel Chinouriri: 20:10 - 21:10 Jade Bird: 18:40 - 19:40 The Amy Winehouse Band: 17:10 - 18:10 Jamie Cullum: 15:40 - 16:40 Stephen Wilson Jr.: 14:15 - 15:10 Bess Atwell: 12:50 - 13:45 Fülü: 11:30 - 12:20 Arcadia - Saturday 28 June ‌ Groove Armada B2N Jungle (DJ Set): 02:00 - 03:00 Annie Mac B2B Jamz Supernova: 01:00 - 02:00 Four Tet: 00:00 - 01:00 Dragonfly Show: 23:50 - 00:00 Michael Bibi B2B Solomun: 22:50 - 23:50 Hannah Wants: 21:55 - 22:50 Danny Howard: 21:00 - 21:55 Becky Hill: 20:00 - 21:00 Levels - Saturday 28 June · Jyoty: 01:15 - 03:00 · Skream & Benga W/ Sgt Pokes: 00:00 - 01:15 · Modeselektor (DJ): 22:30 - 00:00 · Erol Alkan B2B Ewan Mcvicar: 21:00 - 22:30 · Haai B2B Romy: 19:30 - 21:00 · Chaos In The CBD: 18:00 - 19:30 · Berlioz: 16:30 - 18:00 · Jungle (DJ): 15:00 - 16:30 · DJ Paulette: 13:30 - 15:00 · Ella Knight: 12:00 - 13:30 ‌ Levels - Sunday 29 June Groove Armada: 01:00 - 02:30 Seth Troxler: 23:30 - 01:00 Josh Baker: 22:00 - 23:30 Pawsa: 20:30 - 22:00 Chloe Caillet: 19:00 - 20:30 Adriatique B2B Carlita: 17:30 - 19:00 Kilimanjaro B2B Tsha: 16:00 - 17:30 Jazzy: 14:45 - 16:00 Rio Tashan: 13:15 - 14:45 Dani Whylie: 12:00 - 13:15 Leftfield Stage - Saturday 28 June Kate Nash: 21:00 – 22:00 Lambrini Girls: 19:50 – 20:30 The Guest List: 18:40 – 19:20 Chloe Slater: 17:35 – 18:10 Girlband!: 16:30 – 17:05 Radical Round Up: With Billy Bragg, Rianne Downey, Andy White: 15:00 – 16:00 Panel: Saving The Planet But Not Leaving The Workers Behind: 13:30 – 14:30 Panel: Confronting The Rise Of The Far Right: 12:00 – 13:00

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