Bestival 2004

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Note to organisers: 'sunny' is always a dangerous thing to sell an English festival on...
...
If it rains!
Unlike its bigger, non-related rock equivalent, the Nokia Isle Of Wight Festival, Bestival is
small. Very small. That shouldn't be a problem, small can be beautiful, and if you've got great acts (like here, Fatboy Slim warming up for Basement Jaxx) and a good
vibe then it shouldn't matter. But when it looks deserted, then you've got a problem. Searching around, it's often difficult
to believe the site is anywhere near full, especially on Sunday afternoon when a decent but damp-weathered set by reggae revivalists
Ori-Jah-Nal is watched by no more than 50 people. And the first thing Sia says, when she
joins Zero 7's headline performance is, "Thanks so much for sticking around." It's just as well people have
done because the band are the highest paid act of the weekend.
Security is another concern. Friday is like Fort Knox
as police swarm the entrance to the site. Bags are ripped apart, searched, repacked, only for the same process to be repeated
minutes later at the camping site. Sniffer dogs ensure several drug-carrying visitors find themselves putting up their hands
rather than their tents before they're led away, totally bewildered, probably to spend the rest of their days locked
up in one of the Napoleonic sea forts surrounding the island.
Suddenly, Isle Of Wight darlings The Bees' decision to name their latest album 'Free The Bees' makes perfect sense. You'd think
at least playing in front of a home crowd would be a liberating experience but a nervous Friday headline set leaves their
wind-blown audience twitchy and isolated. Recent hits 'Wash In The Rain' and 'Horsemen' provide glimmers of warmth but even
the usually danceable anthem 'Minha Menina' comes over sluggishly damp.
Perhaps they're just too chilled out, having
been lavished by Lee 'Scratch' Perry's sun-kissed, loved-up dub beforehand. Dressed in his customary shiny
hat and psychedelic shell-suit, the revered Rastafarian looks like Goldie Lookin' Chain have run out of ideas
and been forced down Welsh mines to fund their soap-bar smoke-ups. Backed by Mad Professor on mixing
desk, Perry rolls back the years and shows he can still hold a crowd in the palm of his hand. He loves us more than Natasha
Beddingfield could ever say, especially "the gays", who he offers "one love", claiming defensively
"I am not a gay hater", before transcending into even more rambling nonsense: "I am Hurricane Ivan. I am Shazam.
I am the sun." It's what we paid good money to see.
Arguably more sugarcane than hurricane, it's nothing like the kind of tropical storm Dub Pistols
whip up, who after some initial yank-wanking hip-hop move into a more welcome industrial beat breaks soundclash that rips
through Robin Hill, chopped up by the cross-fade machete of main man Barry Ashworth, 'Cyclone' erupts more violently
than an angry wasps nest, the chilled dub grooves of 'The Problem Is' providing the perfect antidote, before sampled AC/DC
riffs and siren-drenched breakbeat monsters help car-chase the police the fuck away and set hungry Koreans on their soggy-nosed
mutts.
Earlier performances, including the samba-silhouetted tequila soul of RSL and sure fire Alan
Partridge faves Fake Bush (a tribute to the 80s-great Kate), also prove worthy highlights, as is another
80s pop icon, Buffalo Stancer Neneh Cherry, who spins a mix in the Big Top tent, where we flock to like
kids in the Bisto Gravy advert. But what with all the hassle getting in (some ticket holders are left stranded and have to
sleep in a nearby field after missing their ferry), an uncertain atmosphere, and a line-up almost too diverse, we look forward
to a fresh start the next morning.
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