您现在的位置是:綜合 >>正文
【】
綜合83687人已围观
简介INDIO, Calif. -- In a year when music icons of a certain age have been leaving us by the increasingl ...
INDIO, Calif. -- In a year when music icons of a certain age have been leaving us by the increasingly depressing handful, it's easy to get nostalgic -- if not a little wistful -- when the ones still here find cause to come together.
And come together they did: The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan on Friday night, Neil Young and Paul McCartney on Saturday with the Who and Roger Waters to close out Sunday (the lineup repeats next weekend).
SEE ALSO:Tall Kendall Jenner and her tall alleged boyfriend played extreme leapfrog at Coachella"Desert Trip" it was called by the thousands who flocked to Coachella's Empire Polo Grounds home in Indio, alternately called "Oldchella" by many who did not.
But fans here know that time is running out, a portal is closing, an era is ending -- with Prince, David Bowie, Merle Haggard, Glenn Frey, Lemmy Kilmister, Maurice White and others as proof -- and being here wasn't just a luxury. It was critical.

"You realize this may well be the very last performances of these treasured musicians. I felt like I had to come," said Michael Kape, a semi-retired New York transplant now living in Palm Springs. "And the mood is so special, these are guys that have been playing for 50 years. Music today lacks the lyrical gems that these bands have created for decades."
Start Me Up
The Stones kicked things off with a couple of surprises (yep, they still have those in store, all these decades later) including a new track from their Dec. 2 album of blues covers, "Ride 'Em on Down" by Eddie Taylor.
But there was another, even more historic cover no one ever saw coming.
That would be "Come Together," a song by the Beatles, the Stones' spirited rivals since the British Invasion itself.
Of course, Mick Jagger got in his little dig at the beginning, calling the Fab Four "some sort of unknown beat group you might remember" while McCartney looked on from the desert stage:
"I’ve never really heard them do a cover," said Amanda Keller, 32, who is at Desert Trip with her mom. "And it was so good -- especially knowing that Paul was watching and will be playing tonight … well, that made it really fun and special in a way I can’t put words to."
It's Never Easy
People who made the Trip paid dearly, in treasure, energy and time.
"We spent $2,000 to get here but it was so worth it," said Oliver Castilla (below), 32, who came with his brother from the United Kingdom. "We love rock -- Desert Trip is a once-in-a-lifetime event and seeing all these amazing bands together like this is definitely something to take off my bucket list. We are really looking forward to seeing Roger Waters and Sir Paul."

The festival was not without its challenges, with Twitter and Facebook filled with complaints from attendees about everything from the lack of crowd control as people left the venue to numerous issues with the transport shuttles.
With an older demographic attending, Jeni Jernigan would've liked to see more attention paid to the needs of the handicapped.
"We waited an hour and a half to get the bus from the venue back to the shuttle stop," she said. "All the other shuttles were running every 15 minutes, with multiple buses. The worst part was that no one would come out and address the issue. Also, the lines have been horrendous waiting for food and it’s very difficult for me to stand for long periods of time."

Amanda Keller (above), 32, who is at Desert Trip with her mom, added: "Getting here yesterday with the shuttle was awful. "With so much traffic we got out of the bus, as did many others, and walked the last two miles to get here. Today, we left a few hours earlier, just to not have to go through that again."
An "intimate" performance by Bob Dylan, who refuses being on-camera for the jumbotron simulcast, left some unhappy.
"While we loved watching the Rolling Stones last night, Bob Dylan’s set was a letdown," said a disappointed Keller. "For those of us with a general admission ticket, we couldn’t see the stage that well, since he didn’t want to be on the Jumbotron.

Susan Keller, Amanda’s mom, flew in from Boston to be with her Los Angeles-based daughter. For her, Desert Trip is the experience she never got to have at Woodstock, which will soon be celebrating its 50th anniversary.
"I didn’t go to Woodstock. We drove there and found out how long of a walk it was and then turned around and went home," she said. "We thought it was just another music festival."
TopicsMusic
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://www.new.maomao321.com/news/27c7699896.html
相关文章
Fake news reports from the Newseum are infinitely better than actual news
綜合Actual investigative journalism: who needs it?At least, that's what some people will likely conclude ...
【綜合】
阅读更多開始胃疼是什麽梗
綜合網上說的胃疼是什麽梗?1、胃疼劇情,網絡流行詞,指一些看了使人胃疼的劇情 。2 、這裏的劇情通常指動漫、遊戲和其他ACG作品中男主在多個女主之間搖擺不定、無法抉擇、我全都要的多角...看白色相簿2裏麵很多 ...
【綜合】
阅读更多核桃仁做菜的菜譜
綜合核桃做菜的吃法有哪些-九州醉餐飲網核桃可以製作芹菜炒黑木耳核桃仁、木耳山藥炒核桃、核桃仁炒韭菜 、核桃仁炒蝦仁 、芹菜炒核桃仁、核桃仁炒西藍花等美食 。使用核桃製作菜肴的時候,將。核桃仁怎麽做菜吃和什麽菜搭 ...
【綜合】
阅读更多