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Glastonbury’s crowd carries Lewis Capaldi through voice issues

The Scottish singer treated the crowd of adoring fans to a host of hit tracks from his two chart-topping albums

LEWIS CAPALDI POWERED through an emotional set on Glastonbury’s Pyramid Stage last night as he steadily lost his voice, revealing at the end of his performance that he plans to take some more time off.

Earlier this month, the 26-year-old singer cancelled all his other commitments in June ahead of the festival at Worthy Farm to allow himself time to “rest and recover”.

Yesterday evening, the Scottish singer treated the crowd of adoring fans to a host of hit tracks from his two chart-topping albums as well as taking his shirt off at one stage

Among the songs on his set list were Forget Me, the lead single off his recently released second studio album, Before You Go and Hold Me While You Wait.

After performing Bruises, he admitted he was having voice issues, telling the crowd: “I’m going to be honest everybody but I’m starting to lose my voice up here, but we’re going to keep going and we’re going to go until the end.

“I just need you all to sing with me as loud as you can if that’s okay?”

He continued to apologise to the crowd, and the Eavis family who organise Glastonbury, for his voice starting to go – but the ocean of fans replied by cheering him on and chanting “Oh Lewis Capaldi”.

Paula Wickens, 53, and 59-year-old Claire Foley watched Capaldi’s performance together.

They said he was “fantastic”, despite the fact that he steadily lost his voice over the course of the set.

“I got quite emotional, I really did,” Foley told the PA news agency.

“When he came on to do the penultimate song, and also when the Red Arrows flew over, that was pretty spectacular. I don’t think I’ve been to a concert as exciting as that.”

Wickens added: “I was smiling like a child, my face hurts from smiling so much. He’s done so well and the fact that he even took his T-shirt off for us, I was like ‘wow, oh my God’.”

Wickens said the pair waited for five hours in the “hot” sun to see the performance, and added that if she could speak to Capaldi about his performance, she would first off “give him a hug and say, you blew the whole arena out of here”.

Before his final song, he told the crowd: “I recently took three weeks off just because I’ve been none stop the past year and I wanted to take a wee break from my head for my mental health.

“I wanted to come back and do Glastonbury because it’s obviously so incredible so I just want to thank you all for coming out. I was scared but you’ve really made me feel at ease so thank you very much for that.”

Capaldi added: “I feel like I’ll be taking another wee break over the next couple of weeks so you probably won’t see much of me for the rest of the year maybe even. But when I do come back, when I do see you, I hope you’re all still up for watching.”

He closed his set with his Grammy-nominated track Someone You Loved, telling the crowd “I love you all” and became emotional as they chanted back the lyrics to him when he was struggling to sing some of the notes.

Foley said of the announcement: “He was very, very brave and very open and honest and the crowd absolutely loved that.”

The Glaswegian singer, who has previously opened up about his recent diagnosis of Tourette’s, also appeared to experience an increasing number of ticks during the set.

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    Mute Barry
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    Aug 30th 2020, 7:33 AM

    Council think it will have no negative impact?

    They’ve clearly not lived near students who love to party. Especially not fun when you have to be up for work!

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    Mute Mark Boyle
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    Aug 30th 2020, 7:36 AM

    @Barry: There article said that antisocial behaviour was out of the scope of a planning application. The ‘no negative effect’ was in relation to the building, not the occupants.

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    Mute D Mems
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    Aug 30th 2020, 8:22 AM

    @Barry: they actually come down hard on having parties within Trinity Hall, previously you were allowed one over-nihht guest who had to be signed in prior to 11PM and couldn’t re-enter after that, prior to 11 it was 3 guests who had to be gone by 11, at least those were the rules a few years ago.
    Hence, parties on site aren’t the issue, coming and going to off-site parties could be an issue however

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    Mute Chris O'Connor
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    Aug 30th 2020, 9:33 AM

    Have rent caps been considered in terms of this development. University rents are notoriously overpriced fuelling rent increases in the general rental market.

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    Mute Joe Vlogs
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    Aug 30th 2020, 10:31 AM

    @Chris O’Connor: Trinity only made a net profit of circa 10 million on student accommodation in 2018, so little chance they will support your view
    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/why-should-students-living-at-home-subsidise-those-living-in-campus-accommodation-1.4183312

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    Mute Joe Toner
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    Aug 30th 2020, 9:31 AM

    No different to Temple Bar at weekends prior to Covid…. Smell of urine and vomit overpowering, empty cans and bottles, discarded food containers…. You know… The usual… But that was acceptable because the Pubs were creaming it. Now the ball is in a different court…..

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    Mute Ali Ryan
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    Aug 30th 2020, 12:02 PM

    Delighted. Temple road is still one of the quietest streets in Dublin. Plenty of room in the area. Students are largely very respectful in my experience.

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    Mute Martin Sinnott
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    Aug 30th 2020, 9:58 AM

    Trinity should be ashamed of themselves being associated with this disaster of planning

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    Mute Tommy Roche
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    Aug 30th 2020, 1:39 PM

    No argument that the vast majority of students are respectful of local residents, but it only takes a few to cause mayhem. The college needs to take a no-tolerance approach to antisocial behaviour. One strike and your out and no return of deposit which should be donated to the local residents association. When mumsy and pop have to fork out a second time I’m sure the ground rules would be explained more forcefully.

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    Mute Peter Bell
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    Aug 30th 2020, 10:08 AM

    Gasly shower of individual’s.

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    Mute Tony Donoghue
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    Aug 30th 2020, 2:14 PM

    @Peter Bell: You’re not a Trinity graduate yourself?

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    Mute Luan Willis
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    Aug 30th 2020, 9:49 PM

    @Peter Bell: It is usually the ghastly old fart’s who are gasly, especially those who use an apostrophe in a plural word.

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    Mute Fachtna Roe
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    Aug 30th 2020, 9:13 PM

    The story had significantly less to do with UTIs than the headline may have led one to expect….

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