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Joseph Williams MP3
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Joseph Williams - downloadAlbum: Two Of Us
Joseph Williams - downloadAlbum: Disney Greatest Love Songs [CD1]
NewsChemical Brothers bring Glastonbury to thunderous climaxChemical Brothers brought the Other Stage to a rousing finale on the last night of Glastonbury Festival (June 24). The Glastonbury veterans and former Pyramid Stage headliners returned to their spiritual home to round off the festival opposite The Who. The veteran electro duo, who are back with sixth album 'We Are The Night', featuring guest appearances from Klaxons, Ali Love and Willy Mason. While none of their wide range of guest-stars appeared onstage, they still brought along the vocals of New Order's Bernard Sumner, Bloc Party's Kele Okereke and Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne electronically on 'Out Of Control', 'Believe' and 'The Golden Path' respectively. Tom Rowlands and Ed Simons provided the muddy but jubilant Other Stage crowd with a thrill-packed show which married spectacular visuals to a set packed from the greatest hits, which cliaxed with 'Dig Your Own Hole' classic 'Elektrobank'. The last people standing at Glastonbury are now heading to the wide range of parties dotted around the markets, the Green Fields and the Stone Circle. NME.COM is now bringing you live coverage from this year's Glastonbury right up to the festival's end. Rolling Stones quash 'retirement' rumours The Rolling Stones have quashed rumours they are to retire. Singer Mick Jagger has said that he plans to continue recording and touring with the band. He said: "I'm sure the The Rolling Stones will do more things and more records and more tours. We've got no plans to stop any of that really. As far as I'm concerned I'm sure we'll continue." Jagger added that he would use his "own judgement" to decide when it was time to stop. He said: "The trouble is, when you get older or you smoke a lot your voice changes. As a singer you know you can't go to certain notes. But that is not everything, it's the express you put into it." Jagger also said he wasn't that keen to headlining Glastonbury on the Sunday night. He said: "I don't want to play Glastonbury on the Sunday night in the pouring rain, which is what The Who did this year. "I was watching it on the telly, and my kids were there. I'm on the phone saying, 'It's awful.' They said it was really fun, but it didn't look fun to me." Of Amy Winehouse he told the BBC: "I think everyone goes through this sort of thing when they become very famous. Hopefully Amy will come out of this the other side with equanimity and a new lease of life." |
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