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CHEMS ANNOUNCE FESTIVAL DATES
#1
Posted 05 March 2004 - 6:53 PM
from the official chems website - thechemicalbrothers.com
CHEMS ANNOUNCE FESTIVAL DATES
05.03.2004
(U.K. News)
Tom & Ed have announced their first wave of festival dates over the summer:
Glastonbury: 25-27th June
Oxygen Festival, Ireland: 10th July
T in the Park, Scotland: 11th July
They are also playing the WMC in Miami this weekend at the Ultra Festival on Saturday and the Astralwerks Mansion party on Sunday. For more information check out the website.
Keep an eye out for our next mailout as we'll be announcing the date & time of their Glastonbury set and also a chance to win a pair of tickets to Glastonbury, what more could you want!!
CHEMS ANNOUNCE FESTIVAL DATES
05.03.2004
(U.K. News)
Tom & Ed have announced their first wave of festival dates over the summer:
Glastonbury: 25-27th June
Oxygen Festival, Ireland: 10th July
T in the Park, Scotland: 11th July
They are also playing the WMC in Miami this weekend at the Ultra Festival on Saturday and the Astralwerks Mansion party on Sunday. For more information check out the website.
Keep an eye out for our next mailout as we'll be announcing the date & time of their Glastonbury set and also a chance to win a pair of tickets to Glastonbury, what more could you want!!
#15
Posted 10 March 2004 - 4:53 PM
referring to your call about the Ultra Festival, have posted this under Chem's sets too ....
http://www.sharingth...emical+brothers
http://www.sharingth...emical+brothers
Dream Out Loud!
#16
Posted 15 March 2004 - 4:06 AM
Here's what found about Ultra
The Chemical Brothers began with hard, straightforward beats before inevitably taking a left turn. Having set the mood, they changed it, segueing into their raucous single "It Began in Africa," with polyrhythmic beats echoing all around the amphitheater and a thunderous voice speaking the title. This was perhaps the day's best musical moment, a disorienting blast of rhythmic chaos that made it easy, for a few minutes, to achieve that state that everyone was aiming for: oblivion.
The Chemical Brothers began with hard, straightforward beats before inevitably taking a left turn. Having set the mood, they changed it, segueing into their raucous single "It Began in Africa," with polyrhythmic beats echoing all around the amphitheater and a thunderous voice speaking the title. This was perhaps the day's best musical moment, a disorienting blast of rhythmic chaos that made it easy, for a few minutes, to achieve that state that everyone was aiming for: oblivion.