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Rod Stewart's 'hilarious blunder' at Glastonbury that fans failed to spot

Rod Stewart's 'hilarious blunder' at Glastonbury that fans failed to spot

Daily Record3 days ago
Sir Rod Stewart took to the stage in the legends slot on the Pyramid Stage on the last day of Glastonbury, but many fans failed to spot the "hilarious" blunder he experienced
Glastonbury Festival goers and Sir Rod Stewart fans have been left in stitches after spotting a "hilarious" gaffe the singer made during his performance, which has only just come to light. The amusing incident was highlighted by comedian Harry Hill, who took to Instagram to share a clip of Sir Rod's on-stage antics.
The footage has since gone viral, with many finding humour in the cheeky "blunder" that occurred during Sir Rod's set. In a fit of giggles while watching Glastonbury Festival, Harry captioned the post: "I think my Glasto highlight has been Sir Rod blowing his nose."

Accompanying the video, Harry poked fun at the 80-year-old rock legend for seemingly fishing out a handkerchief before nonchalantly blowing his nose in full view of the audience. Prior to the humorous episode, Sir Rod can be seen rummaging in his pocket for the tissue before heading over to the side of the stage to get one.

The post has racked up over 15,000 likes and sparked a flurry of comments from amused viewers. One user simply stated: "Hilarious."
Another chimed in with: "TV highlight of the week." A witty third remarked: "Do you think I'm snotty?"
Others praised the star's showmanship, with one saying: "He was brill. Loved him going off stage for a cuppa. Good on him. True entertainer."
Sir Rod graced the Pyramid Stage for the legends slot on the final day of the Worthy Farm festival. Accompanied by back-up vocalists and his band, the singer delighted fans with renditions of his beloved classics.
Ahead of his much-anticipated Glastonbury performance, Sir Rod encountered a string of challenges. He was forced to cancel a handful of US gigs in early June as he battled the flu before the festival.

He has previously revealed his intention to cease "large-scale world tours" after 2025, favouring more personal venues instead. Yet, as he took the stage at Glastonbury, the crowd's reaction suggested he still possesses the flair for an electrifying performance.
On social media platform X, one admirer posted: "Massive crowd for Rod fair play." Another chimed in with: "Bigger turnout for Rod than Neil Young last night."
A third commented: "All those eyes on Rod. He looks fabulous for his age." Another fan expressed: "He deserves that crowd after all these years."
The Maggie May crooner stepped into the legendary tea-time slot at the prestigious festival, following in the footsteps of icons like James Brown, Diana Ross and Shania Twain. In anticipation of the event, Sir Rod shared his excitement with Radio Times: "I'm really looking forward to it, and it is a different gig. It's like when you're playing a cup final you're trying to treat it like another game.
"But, of course, it's not. It's special. It'll be glamorous, it'll be sexy. And we've got a little orchestra coming on to play with us. And we may have some bagpipes."
Fans were beside themselves with excitement on Sunday when the artist was accompanied onstage by his former Faces bandmate Ronnie Wood.
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Rapper in Tupac Shakur's group who appeared on songs with music icon ‘dies by suicide' aged 47
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Rapper in Tupac Shakur's group who appeared on songs with music icon ‘dies by suicide' aged 47

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Nile Rodgers talks kilts, Kazakhstan and why CHIC belong to Glasgow
Nile Rodgers talks kilts, Kazakhstan and why CHIC belong to Glasgow

Scotsman

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Nile Rodgers talks kilts, Kazakhstan and why CHIC belong to Glasgow

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But what was really interesting is that I'm doing a private party and they want me kilted up in their family garb, so I said 'well, whatever, I'm down, you know?'. Will he be donning a kilt? 'That's what they want me to do, so I said OK. Not at the Barrowland but yeah, we're doing a couple of private gigs.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Unfortunately Rodgers and Chic won't have any time to hang about in Scotland this time round as it's straight on to the next gig. 'This tour, almost every show is in a different city the next day. Typically, because of my charity work, I don't like to travel by private aircraft because that same money I could be spending on the kids in my programme, but it's the only way to do this tour because we're in one city and the next day in another country and the following day another. It's crazy. This is going to be the most cities that we've hit in one summer in my entire career,' he says. 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I didn't seem to look peculiar to people, even though I know that I don't typically dress like your average Kazakhstani but man, we had so much fun. 'And we were making a joke, me and the girls in my band, and I said you know, for the last couple of years of Prince's life he always played Le Freak, stuck it in the middle of a song, and I said we're going to stick in Jungle Love, and we started doing the dance and the client who brought us in jumped right in with us and started doing the Jungle Love dance. It was incredible. We were in Kazakhstan and he knew exactly where we were coming from culturally, and I thought to myself, that's the beauty of music and that's really what the world is. People are beautiful. Government's pretty much stink,' he laughs, 'but people are awesome.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Rodgers agrees that the beauty of music is that it transcends politics. 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I remember my girlfriend turned me on to this and there was no such thing as stranger danger. I never heard a bad story, like now it seems that's all we hear. And I know mathematically that there are no more bad people now than there were then, so I just take it as mostly people are good, and every now and then you meet jerks, but most of the time people are really cool.' With the extensive touring, producing, writing and charity work that Rodgers is involved in, is he ever able to go and watch other musicians play? 'Rarely. I love to, but it's rare. I saw Esperanza Spalding and Adam Lambert at the Polar awards [The 2025 Polar Music Prize ceremony in Stockholm last month], and that was great, that was cool and fun, but that's not my normal life. 'My normal life is I'm going from one place to the next. I rarely have leisure time because I'm working on other projects. Doing live gigs is not my life, that's just one small part of it.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad With Barrowland ready and waiting does Rodgers have the playlist ready for the gig, and is it a set or does it change? 'It changes all the time because we have an idea of the amount of time that we have on stage. As a person, I'm very cognisant of other artists and I never go over time. Chic is incredibly prompt. We're like a machine. And what's really interesting is that we're not a machine, we're a completely live band. Almost every band you see has click tracks and secret backing tracks and stuff like that, and believe me I know, because I know almost every band out there, but we're completely live. 'But we're very prompt. I have my stage manager saying 'OK, you've got five minutes, three minutes, two minutes, you've got to be on stage'. We're very, very, very cognisant of the other acts, and because we're live, we're not locked to a clock, so we have to be aware of how much time we're on stage because sometimes I'll talk and just go off the rails and start telling stories and that's not really what we're there for. We're there to play music. But sometimes you can't help it. The vibe is so great. And because I've been to all these countries so many times I have nothing but great memories that sometimes I want to share, so I tell them.' And will he be playing his trademark white Fender Stratocaster with the maple fingerboard? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Of course. It's the only guitar I play. If I break a string the audience has to wait for me to change the string.' Does he not have a spare, or other guitars? 'I have tons of them, but I only play that one.' Nile Rodgers performing with Chic at TRNSMT Festival, Glasgow, 2022. | Getty Images Looking back over his lengthy career, of what is Rodgers most proud, some of the hits, his influence on other musicians, his longevity, his success, his charity work? 'That's really high on my list,' he says, referring to his We Are Family Foundation, set up in 2008 and which has funded schools in Malawi, Mali, Nepal and Nicaragua, created a diversity and tolerance curriculum that was sent to every elementary school in the US and is dedicated to create programmes that 'promote cultural diversity while nurturing and mentoring the vision, talents and ideas of young people who are positively changing the world'. 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SAS star becomes dad again aged 48 as baby arrives 5 weeks early
SAS star becomes dad again aged 48 as baby arrives 5 weeks early

Metro

time2 hours ago

  • Metro

SAS star becomes dad again aged 48 as baby arrives 5 weeks early

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