Latest news with #BrandiCarlile
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Iconic Rock Festival Reunion in New Doc That Features 'Never-Before-Seen Archival Footage'
Iconic Rock Festival Reunion in New Doc That Features 'Never-Before-Seen Archival Footage' originally appeared on Parade. ABC News Studios and the Canadian Broadcasting Company announced on Thursday, July 24, that they are premiering a documentary about the iconic Lilith Fair music festival in conjunction with original founder . Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery is a feature-length documentary from director Ally Pankiw that "tells the untold story of the groundbreaking music festival featuring only women artists, started by iconic Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan and her team in the late 1990s, in opposition to systematic industry barriers that limited women from playing together on a concert bill and getting back-to-back airplay on the radio," according to the press release. The documentary is inspired by the Vanity Fair article "Building a Mystery: An Oral History of Lilith Fair," and it "draws from more than 600 hours of never-before-seen archival footage as well as new interviews and stories from fans, festival organizers, and artists."The press release continues, "The documentary reunites and features interviews from original Lilith Fair artists Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, Erykah Badu, Paula Cole, Jewel, Mýa, Natalie Merchant, Indigo Girls, and Emmylou Harris, and a new generation of artists who have carried the torch, including Brandi Carlile and Olivia Rodrigo, among others. As the film celebrates the festival's groundbreaking legacy and impact, it also confronts the backlash that tried to diminish it and explores what Lilith means in today's world." 'I'm so filled with pride and nostalgia watching this film,' said McLachlan in a statement. 'Ally and the team have beautifully captured the magic and strength of a community of women who came together and lifted each other up to create positive change in the world. I hope the film resonates with everyone and we can continue to strive to support and champion one another.' The film was produced by actor Dan Levy's Not A Real Production Company, and he said in a statement, "Lilith Fair holds a very special place in my heart. It was one of the first spaces where I remember feeling at home. The music, the sense of community, and the power of a group of women proving an entire industry wrong was a tremendous thing to experience. What Sarah built with that festival changed so much for so many people. And while it is now seen as an odds-defying success story, it was an uphill battle every step of the way. And there is a lot to be learned from that story. It's an honor to be working alongside Sarah on this, and I am excited for everyone to understand just how revolutionary Lilith Fair really was.' Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery premieres on Wednesday, September 17 on CBC and CBC Gem in Canada and on Sunday, September 21 on Hulu in the U.S. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 Iconic Rock Festival Reunion in New Doc That Features 'Never-Before-Seen Archival Footage' first appeared on Parade on Jul 24, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

News.com.au
04-07-2025
- Entertainment
- News.com.au
Country music legend Tim McGraw sparks fears over unrecognisable new look
Country music legend Tim McGraw looked unrecognisable as he clutched a cane in his latest photo shared on Instagram. Fans had some concerns following a social media post showing the singer, 58 and his wife, fellow country music legend Faith Hill, 57, in Denmark. The pair were pictured sitting at an outdoor cafe in Copenhagen, which is where they are staying as they support their daughter Audrey, 23, on tour. The couple looked loved-up as they smiled for the camera, with smitten Tim writing next to the sweet snap: 'Hangin' with my baby in Copenhagen to see @audreymcgraw on tour with the fabulous @brandicarlile.' But despite the sweet photo, fans were left concerned for Tim as he was pictured with a cane. Taking to the comments, one fan wrote: 'Beautiful photo. Why do you have a cane? Are you OK?' one fan asked. Another follow said: '@thetimmcgraw praying for your recovery.' Someone else wrote: 'Need the full story on the cane, my man.' While another added: 'One thing for sure … doesn't look like you.' Tim is yet to reveal why he is having to use a cane, but he did previously open up about having ongoing back and knee issues. Speaking on the Bobby Bones podcast in May, he revealed: 'I had had a back surgery before tour last year, and that sort of went south on me at the beginning of the tour, and sort of compensating for that my knees went out like three weeks into the tour.' Back in 2018, Tim shocked concertgoers after he collapsed on stage during a gig in Ireland. The country music star fell to his knees during a performance of his song Humble And Kind at Dublin's Country2Country festival. After he collapsed Tim's wife Faith came out to address the crowd, and revealed that her husband was 'super dehydrated from travelling so much'. She then revealed that she 'had taken the decision to have him not come back out on stage'. Tim's spokesman said at the time: 'Tim McGraw was suffering from Dublin this evening at the C2C show. 'He was attended to by local medical staff on-site and will be fine. 'He and Faith thank everyone for their love and support and look forward to seeing their Irish fans again soon.' Tim and Faith tied the knot back in 1996. Together the couple have three daughters – Gracie, Maggie and Audrey. Tim has previously revealed that music is his 'saviour.' He said: 'Anything that's ever happened good in my life has come from music. 'So it's a treasure to me. Whether I want to do it continually, whether I want to stop doing it, any of those things, it's my saviour in a lot of ways.' Away from the country music scene, Tim teamed up with rapper Nelly for the 2004 hit Over and Over, which reached number one in the UK. He also starred alongside Sandra Bullock in the 2009 film The Blind Side. Last year, Tim won high praise when he collaborated with Post Malone on the hit song, Wrong Ones.


The Sun
03-07-2025
- Entertainment
- The Sun
Leftie BBC & Glasto is perfect meeting of mindless middle-class b***ends… and funded by millions of OUR licence fee cash
IT wasn't just the regular plod they needed at Glastonbury this weekend – the Irony Police should've been in there making mass arrests as well. 'Cos, one minute, someone calling himself Bob Vylan was leading like-minded imbeciles in a 'death to the IDF' chant, on the Beeb's iPlayer. The next, singer Brandi Carlile was gazing out at thousands of happy antisemitic faces, on BBC2, telling them: 'It's hard to imagine this many peace-loving, free- thinking people in one place.' Hard, not to mention impossible, because Glastonbury is a venue that divides the nation into two clearly defined camps. Mutual grovelling There are those attendees who, despite being some of the most mystical, ethereal, genre-defining, middle-class bellends on the planet, clearly think both they and the festival are a bit special. And there are about 68million other Britons whose feelings range from mild disdain to a loathing so passionate I was half wondering if the Red Arrows could be fitted with Sidewinder missiles the next time they perform a ceremonial Glastonbury fly-past. There are many sound reasons to feel this way, of course, but I'll start with the figures, which tell us there are between 400 to 500 BBC staff at the event who, at a cost of several million licence-funded pounds, swamp us with more than 200 hours of coverage and contribute significantly to the 2,000 tonnes of rubbish it creates, without ever easing up on the environmental lectures. Levels of tolerance will naturally vary according to musical tastes and the line-up. What's always certain is that the edge will never be taken off proceedings by the BBC team, who are deeply flattered by the word 'hosts'. At best, they're entourage members whose relentless sycophancy can collapse a whole segment in a gush of mutual grovelling, as was demonstrated by Jo Whiley and Raye on Saturday night. 'You're going to walk on that stage and just nail it.' 'Can I just say, you look so beautiful again.' 'You're gorgeous.' 'You're a vision.' 'Give me a hug.' As nauseating as their manner is, the thing that really repulses us about Glastonbury is the overwhelming hypocrisy which was showcased at the Shangri-La garden, on Saturday. An area previously dedicated to anti-capitalist protests, at the £400-a-pop weekend, where someone called Angie Bual explained this year's display was driven by the feeling 'trees and plants move over borders, through the sea and so do people and they bring diversity. So we celebrate biodiversity and multiculturalism,' while seated just a few metres away from Glastonbury's security fence. A security fence, incidentally, that's guarded by ex-SAS members who protect festival-goers' over-entitled arses from an influx of the herd they so clearly despise. These double-standards are relatively easy to laugh off, obviously, but it's impossible to do the same with Bob Vylan, who turned out to be some hyphenated vegan called Pascal Robinson-Foster, which probably explains why he's filled with so much self- loathing. The problem didn't begin, however, with Pascal and his idiot mate on Saturday. It started on October 7, 2023, when Hamas murdered 1,195 Israelis, including 378 at a very similar gathering to Glastonbury called the Nova music festival. Instead of the natural revulsion and sympathy any decent human would feel, though, the political Left, including significant chunks of Glastonbury's artists and crowd, traded in their moral compasses for a few slogans and sided with the murderers and rapists. A lot of weasel words have followed since things came to an inevitable head at the weekend, including an apology from Glastonbury's nepo baby boss Emily Eavis, who said Pascal, 'crossed the line. There's no place for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence at Glastonbury'. You have to ask, then, why did she book him and fellow cretins Kneecap who, with the best will in the world, were never going to encore with a cover version of Hava Nagila. We should take at face value, though, the pre-festival arrogance of her dad Michael Eavis, who clearly has zero understanding of public- service broadcasting or how its concept of neutrality works, but was at least being honest when he said anyone who disagrees with Glastonbury's politics: 'Can go somewhere else.' A bit rich, given that we fund the coverage. If Eavis has the remotest conscience about the Beeb, however, he'll understand it cannot go on playing whack-a-mole with all of this huge event's political crazies. No matter how many safeguards you put in place, it's a game they cannot win, and if the BBC is to survive at all it's Glastonbury that needs to go 'somewhere else' and hopefully crawl back under the rock where it truly belongs. You've delighted us long enough, thanks very much. ISLE OF CHATTER POXES . . . ONE surprising result of the Glastonbury fallout is that it's helped me see Love Island in a slightly new light, on the grounds that the ITV2 crowd does at least feature one vaguely likeable human being. He is Tommy, the 22-year-old landscape gardener, from Herts, who's thoughtful, honest, faithful and almost totally invisible to most of the girls, who prefer to throw themselves at one of the villa's many arseholes, helping to create a series of love triangles and set a pattern for the entire summer. Coupled-up Harrison very publicly kisses third-party Helena, so angry partner Toni asks: 'Can I pull you for a chat?' A scene witnessed by a hurt Helena who feels compelled to pull her love rival for 'a chat', thereby also forcing Harrison to pull Helena for 'a chat'. A 'final' clear-the-air moment that's followed by Toni pulling her for another chat, which then requires Harrison to pull devastated Toni for a clarification chat, where they end up kissing, leaving Helena with no other option than to ask Harrison: 'Can I pull you for a chat?' And so on and so on and so on. With almost no prospect of this hall of mirrors process ending any time soon. 'Cos I am reluctant to suggest the Love Island blokes are all irredeemably hormone-crazed and stupid, however . . . Harrison has spent his entire adult life pronouncing the word 'ar-chive' as if it's a herb, and Ben thinks a posh menu is called 'Aled Carte', which it may well be at a French/Welsh fusion restaurant. But, in the name of the big man, before they're back in public circulation, I'd be very grateful if someone could pull them both for 'a chat'. TV Gold THE slow-burning horror of BBC4's Storyville: The Srebrenica Tape. The much-missed Doddie Weir bringing the house down on Sky Sports' repeat of Living With Lions. The Glastonbury performances of Nile Rodgers, Ezra Collective and Neil Young doing Harvest Moon, that not even the venue and sound quality could ruin. And Netflix's masterpiece Dept Q, which featured some of the best acting of the year, from Matthew Goode, left, as DCI Carl Morck and managed to go nine whole episodes without a single outbreak of overbearing political correctness. Another series would be hugely appreciated. Random TV irritations THE surprisingly large number of political commentators who've failed to spot the rather obvious signs Angela Rayner is a complete moron. BBC staff giving Carlos Alcaraz's name the Daffy Duck treatment in an attempt to sound Spanish. And the horrendous lyrics accompanying Wilkinson Sword's new 'hairy truth' advert for its Intuition razor: 'Nips, lips, some on the back. Knees, toes, six on the crack.' Crotch rash, grazes, pubic inflammation. You've just given us too much information. Lookalike of the week Sent in by Shane Allen, of Denbigh. Deborah Meaden: 'If only the world could live like Glastonbury, we'd be a lot happier.' Big Weekend, Alison Hammond: 'For 50 years, Lenny Henry's made people laugh.' Good Morning Britain, Kate Garraway: 'Russell Kane says so many funny things happen to him he's got too much material.' And there's a guy works down the chip shop swears he's Elvis. Meanwhile, back on his Kiwi Adventure, Noel Edmonds: 'We've got to appreciate that we are surrounded by this sort of mist of invisible energy. 'One of the limitations of the human form is that we can't see it, but your cat and your dog can see it. 'There are so many people who think you're crazy if you talk this way about a rock having energy, but. . . .' NURSE! Sunday , the ITV2 continuity announcer: 'Are you looking for a brand spanking new comedy from Jordan Gray?' Then cut out the middle man and call 116 123. It's the Samaritans you need.


The Sun
03-07-2025
- Entertainment
- The Sun
Music legend, 58, looks unrecognizable as he clutches cane in new snap with famous wife
THIS country music legend looked unrecognizable as he clutched a cane in his latest photo. Fans had some concerns following a social media post of the singer, 58 and his famous wife. 4 4 4 Country star Tim McGraw shared a picture of himself on Instagram with his singer wife Faith Hill, 57, as they spent some time together in Denmark. The pair were pictured sitting at an outdoor cafe in Copenhagen, which is where they are staying as they support their daughter Audrey, 23, on tour The couple looked loved-up as they smiled for the camera, with smitten Tim writing next to the sweet snap: "Hangin' with my baby in Copenhagen to see @audreymcgraw on tour with the fabulous @brandicarlile." But despite the cute photo, fans were left concerned for Tim as he was pictured with a cane. Taking to the comments, one fan wrote: "Beautiful photo. Why do you have a cane? Are you ok?"' one fan asked." Another follow said: "@thetimmcgraw praying for your recovery." This one wrote: "Need the full story on the cane, my man.' Tim is yet to reveal why he is having to use a cane, but he did previously open up about having ongoing back and knee issues. Speaking in May to Bobby Bones podcast, he revealed: "I had had a back surgery before tour last year, and that sort of went south on me at the beginning of the tour, and sort of compensating for that my knees went out like three weeks into the tour." HEALTH SCARE Back in 2018, Tim shocked shocked concertgoers after he collapsed on stage during a gig in Ireland. The country music star fell to his knees during a performance of his song Humble And Kind at Dublin's Country2Country festival. After he collapsed Tim's wife Faith came out to address the crowd, and revealed that her husband was "super dehydrated from travelling so much". She then revealed that she "had taken the decision to have him not come back out on stage". Tim's spokesman said at the time: "Tim McGraw was suffering from Dublin this evening at the C2C show. "He was attended to by local medical staff on-site and will be fine. "He and Faith thank everyone for their love and support and look forward to seeing their Irish fans again soon." HAPPY LIFE Tim and Faith tied the knot back in 1996. Together the couple have three daughters together - Gracie, Maggie and Audrey. Tim has previously revealed that music is his "saviour." He said: "Anything that's ever happened good in my life has come from music. "So it's a treasure to me. Whether I want to do it continually, whether I want to stop doing it, any of those things, it's my saviour in a lot of ways." Away from the country music scene, Tim teamed up with rapper Nelly for the 2004 hit Over and Over, which reached number one in the UK. He also starred alongside Sandra Bullock in the 2009 film The Blind Side. Last year, Tim won high praise when he collaborated with Post Malone on the hit song, Wrong Ones.
Yahoo
29-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
In pictures: Saturday at Glastonbury Festival
Day four of Glastonbury Festival began with Kaiser Chiefs opening the Pyramid Stage and continued with performances from an array of huge stars. Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts headlined the Pyramid Stage, with Charli XCX, Doechii and Scissor Sisters also drawing big crowds on other stages. Kneecap's set on The Other Stage was not screened live, but will be made available on demand later, the BBC has confirmed. Elsewhere, people finally found out who the mystery band listed under Patchwork were - Britpop icons Pulp. Glastonbury's mystery band Patchwork were Pulp, after all In pictures: Glastonbury Festival day three Why there will be no Glastonbury Festival in 2026 'We want to give you best seat in house for Glasto' Fashion show: People continue to put in their best effort when it comes to their outfits - even on day four. In the air: Kaiser Chiefs opened the Pyramid Stage on Saturday All in pink: British singer-songwriter Alessi Rose performed on The Other Stage earlier. Exploring Glastonbury: While everyone else is running around in T-shirts and shorts, one person was spotted dressed like an Arctic explorer. Tune: Even early on day four, the crowd was ready to party. You Without Me: Many in the crowd were emotional as US country star Brandi Carlile performed You Without Me, a song about the experience of a parent watching their child grow up and assert their independence. Crowd surfing: Bob Vylan performed on the West Holts stage. Protective parasol: It is due to stay warm with temperatures of up to 25C. Kneecap: Moglai Bap and Mo Chara of Kneecap perform to a huge crowd on the West Holts stage. Colour and glitter: Carnival performers put on a show on the festival site. Raye in a box: There was a huge cheer from the crowd when singer Raye emerged from a black box at the start of her sunset slot on the Pyramid Stage. A surprise appearance: Haim performed to a packed-out Park Stage. However, shouts of "louder, louder" could be heard from the crowd as they competed with music from a neighbouring stage, with some fans leaving the set early. Keep on Rockin' in The Free World: Neil Young took to the Pyramid Stage in a headline set that did not disappoint. "The section of the crowd I'm in actually swooned as Neil Young plucked the opening chords to The Needle and The Damage Done," wrote the BBC's Mark Savage. Brat is forever: Despite a brat background going up on flames at the start of Charli XCX's set, it ended with the words "I think you all have proven to me that brat is forever." During Blame It On Your Love the singer crawled along the stage - and licked it - before launching into 2012 hit I Love It. A hip-hop masterclass: Doechii delivered a high-energy set, schooling the crowd on hip hop. Her set was only 45 minutes long, but the Swamp Princess (a nod to her Floridian roots) made her Glastonbury debut count. Follow BBC Somerset on Facebook and X. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630. Politics at Glastonbury a 'festival within a festival' Kaiser Chiefs kick off Pyramid Stage as BBC says Neil Young set will be aired after all Glastonbury: The 1975 deliver a polished, but safe headline slot