Arctic army, by your beds. The week youâve been pruning your quiffs and fluffing your Mecca dobbers for has finally arrived â Arctic Monkeys are back, en route to Reading & Leeds Festival this weekend and primed to be the best thing youâll see for the rest of the year, outside of Trumpâs mugshot.
But, the band will no doubt be asking themselves, how to go down in R&L history? Well, there are a few tried and tested tricks…
Be long-awaited
Ideally youâre looking at laying low for at least 10 years before making that unforgettable, Pulp-in-2011 comeback. You want to make 25-year-olds ecstatic at finally getting to see you live, 35-year-olds relive their prime party years to cries of âgo on, just a nibbleâ and R&Lâs regular audience of 16-year-olds get flashbacks to the simple childhood days before the divorce. But the four years since the Monkeys played the UK, and the eight since they last headlined R&L, is just about enough to qualify, so do call it a comeback.
Make an entrance
Strolling on to classic orchestral pop or the soundtrack of gangster classic The Long Good Friday, as the Monkeys have been doing at recent festival shows, makes for a lovely mood-setter, but not quite the I-was-there event entrance such legend-making occasions require. Think Kurt Cobain being wheeled onstage in a wheelchair in 1992 wearing a psychiatric ward gown and blonde fright wig, then turn it up a notch. Considering the lunar lounge theme of the Monkeysâ last album, ‘Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino’, Iâd suggest floating down from the rafters in astronaut suits fitted with cravats and pocket squares.
Just play hits
Honestly: ditch the deep cuts and B-sides and just play wall-to-wall hits. It might seem like the most obvious festival set clichĂ© in the world, but itâs effective simply because so few acts actually do it. Bowie at Glastonbury 2000: all the hits. Macca at Glasto 2004: a significant portion of the hits. And thatâs pretty much it. So get on the stage, start playing hits, and when you run out of hits, get off the stage. Print your setlist off the âSinglesâ section of your Wikipedia discography if you have to. To be fair, bar âPotion Approachingâ, the Monkeysâ festival sets of late have stuck fairly solidly to this ethos â but remember, the odd homecoming treat of âFake Tales Of San Franciscoâ or âWhen The Sun Goes Downâ is nothing to be scared of when striving for R&L glory.
Wear an eye-catching outfit
For maximum R&L myth-making, you need an onstage image that will be burned forever into the retinas of anyone lucky enough to see it. Kevin Rowlandâs turn in a revealing white minidress and stockings in 1999 should be your benchmark, but Googling “Björk festival WTF?!?” should provide plenty of ideas too.
Donât scrimp on special guests
After the (ahem) glory day of Macca versus Bruce at this yearâs Glastonbury, the surprise guest bar has been significantly raised. The days of just popping to the dressing room next door and offering the singer of an earlier band a couple of lines to hang about for your encore are long gone, and Miles Kane is definitely not going to cut it. Youâve got to aim high, push hard against the most steadfast of agents and resist any temptation to throw in the towel and call Rick Astley. Thereâs history to be made here: weâre talking Kate Bush or bust.

Think BIG
Steam, fire and lasers? Seen it all before, pal. Over decades of “but I’m not a soldieeeer“s and “live and let die“s, weâve grown immune to all the usual pyro tricks, and any regular festival-goer is becoming tired of finding butterfly confetti in bodily crevices months after the event. These days the truly legendary festival sets push the boundaries of whatâs technically possible at a big gig in a field. Surely itâs time to utilise the most cutting-edge digital-mapping app technology to light up everyoneâs phones in spectacular patterns a la Coldplayâs wristbands, or for the Monkeys to splash out on a gigantic teddy picker capable of lifting fans out of the crowd and depositing them onstage to play drums on âCrying Lightningâ.
Break everything
To return to Nirvana in 1992: when all else fails, simply stack all of your instruments and equipment in a big pile at the front of the stage and throw guitars at it until the entire stage looks like a drone strike on Denmark Street. Legend assured.
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