âStop, Iâm fucked!â declares a wickedly giddy Robbie Williams as a play-pretend gurn begins to creep across his face. Yet the biggest risk to health and safety as the singer closes out night one of Madrid’s Mad Cool Festival 2023 isnât any of his suggested personal vices. Instead, itâs the risk of human towers collapsing as Williams breaks into a rollicking rendition of 1997âs âLet Me Entertain Youâ â audience members rush to lift one another on their shoulders in a scene of pantomime-level chaos. âIâm so fucking famous,â Williams says in response, cackling as he prowls down the stage’s runway and prompts another wave of ecstatic screams to rip through the festival grounds.
This is Williams distilled to his purest form: all of his firecracker energy barely fits on the festival’s eponymous main stage. Having been âmainlyâ sober for 20 years, he tells us, and happily married with four kids, the global star gives his Mad Cool headline slot his all, amping up the theatrics at every given opportunity. When heâs not ricocheting between hits like âFeelâ and âKidsâ, he’s rambling through showbiz anecdotes at a leisurely storyteller’s pace, imparting questionable advice like a lad who has spent his entire night talking shit in the smoking area. Itâs both sublime and ridiculous at once.

Such self-awareness is part of his charm, though, as is his willingness to engage directly with the audience. Throughout a riotous âCandyâ he references the Oprah âyou get a carâ meme as he throws t-shirts into the crowd, before breaking into the trackâs chant-along chorus. He’s not above offering an Oasis cover either, leaning forward and arching his head up towards the mic stand as he sings âDonât Look Back In Angerâ with genuine sincerity. Later, he has a go at âCould It Be Magicâ before giving up. âI canât be bothered,â Williams exclaims through laughter. âBetween me and you, I donât think Take That were ever big in Spain.â He almost immediately follows this up with a 30 second-long rendition of the US national anthem. Of course.
If his show â which is in support of his latest compilation album, 2022âs âXXVâ â sometimes borders on being Butlin’s-style cheesy, it is unashamedly so: Williams performs with too much honesty and pure joy to get snobby about. Bedecked in a heavyweight silver chain and floor-length robe, he delivers a soaring rendition of âThe Floodâ, raising his mic stand above his head as the song hits its emotional climax. âLove My Lifeâ, a ballad-like slice of posi-pop, features a rainbow confetti cannon.

All this gives texture, drama and soul to a show that is unpredictable and human. As he introduces ‘Angels’ by talking about how he overcame a decade of mental health issues, it is clear that, for Williams, entertaining thousands of people at festivals like this one still acts as a healing salve. He is a performer with more than enough heart to match his humour.
Robbie Williams played:
‘Hey Wow Yeah Yeah’
‘Let Me Entertain You’
‘Monsoon’
‘Strong’
‘Come Undone’
‘Do What U Like’
‘Could It Be Magic’ (Barry Manilow cover)
‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’ (Oasis cover)
‘The Flood’ (Take That cover)
‘Love My Life’
‘Candy’
‘Feel’
‘Kids’
‘Rock DJ’
‘No Regrets’
‘She’s The One’
‘Angel’
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