NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM
The early May Bank Holiday normally kicks off festival season. Not year, of course. Put that sourdough recipe away, though, though because the global pandemic hasnât stopped some diehards attempting recreate the grinning chaotic energy of dashing between stages, cramming yourself into sweatboxes to see the next big thing or dancing about like nobody’s watching.
This weekendâs Unity 2020 Festival was probably the most fun you could have without leaving your front room. Curated by BBC presenter Abbie McCarthy, the lineup of â as she put it â âqueens and legendsâ took over The SSE Arena at Wembleyâs Facebook Page for a bustling daytime party. The aim was to raise lifesaving funds and awareness for Womenâs Aid, a charity working to end domestic abuse against women and children, an issue thatâs only worsened during the lockdown, with calls to relevant helplines having risen by 25 per cent during the first three weeks of self-isolation.
A festival with a flavour of MTV Cribs, this eclectic bill of lockdown livestreams sees all-killer, no-filler 20-minute performances from the likes of Years & Yearsâ Olly Alexander, rising alt-pop star L Devine, viral successes Tones & I and NME favourite Yungblud. Even indie-poppers Everything Everything pop up for a split screen, full-band run through of the apocalyptic party âSpring/Sun/Winter/Dreadâ.
Elsewhere Nina Nesbitt delivers no-nonsense pop from her kitchen, flipping off fuckboys with âThe Best You Hadâ and âLoyal To Meâ while her washing machine handles a load of whites. Dance sensation Georgia apparently has a room in her house solely for raves, which is perhaps why the pulsating energy evident during âThe Thrillâ seems to come so naturally.
Joy Crookesâ emotional soul shines bright as she tears into âAnyone But Meâ and transforms Frank Oceanâs âLostâ into a haunting meditation on loss and folk star Jade Bird, alongside guitarist Luke Prosser, heads to the garden for an acoustic cover of Radioheadâs âBlackstarâ and a sneak-peak of dreamy new track âGoldenâ.
While Bird offers a sense of escapism, A-lister-in-waiting L Devine leans into the chaos of the situation. A mannequin holds her microphone as projections, smoke machines and a my-first-disco light set-up make her performance feel like a proper gig. Dialling everything up rather than stripping things down, she dives into the romantic âLike You Like Thatâ with everything sheâs got.
The slow-burning âDaughterâ deals with first loves and homophobia, while closer âDonât Say Itâ is a glitchy number about pain and beauty that sees her sing âgive me the real shitâ down the barrel of the camera lens as though sheâs actually onstage at Wembley Arena rather than livestreamed via their Facebook page. It wonât be long until she is, though.
Indie scamps Fickle Friends bring a party starting spirit with tracks such as âBrooklynâ, âSwimâ and âGlueâ (even though vocalist Nattyâs cat manages to snooze through the whole set), while newbie âWrite Me A Songâ inspires a bedroom country hoedown. Yonakaâs frontperson Theresa Jarvis and guitarist Alex Crosby strip back their angsty punk-pop, revealing the beauty within. âRockstarâ sees them tremble with hope and is sung âfor the dreamers.â
Emo-poppers Muna open with the sadbanger âI Know A Placeâ before diving into 2019âs buoyant and superb âSaves The Worldâ. âStayawayâ wows with its stunning three-part harmonies before singer Katie Gavin moves her snoring dog Sparky and delivers a solo, slowed version of âNumber 1 Fanâ, which really brings out the message: âIf youâre alone, maybe nowâs the time to learn how to be your number one fan.â
Closing out the night, Yungblud â who normally lives with everything turned up to 11 â offers a rare acoustic set. Even with an acoustic guitar on a LA rooftop, Yungblud manages to create a sense of havoc.
His usually pounding new single âWeird!â is very much an anthem for the times, dealing with pressure and uncertain next steps, but it ends with Yungblud admitting: âIf youâre out there feeling scared, Iâm the same. Jinx. Ditto.â True to form, though, he turns that feeling into a cause for celebration with the swaggering âLonerâ. Even hundreds of miles away, itâs impossible not to sing along to its bratty message of rebellion. Yungblud is a rockstar whatever the situation.
A cover of The Cureâs âFriday, Iâm In Loveâ is surprisingly delicate before the triumphant âCasual Sabotageâ takes on new meaning in these trying times. âI need to exist,â he sings, desperate for space. Events like Unity 2020 help with those feelings of isolation, reviving a community spirit in the comments section and inspiring a bit of normality in a world gone wrong.
The post Unity 2020 Festival live on Facebook: a good cause and great sets from Yungblud and L. Devine appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.