Annie Clark can do no wrong. From a stint with the Polyphonic Spree to collaborations with David Byrne and performances inspired by Pina Bausch, her constant innovations and guitar heroics make her an ever-intriguing live act.
An Oklahoma-born, Texan-bred singer-songwriter who took her stage name from a Nick Cave song, it was her sweetly existential debut, Marry Me which got critics attention back in 2007 and has led to work with Andrew Bird, Bon Iver and Arcade Fire. Describing her latest, eponymous album as 'a party record you could play at a funeral', her Glastonbury debut will be an unmissable, intensely manic, delight.
Annie Clark can do no wrong. From a stint with the Polyphonic Spree to collaborations with David Byrne and performances inspired by Pina Bausch, her constant innovations and guitar heroics make her an ever-intriguing live act.
An Oklahoma-born, Texan-bred singer-songwriter who took her stage name from a Nick Cave song, it was her sweetly existential debut, Marry Me which got critics attention back in 2007 and has led to work with Andrew Bird, Bon Iver and Arcade Fire. Describing her latest, eponymous album as 'a party record you could play at a funeral', her Glastonbury debut will be an unmissable, intensely manic, delight.