Closing Sunday night with an almighty racket will be the boys that proudly represent East Midlands rock; the unstoppable Kasabian.
A career in music that started 10 years ago with their eponymous album spurned the deep and brooding Club Foot, and led them to an Other Stage appearance in 2005. Numerous awards followed, including Best British Group at the 2010 BRITS and Best Live Act award at the 2007 NME Awards, plus celebrated headline sets at Reading and Leeds and T in the Park.
However, Serge and Tom believe that this next album, 48:13, is the one to get excited about, claiming in the NME that "everything has been training to this point." New single EEZ-EH certainly marks a return to the tripped-out sounds of 2004, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through dirty disco with monkey cackles and apocalyptic warnings about Google peppered throughout.
Drawing on 5 albums worth of tracks characterised by explosive drops and herculean guitar riffs, these hirsute rock stars cannot fail to echo and shake the rolling Somerset hills. Ear-bleeding in a good way, their closing set on the Pyramid stage is the perfect time to send away the battle-weary Pilton warriors in a burst of sweaty and frenzied rock 'n' roll.
Closing Sunday night with an almighty racket will be the boys that proudly represent East Midlands rock; the unstoppable Kasabian.
A career in music that started 10 years ago with their eponymous album spurned the deep and brooding Club Foot, and led them to an Other Stage appearance in 2005. Numerous awards followed, including Best British Group at the 2010 BRITS and Best Live Act award at the 2007 NME Awards, plus celebrated headline sets at Reading and Leeds and T in the Park.
However, Serge and Tom believe that this next album, 48:13, is the one to get excited about, claiming in the NME that "everything has been training to this point." New single EEZ-EH certainly marks a return to the tripped-out sounds of 2004, taking you on a rollercoaster ride through dirty disco with monkey cackles and apocalyptic warnings about Google peppered throughout.
Drawing on 5 albums worth of tracks characterised by explosive drops and herculean guitar riffs, these hirsute rock stars cannot fail to echo and shake the rolling Somerset hills. Ear-bleeding in a good way, their closing set on the Pyramid stage is the perfect time to send away the battle-weary Pilton warriors in a burst of sweaty and frenzied rock 'n' roll.