Comedown shepherd, sun worshipper, little freak: every version of Lorde shines like the sun this evening.
Every artist looks forward to this weekend of the year,” she says. “This place is Disneyland. This is the dream. Start your Independent Premium subscription today. She struts up and down a central staircase supported by a giant circular disk that glows like a star. Her new blonde locks complement the golden stage design, as the sun dips behind the Pyramid and bathes the crowd in a yellow glow. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy policy and Terms of service apply.
Watch Lorde perform 'Stoned At The Nail Salon' with Arlo Parks and Clairo from the pyramid stage during her Glastonbury 2022 set.
“I wanted to dedicate this song to the five members of the supreme court, who showed us that at the end of the day they truly don’t give a shit about freedom. Olivia Rodrigo also spoke out against the decision during her set yesterday (June 25). After bringing Lily Allen out to the stage, she told the crowd, “Roe v. The ruling had granted women in the US the right to terminate a pregnancy and was put in place nearly 50 years ago.
The New Zealand singer joins a number of musicians at Glastonbury who have condemned the reversal of the landmark 1973 Roe v Wade case.
I ask you today to make accessing that wisdom your life’s work? She built upon the momentum as she introduced her hit Green Light, saying she thinks of it as a “British song”, causing the packed audience to cheer before they chanted the lyrics back to her. She said: “Want to hear a secret, girls? “That wisdom is also your birthright. Throughout her energetic set, she told the crowd it was “so good to be back” as she performed a selection of her hit songs including Buzzcut Season, Homemade Dynamite, The Louvre, Sober and Royals. That horror is your birthright.
"F*** the Supreme Court," the Kiwi artist told the cheering crowd.
That horror is your birthright. Your bodies were destined to be controlled and objectified since before you were born. "Welcome to sadness.
New Zealand singer Lorde has used the stage at Glastonbury to slam the US Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. "Welcome to sadness.
Your bodies were destined to be controlled and objectified since before you were born. That horror is your birthright,” the 25-year-old singer said. "Welcome to sadness. Lorde also told her fans it was “good to be back" as she kicked off her set on the Pyramid Stage on the fifth and final day of the festival. The Solar Power singer was the latest celebrity to speak out as she took to the stage at the Glastonbury festival on Monday. New Zealand singer Lorde has used the stage at Glastonbury to slam the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v.
Lorde - the moniker for Auckland-born Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O'Connor - performed on the Pyramid stage during the fifth and final day of the iconic festival, ...
Lorde performed at Glastonbury in the UK today, and she addressed the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade right after performing the Solar ...
That wisdom is also your birthright. That horror is your birthright. Wade right after performing the Solar Power track “Secrets From a Girl (Who’s Seen It All).”
During her performance at Glastonbury this weekend, New Zealand pop star, Lorde, brought out Arlo Parks and Clairo to deliver a rendition of a fan ...
“I wanted to dedicate this song to the five members of the supreme court, who showed us that at the end of the day they truly don’t give a shit about freedom.” Lorde also caught everyone’s attention during her performance as she spoke out against the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the Roe v. Wade verdict, which made abortion a federal right in the US back in 1973.
The Turkish designer cemented the musician's fashion pivot, channelling all the energy of the divine feminine.
That wisdom is also your birthright. That horror is your birthright. At Glastonbury, the musician emerged bleached blonde in a corseted swimsuit taken from Dilara Fındıkoğlu’s latest offering, which is fitting, given that Lorde spent the majority of her album roll-out on a beach commune.