Lewis Capaldi at Glastonbury review – an awe-inspiring display of love and human spirit

Pyramid stage
The Scottish balladeer is full of his usual hilarious banter but his vulnerability also remains, especially as his voice leaves him. Luckily there are 100,000-odd people on hand for support

Glastonbury 2023 has so far felt short of a big pop crowning moment: there’s no sense of a major arrival like Olivia Rodrigo last year, or a brilliant young artist ascending to headline the Pyramid stage. Alongside Fred Again, perhaps, Lewis Capaldi feels as close as it comes.

With two albums under his belt, the Scottish balladeer is in the same position as Billie Eilish and Stormzy each were when they topped the bill. You wonder if he’s been offered it – or whether he might even have turned it down, deterred by the pressure of the spotlight. Glastonbury is Capaldi’s widely reported-on return to live performance after cancelling his other June dates in order to prioritise his mental health. “I haven’t been home since Christmas and at the moment I’m struggling to get to grips with it all,” he told fans at the start of the month.

He gets straight down to business once he walks on stage in his simple white T-shirt, diving into the first line of recent epic Forget Me. The brisk start feels both cocksure – he hangs off the mic a bit like Liam Gallagher – and anxious, and he has a noticeable cough. This dichotomy is precisely part of Capaldi’s appeal: his songs dwell on his perceived inferiorities, yet that massive voice of his is a bulwark, or a port in the storm. It sounds so much better live than on record, where it’s so often straitjacketed by terrible antiseptic production: wilder and less like an alarm blaring (near enough every chorus on his new album, Broken By Desire to Be Heavenly Sent, goes off like a bomb), and helped, too, by the straightforward rough-and-readiness of his band.

The other Capaldi dichotomy, it becomes apparent this afternoon, is the divide between his unruffled wit and total vulnerability. Capaldi has Tourette’s syndrome, which manifests in quite violent physical tics, affecting him between almost every line of every song. He pauses after Forever – which includes an impromptu Red Arrows flyover – to take in the gigantic early-evening Pyramid crowd (maybe the biggest I’ve ever seen – though I wasn’t at the secret Foo Fighters set yesterday), and the crowd starts chanting: “Oh, Lewis Capaldi!” to the tune of Seven Nation Army. He brushes us off. “That’s enough! I don’t need Jack White making money off this situation!” But the crowd keep at it. Capaldi doesn’t mention his recent mental ill health until the end of the set, but it very quickly becomes obvious that the audience are keenly aware of his situation and determined to buoy him at every possible opportunity.

The first half of the set is all about that trademark Capaldi humour. He tells the kids in the crowd that swearing is “fucking cool” and that he’s “shitting my pants”; he calls those of us who have been here since Wednesday “smelly fucking bastards” and teases the imminent removal of his T-shirt. He introduces Pointless by saying that it’s a cowrite with Ed Sheeran, who has been “in America for the last little while … but we’re close friends, I phone him up, I tell him I’m playing the Pyramid stage – ladies and gentlemen, Ed Sheeran!” Everyone loses it – but in the spirit of Pyramid opener Rick Astley earlier today, it’s a rick-roll. “He’s not fucking here!” Even when he dedicates Before You Go to his late auntie, he gestures towards heaven – and then hell: “I don’t know which way she went. She was a lovely person but she could be a bitch!”

But then the tenor of the set starts to change. There’s a warble in his voice on Bruises, which contains a tender wordless cry that sends shivers down my spine. He admits, before Wish You the Best, that he’s losing his voice, and then whips his top off. “I feel like Iggy Pop!” he says, all bravado, but it makes him look defenceless, especially as his voice starts to properly slip away. “I’m really sorry, this is the last place I’d want this to happen,” he says. “This is a fucking pain in the arse, you’ve all come out. I apologise, my voice is packing it in.” He has a go at Hold Me While You Wait – a song whose message of self-loathing feels resonant after two nights on the farm – then apologises again. “I’m sorry, I’m a bit annoyed with myself here,” he says, and the chant of “Oh, Lewis Capaldi” starts again. It’s not quite in time, but that only underlines how many thousands of people are out here, willing him on. The effect is immensely moving.

The top goes back on. “I recently took three weeks off … a wee break for my mental health,” Capaldi says at the end. “I wanted to come back and do Glasto because it’s so incredible, so I just wanna thank you for coming out and watching us. I was shit scared but you’ve really made me feel at ease. I’m really sorry, I hope the Eavises will have me back even though it’s been a bit of a shit show.” Then he makes a major announcement. “I feel like I’ll be taking another wee break for the next few weeks, you might not see me even for the rest of the year – but when I do come back and I do see you, I hope you’re up for watching.”

He closes the set with Someone You Loved, and at this point, he can barely sing more than a few lines without his voice drying up. The audience belt the words out for him as he walks around the stage, taking in the view, and he saves his last ounce of vocal strength for the last, massive chorus. “Glastonbury, thank you so much,” he says. “If I never get to do this again, this has been amazing.” You feel so deeply for the guy, and it’s palpable how much the crowd want him to know that he’s OK, it’s all OK, he is loved. Although I’m sure it’s not the main stage moment Capaldi dreamed of, it is beautiful, supportive, truly communal, and a testament to the complex bond he has built with his fans; a real human triumph.

• In the US, Mental Health America is available on 800-273-8255. In the UK, the charity Mind is available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978

Contributor

Laura Snapes

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Lewis Capaldi at Glastonbury 2019 review – laughter through the tears
His self-deprecating schtick can’t last long in the face of such huge success, but the Scottish songwriter’s A-grade banter helps offset his sad ballads

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

29, Jun, 2019 @5:03 PM

Article image
Saturday at Glastonbury 2023: Rick Astley, Guns N’ Roses and Lana Del Rey – as it happened!
Our Glastonbury liveblog from sun-addled Worthy farm followed the Pretenders’ surprise cameos, Morrissey’s unlikely reincarnation and more

Keza MacDonald (now), Ben Beaumont-Thomas, Laura Snapes and Gwilym Mumford

25, Jun, 2023 @12:13 AM

Article image
Capaldi’s crowd and Del Rey cut short: memorable Glastonbury 2023 moments
Audience comes to Scottish singer’s aid at Pyramid stage, while late-arriving US star performs a cappella after midnight curfew

Tobi Thomas

25, Jun, 2023 @4:36 PM

Article image
Lewis Capaldi announces he needs a mental health break after Glastonbury
‘You might not see me for the rest of the year,’ the Scottish singer tells the crowd during a warmly received set during which he admitted he was struggling

Josh Halliday

24, Jun, 2023 @6:29 PM

Article image
Blondie at Glastonbury review – Debbie Harry is an atomic charisma bomb
She can’t sing like she used to – but makes up for it with a riveting performance full of untamed theatrics and awesomely aloof cool

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

25, Jun, 2023 @6:31 PM

Article image
Lewis Capaldi: 'To get slagged off by Noel Gallagher was life-affirming'
The singer has emerged seemingly from nowhere to top the charts and play for 60,000 at Glastonbury, but he is taking fame – and abuse from pop stalwarts – in his stride

Elle Hunt

30, Jun, 2019 @2:31 PM

Article image
Guns N’ Roses at Glastonbury review – a riotous trip into rock paradise
With a beaming Dave Grohl guesting on guitar and hits interspersed with homages to their influences, Axl and co make for hard-rocking – yet surprisingly polite – Saturday headliners

Alexis Petridis

25, Jun, 2023 @12:40 AM

Article image
TRNSMT festival review – Lewis Capaldi is the man of the moment
TRNSMT may be haunted by the ghost of T in the Park, but a new all-female stage and crowd-pleasing performances by Stormzy and George Ezra make for a successful replacement

Graeme Virtue

15, Jul, 2019 @11:42 AM

Article image
Arctic Monkeys at Glastonbury review – breaking rock’s rules at their own strange pace
With euphoric alt-rock anthems up against atmospheric ballads, this set shows the ground the headliners have covered – but doesn’t always bring the crowd on the journey

Alexis Petridis

24, Jun, 2023 @12:40 AM

Article image
Yusuf/Cat Stevens at Glastonbury review – singer-songwriter’s ‘legends’ set is a lowkey triumph
The 74-year-old’s mellow but idiosyncratic pop and indelibly beautiful classic cuts provided a soothing balm for tired music fans on the final afternoon of the festival

Alexis Petridis

25, Jun, 2023 @4:47 PM