Lars Ulrich of Metallica makes tribute speech to Michael Eavis

and pretty much sums up the farmer and the Festival for many

By Scott Williams | Published: Tue 4th Nov 2014

Glastonbury Festival 2015 - around the festival site (Michael & Emily Eavis)
Photo credit: Chris Mathews

Glastonbury Festival 2015

Wednesday 24th to Sunday 28th June 2015
Worthy Farm, Pilton, Shepton Mallet, Somerset, BA4 4AZ, England MAP
£220 (secured with a deposit) - SOLD OUT
Daily capacity: 198,000

We don't normally do news on awards, but Metallica's drummer Lars Ulrich's tribute to Glastonbury Festival founder Michael Eavis at the Music Industry Trusts Awards ceremony in London last night, perfectly encapsulates what makes the Festival and the farmer so special for many of us.

The Guardian have reproduced the speech in full (here).

Lars Ulrich from this year's headlining acts paid tribute to the 79-year old at the charity event held in aid of Nordoff Robbins and the BRIT Performing Arts & Technology School along joining video tributes from Coldplay, Paul McCartney and Dolly Parton.

The Metallica drummer said,

You know what?

Michael Eavis is the greatest rock star in England.

You know why?

Because he's not trying to be.

Michael Eavis is the centrepiece of the Glastonbury festival.

And the Glastonbury festival is the centrepiece of British music culture and the centrepiece of the British music year.

So by definition, since Michael Eavis is the centrepiece of the Glastonbury festival, he's the greatest rock star in England, primarily because he doesn't try.

And you know what, that's the ultimate definition of cool.

Glastonbury is the least corporate festival you can play.

This is the festival that promotes autonomy, individuality, uniqueness, and which encourages independent thinking via free spirit approaches and esoteric thoughts. And it's pretty clear to me that Glastonbury is much more than just a typical boots-in-the-mud festival.

It's a state of mind.

It's a cornerstone in people's year.

And it's a huge part of people's lives.

Everybody wants to play Michael Eavis's festival.

And the only way you get to play is quite simple; you have to be invited.

I have now experienced this first-hand myself, and I can attest to the fact that these are not two-way conversations that take place between representatives, between managers or between booking agents.

All roads lead through Michael Eavis and also his daughter Emily. And if they want to invite you to partake in the festivities they host each year, they will let you know.

As I touched upon earlier, the truest rock stars happen by default.

They don't know.

They don't seek.

They don't chase

They just are.

It's an instinct rather than an objective or a mission.

It's something that happens, not something you create.

Every single piece of Glastonbury feels organic and incidental to me, and that's what makes it stand out.

There is a refreshing lack of corporate attitudes, a welcome void of corporate approach.

The mindset that precedes the event is as pure and organic as the air at Worthy Farm itself, devoid of the clutches of commercialism, but abundant with a genuine feeling of togetherness and community.

I have played almost every single festival on this beautiful planet, and I can tell you that there's no other experience like Glastonbury … both from a fan's point of view and a musician's point of view.

And every element of this uniqueness is a result of Michael Eavis's approach … and every element of this uniqueness directly reflects his personality.

I can say all of this with conviction of course, because this year, something truly special happened in my life.

The band I'm in was invited by Michael and Emily, to play the festival.

I never in a million years imagined that would happen.

I thought it was beyond our reach, and after a decade of hope I had finally come to peace with that.

When asked about it, I would profess my desire to visit, or perform, on the hallowed grounds of Worthy Farm, yet I had truly given up on it leading to an appearance.

But lo and behold, this year, news filtered back to me that Michael and Emily were finally interested.

I never asked why and I never questioned it.

How exactly it happened I'll never know, and I guess I'd prefer not to, but I can look each and every one of you in the eye and tell you that it was categorically the least conventional "music business" approach to landing a festival slot that I've ever been a part of.

Fast forward to the Friday of the festival …

My gang and I made the trip to the site the day before our band was due to play, and it wasn't long before word got back that Michael had invited us to come be his guests in "the ribbon tower" and enjoy the sunset. Unfortunately, one thing led to another, led to another and it was soon clear to us that we wouldn't make the tower in time for dusk. So basically from 8.30 on, my primary mission was to find Michael Eavis, one out of 300,000 people, a bit like looking for a needle in a haystack, except it wasn't really like a needle in a haystack, because this man is the absolute epicentre of the festival. And wherever he is, wherever he moves, whatever space he's occupying, that's where the magnetic field is at its strongest.

So there we were schlepping around in our old school Land Rover looking for the man, when all of a sudden, without fanfare or fireworks, there he was, about 20 feet from us, standing casually up against a fence, the unwilling, but undeniable centre of attention.

Michael is a peculiar mixture of big and small (and I don't just mean physically!) … he is the living human embodiment of everything this festival encompasses, the unique combination of humility and purity mixed with the fact that for this one weekend every year, he is the most powerful man in England.

I was about a second and a half into my encounter with him when I realised he had greeted me like an old, long lost friend, like someone with whom I had shared many late night beverages and tall tales.

I instantly felt completely at home, and at ease, in his company.

He was totally unassuming and yet there I was, standing with the person who was directly responsible for me standing in that very spot.

Well I must admit, a part of me, felt just about as tall as the wellies I was wearing during our 10-minute exchange of pleasantries.

I must further confess that I spent a large part of the weekend obsessed with the phenomenon of Glastonbury itself.

The idea that 40 weeks a year there is no trace of this weekend on these fields. 40 weeks a year there's a family of farmers that live and work here like many other farming families in England.

When I was driving, or walking, around the site, I would occasionally get within eyeshot of the actual livestock, or the working elements of the farm. On one side of me was a crowd of roughly 175,000 people. On the other side of me was a fully functioning, working farm, each of these "worlds" living in total harmony next to each other.

Absolutely priceless.

And in my travels, absolutely unprecedented.

Michael Eavis's story has been so well documented over the years, and has obviously enjoyed the same treatment this evening. In a nutshell – local farmer and landowner goes to a festival, becomes inspired to do his own, and accidentally starts what will become the biggest gathering of people based around music the world sees on a regular basis every year.

Remember … there is no truer recipe for rock-stardom than the word "accidental".

"Accidental" is the central ingredient in true rock-stardom, because the minute too much ‘thought' goes into it, you've already lost.

Things become contrived and cerebral.

It becomes a "product" and not a state of mind.

And what Michael Eavis represents is the purist definition of a state of mind.

Glastonbury is a place you go to physically of course, but ultimately, it represents a state of mind.

His state of mind.

All of which hopefully and finally explains why Micheal Eavis is the biggest rock star in Britain.

So when you see such noble human causes as Greenpeace or Water Aid represented at the festival, when you realize passionate political causes such as the Campaign For Nuclear Disarmament have been supported, and when you realise that the profits generated are given back to charities both national and local, you can see that Glastonbury has a uniquely human and genuinely selfless state of mind for a festival.

And remember the key to it all –

Michael Eavis.

Because Michael Eavis is Glastonbury.

And Glastonbury is Michael Eavis.

But guess what, for tonight, Michael Eavis is ours.

The doors have been locked from the outside.

And so I am EXTREMELY happy to announce that Michael Eavis is the "worthy" recipient of the 2014 Music Industry Trust Award.

Please give a warm welcome to Michael.

Michael Eavis then came up onto tyhe stage in his trademark shorts to accept the Music Industry Trust Award 2014 from Lars Ulrich.

Next year's sold out Glastonbury runs for five full days from  Wednesday 24th until Sunday 28th June 2015 across over a 1,000 acres of beautiful countryside at Worthy Farm, Somerset. As ever, entry includes a free programme. Once again, the Festival will be raising more than £2 million in funds for Oxfam, Wateraid, Greenpeace and and hundreds of other worthy causes, both local and international.

There are no acts confirmed yet for 2015, the line-up will not be announced until spring next year. Expect something like 2,000 performances at over 100 venues including music, cabaret, theatre, circus, a fantastic Kidz area, poetry, green crafts and information, site art, decor, and loads, loads more ... much more than just the music, so make sure you check it all out!

As usual eFestivals will bring you the very best-sourced rumours, allowing festival-goers to see who is playing long before the bands are formally announced - keep your eyes on the Glastonbury 2015 rumours, updated as we receive information.




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