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‘We were the bridge between indie and dance’: Glastonbury icons Orbital on 30 years of breaking barriers
In conversation with the Guardian at the festival, Paul and Phil Hartnoll recalled their culture-changing sets of the 90s – and whether they killed off Top of the Pops
But 30 years ago, when Orbital played their first-ever Pyramid stage set, thereby inching the “indie kids” towards techno, it represented a landmark moment for the festival and for British music culture. Brothers Phil and Paul Hartnoll were reflecting on how the festival has changed – and their own part in shifting it from a traditionally rockist event to the more accommodating one today – while in conversation with the Guardian’s chief pop music critic Alexis Petridis on Saturday morning. Photograph: Alecsandra Dragoi/The GuardianThey began making visuals for their shows, inspired by prog-rock acts such as Pink Floyd: “If we’re going to be on stage, we have to have something behind us.” They made their early videos by filming an oscilloscope, true to their DIY ethos and diverse sources.
Or read this on The Guardian