Jay-Z's Glastonbury revenge
US RAPPER Jay-Z answered his critics, with a performance at Britain's famous Glastonbury music festival that was received with rapturous cheers
Oasis's Noel Gallagher was one of the most vocal critics against Jay-Z performing at England's most famous rock festival.
Striding on stage tonight with a guitar slung over his shoulder, Jay-Z cheekily led the crowd in a rendition of Oasis's "Wonderwall", smiling throughout, and with wife Beyonce Knowles in attendance, his set included songs such as "99 Problems". In a radical departure from the indie rock and guitar bands commonly associated with Glastonbury, the festival recruited the New Yorker in a bid to reach out to a younger audience. Michael Eavis, who runs the festival on his dairy farm, admitted they had "stuck their necks out on this one." Organisers staunchly defended the choice of Jay-Z, despite the slow ticket sales and sniping from Glastonbury veterans like Oasis guitarist Noel Gallager. In April, Gallagher slammed the booking of Jay-Z to headline to festival as "wrong", declaring: "I'm not having hip-hop at Glastonbury. It's wrong." The festival, held on Worthy Farm near Glastonbury in Somerset, south-west England, is the largest greenfield music and performing arts festival in the world. The event, which turns more than 320 hectares of rolling countryside into a tent city, started with 1,500 people in 1970 and has its roots in hippiedom.

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