Music

Lovebox festival review – Solange intoxicates the smiley revellers


With East London’s Victoria Park now home to All Points East, competitors have been forced to disperse. For Lovebox, that’s meant an unexpected new chapter on the South Ealing/Acton borders. After clearing intense levels of security, a largely Gen Z crowd mainlined Carlsberg and donned festival must-haves including Stormzy-esque utility vests and face jewels. They were a smiley and lightly engaged bunch; the appearance of outlandish, Segway-riding rapper 2 Chainz dressed as a tennis ball raised few eyebrows on Friday.

Similarly, Saturday afternoon saw Four Tet, whose Brixton Academy dates were among the hottest tickets of 2018, draw fewer revellers than you might have expected, while a healthy crowd attended a set by Belgian techno doyenne Charlotte de Witte. Even Friday headliner Solange’s intoxicating set failed to fully enthrall through no fault of her own, with singalongs for hits including Cranes in the Sky and Don’t Touch My Hair. In the chatter between songs, she mused on her faith and said how grateful she was to see black and brown faces in the audience.

Perhaps predictably, the crowds were most taken with the artists dominating the charts. Among them was afroswing/rap favourite J Hus, whose set ran the gamut from breakout hit Dem Boy Paigon to the anthem Bouff Daddy. While he often cut a slightly shy figure on stage, an appearance from contemporary Dave made things more bombastic – though, happily, the latter refrained from his party trick of bringing up members of the audience. Or Lizzo, whose body-positive pop and a burst of No Scrubs before heartache anthem Jerome had everyone singing along despite the patchy sound.

Body-positive pop … Lizzo.



Body-positive pop … Lizzo. Photograph: Burak Çıngı/Redferns

Elsewhere, Brockhampton – the all-singing, all-dancing, all-rapping collective – got a huge reception for their hyperactive alt-R&B and amateur dramatics. And, despite a slow start, Giggs, the often sordid elder statesman of UK rap, commanded the crowd with a smattering of Kano and JME before launching into his salacious singalong hits Lock Doh and a remixed, reloaded Talkin Da Hardest.

Saturday headliner Chance the Rapper closed things in ecclesiastical fashion, creating a megachurch vibe with a backing choir and tracks such as Blessings and Angels, even if he had to draw on his most commercial material – the DJ Khaled-produced, Bieber-featuring I’m the One – to keep things on track.

The young crowd may often have seemed five seconds away from drifting off to check their star signs, but the mood was positive and inclusive. The smart decision would be to better tailor the lineup to suit this throng, who have more stamina and a better glitter collection than most of us.



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