The Desert Trip mega-rock concert got off the ground Friday in Indio before a crowd of 75,000, introducing a new style of music festival targeting veteran concert-goers rather than millennials.
In place of dozens, or hundreds, of bands performing over multiple stages at most two- and three-day music marathons like the annual Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, Desert Trip served up only six acts: Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, the Who, Neil Young and Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters.
It pulled in tens of thousands of fans who grew up with that music in the 1960s and ’70s. Officials with the concert’s promoter, L.A.-based Goldenvoice, said the average age of ticket buyers is 51. Even that, however, looks relatively spry compared to the average age of Desert Trip’s talent lineup: 72.
“We’ve all been playing for more than 50 years now, and it’s amazing you’re still coming to see us,” Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger told onlookers during that group’s set Friday night, which followed Dylan’s festival-opening performance. “So thank you.”
Jagger also addressed the jokes that started flying when the concerts were announced earlier this year, and pundits dubbed the event “Old-chella” and “Rockers With Walkers,” among other barbs.
“There will be no age jokes tonight, all right?” he asked shortly after taking the stage with longtime bandmates Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ron Wood. He then quipped, “Welcome to the Palm Springs Retirement Home for British Musicians.”
Festival-goers were mostly able to avoid the three-digit peak desert heat because performances began around sundown, with Dylan and his band taking the stage at 7 p.m.
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Desert Trip didn’t escape technical glitches, and traffic snarled for concert-goers heading into and exiting the grounds of the Empire Polo Field, which also is the site for the Coachella festival and its country offshoot, Stagecoach.
There appeared to be technical difficulties with the massive video screen behind the stage in the early going, as live images of Dylan and his band were replaced for much of the set by vintage film footage of urban traffic, nature scenes and other images. Auxiliary screens farther back appeared to function better.
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The Who’s Roger Daltrey, left, and Pete Townshend, right, on stage at Desert Trip.
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The Who guitarist Pete Townshend on stage at Desert Trip.
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Lynne Kaplan of Irvine dances through a mister in the culinary experience area on the final day of Desert Trip.
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The Who drummer Zak Starkey on stage at Desert Trip.
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The Who’s Roger Daltrey on stage at Desert Trip.
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A giant image of The Who guitarist Pete Townshend and singer Roger Daltrey is projected during their performance on the final day of Desert Trip.
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Fans take in the The Who on stage at Desert Trip.
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The Who’s Roger Daltrey on stage at Desert Trip.
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The Who’s Pete Townshend, right, on stage at Desert Trip.
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A closeup of a coconut drink served in the culinary experience area on the final day of Desert Trip.
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The Who’s Roger Daltrey, left, and Pete Townshend, right, on stage at Desert Trip.
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Neil Young fans take turns posing with Young’s 1970 album cover on the final day of Desert Trip.
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Paul McCartney on stage at Desert Trip on the Empire Polo Club grounds.
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Paul McCartney on stage Saturday night at Desert Trip on the Empire Polo Club grounds in Indio.
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Fans watch Paul McCartney perform from grandstand suites on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Club grounds.
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Neil Young and Paul McCartney on stage at Desert Trip on Saturday at the Empire Polo Club grounds in Indio.
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Fans watch Paul McCartney performs on the big screen on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip.
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A view from the grandstand seats as fans cheer and sing along to Paul McCartney’s performance on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Club grounds in Indio.
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Fans cheer and sing along as Paul McCartney performs on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip.
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Neil Young performs on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Club grounds.
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Rhya, 5, left, and Saydee, 3, right, Provensen of Huntington Beach dance to Neil Young.
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Neil Young is projected on a big screen performing near a teepee on the second day of the three-day Desert Trip.
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The Rolling Stones perform Friday on the first day of Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Club grounds in Indio.
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Guitarist Ron Wood of the Rolling Stones performs on the first day of Desert Trip in Indio.
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Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones perform on the first day of Desert Trip in Indio.
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Guitarist Keith Richards appears on a jumbo video screen while performing with the Rolling Stones on the first day of Desert Trip in Indio.
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Mick Jagger appears on a jumbo video screen while performing with the Rolling Stones at Desert Trip in Indio.
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Most fans in the general seating area could only see Bob Dylan’s set at Desert Trip on a grainy black and white video screen.
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A fan is silhouetted as he watches Bob Dylan perform on the big screen on the first day of Desert Trip in Indio.
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A fan is silhouetted as he watches Bob Dylan perform on the big screen on the first day of the three-day Desert Trip at the Empire Polo Club grounds in Indio.
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Backstage with Roger Waters at Desert Trip.
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Fans pose with the Who’s “Kids Are Alright” album cover as a backdrop at Desert Trip in Indio.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times) One of the musicians in the Stones’ entourage stepped forward to play the signature French horn solo in “You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” and could be seen onscreen playing the instrument, but what the audience heard was the sound of silence. The USC Thornton Chorale Singers, however, came through loud and clear in their contribution to that number.
Dylan served up a handful of his best-known songs — “Rainy Day Women #12 and 35,” with its woozy chorus “Everybody must get stoned,” “Highway 61 Revisited,” “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” — but devoted the majority of his 80-minute time onstage to more recent material such as “Early Roman Kings,” “Pay in Blood” and “High Water (for Charley Patton),” choices that didn’t endear him to hit-hungry fans.
The Stones, by contrast, delivered a set that ran more than two hours and was heavy on the group’s biggest hits: “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction,” “Honky Tonk Women,” “Gimme Shelter,” “Start Me Up,” “Street Fighting Man,” “Miss You” and “Sympathy for the Devil.”
Other than the choir, there were no surprise guests during either performance, nor any collaboration between Dylan and the Stones, two elements that had been the source of much speculation ahead of the show.
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