Moroccan Trance Collective Kick off Music at Glastonbury

2023 Glastonbury Music Festival
© Thomson Reuters
2023 Glastonbury Music Festival © Thomson Reuters
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Moroccan Trance Collective Kick off Music at Glastonbury

2023 Glastonbury Music Festival
© Thomson Reuters
2023 Glastonbury Music Festival © Thomson Reuters

Glastonbury Festival's main Pyramid Stage opened on Friday to the sounds of The Master Musicians of Joujouka, a trance music collective from Morocco, as tens of thousands of fans kicked off three days of music and merrymaking under a blazing English sun.

The sprawling, eclectic and world-famous festival in southwest England will feature hundreds of acts including American rockers Guns N' Roses and British singer Elton John, whose Sunday night show will be his last UK tour performance.

Fellow headliners Arctic Monkeys' Friday evening performance will go ahead, organizers confirmed, following doubts after frontman Alex Turner contracted laryngitis, according to Reuters.

"He's ok. They're on," organizer Emily Eavis, whose father Michael started Glastonbury Festival on his farm 53 years ago, told BBC Radio. "We were thinking about whether we should have a serious backup plan - but no, thankfully, they're on."

The Master Musicians of Joujouka, who also played at Glastonbury in 2011, belong to a centuries-old musical tradition with Sufi roots that gained greater attention after a collaboration with the Rolling Stones' Brian Jones in the 1960s.

Festival-goer Leslie Mills said she was most looking forward to the mystery act billed as "The Churnups" and widely believed to be the Foo Fighters as she sat on the grass sipping Diet Coke in 25 Celsius (77 Fahrenheit) temperatures.

Asked about the opening performance from the Moroccan collective, she replied with a chuckle: "It was different. I had a little dance."



2 Elephants Die in Flash Flooding in Northern Thailand

This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
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2 Elephants Die in Flash Flooding in Northern Thailand

This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)
This handout photo taken and released on October 3, 2024 by the Elephant Nature Park shows elephants standing in flood waters at the sanctuary in Thailand's northern Chiang Mai province. (Photo by Handout / ELEPHANT NATURE PARK / AFP)

Two elephants drowned during flash flooding in popular Thai tourist hotspot Chiang Mai, their sanctuary said Sunday, as local authorities evacuated visitors from their hotels and shops closed in the city center.

More than 100 elephants at the Elephant Nature Park in Chiang Mai province were moved to higher ground to escape rapidly rising flood waters, an employee who gave her name as Dada, told AFP.

But two elephants -- named in local media as 16-year-old Fahsai and 40-year-old Ploython, who was blind -- were found dead on Saturday.

"My worst nightmare came true when I saw my elephants floating in the water," Saengduean Chailert, the director of the Elephant Nature Park in northern Thailand, told local media.

"I will not let this happen again, I will not make them run from such a flood again," she said, vowing to move them to higher ground ahead of next year's monsoon.

In Chiang Mai city center, people waded through muddy water close to knee height in the night bazaar, and water flowed into the central train station, which has now been closed.

Tourists were forced to evacuate hotels and a local TV station showed a monk carrying a coffin through floodwaters to a cremation site.

Major inundations have struck parts of northern Thailand as recent heavy downpours caused the Ping River to reach "critical" levels, according to the district office. The water level peaked on Saturday but had receded slightly by Sunday.

Thailand's northern provinces have been hit by large floods since Typhoon Yagi struck the region in early September, with one district reporting its worst inundations in 80 years.

Twenty provinces are currently flooded, the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation said Sunday.