American indie rock kings The Killers rounded off the second day of the Glastonbury festival with a storming one-and-a-half hour set that left the main stage audience cheering for more. ”Glastonbury, we are all yours!” front man Brandon Flowers in gold lamé shouted as the Las Vegas group lit up the art and music festival where heavy rain ensured the traditional mud bath.
Tens of thousands of people flocked to Glastonbury for the world’s biggest green-field arts and music festival on Thursday — and with rain falling and more forecast to come, mud lovers might not be disappointed. The festival is notorious for its torrential rain after three ”washout” years in 1997, 1998 and 2005.