T in the Park 2010: Running order
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Download a printable PDF of this weekend's full running order.
Friday 9th July
Main Stage
- 22.10-23.50 Muse - Epic, arena-straddling, Freddie Mercury-worshipping space rock from Devon.
- 20.25-21.30 Faithless - The legendary dance act return to T to get the crowd jumping.
- 19.05-19.55 Editors - The man also known as Mr Edith Bowman and the rest of the boys delight us with their expansive indie anthems.
- 18.00-18.35 Paloma Faith - Pop princess with a big voice and a fashion sense to rival Noel Fielding's.
- 17.00-17.30 The Big Pink - Velvety indie-fuzz-electro that has the girls falling like dominoes.
Radio 1/NME Stage
- 22.15-23.50 The Black Eyed Peas - Will.i.am, Fergie and co bring the 'Boom Boom Pow' to Balado.
- 20.35-21.45 Florence + The Machine - Ms Welch shows off her increased profile, stepping up from last year's slot on the Futures Stage.
- 19.15-20.05 Jamie T - The Cockney, D&B-infused guitarist brings out the sunshine.
- 18.00-18.45 The Temper Trap - Aussie authors of the ubiquitous TV theme 'Sweet Disposition'.
- 17.00-17.30 Kids In Glass Houses - Rock-friendly Cardiff boys with a pop-punk edge.
King Tut's Wah Wah Tent
- 22.35-23.50 Calvin Harris - The Dumfries DJ gets us ready for the weekend. Wear your pineapple hat.
- 21.05-22.05 Hot Chip - Inspired electro-soul dads sing ever so sweetly on synth-tastic pop gems.
- 19.50-20.35 La Roux - Danceable electro-pop beats from the pointy-haired pixie.
- 18.50-19.20 Dirty Projectors - Glorious female harmonies over wonkily syncopated indie-pop from the NY envelope pushers.
- 17.50-18.20 3OH!3 - Happily immature krunk-rap-pop from Ke$ha's bezzy mates.
- 17.00-17.25 Everything Everything - The Manchester ones to watch deliver on the disco drums and catchy riffs.
Red Bull Bedroom Jam Futures
- 23.10-23.50 Echo & The Bunnymen - Post-punk classics from one of the very best bands of the 80s.
- 22.05-22.40 Kele - The Bloc Party frontman showcases a glorious, pounding dance direction in his solo show.
- 21.05-21.35 Delphic - Mancunian electro-pop-rock with world-dominating vision.
- 20.05-20.35 Mayer Hawthorne and The County - Sweet, sassy, retro soul to make you think it's 1960s Detroit all over again, from the multi-talented Californian.
- 19.15-19.40 Chapel Club - London indie five-piece built upon tight rhythm sections and dramatic guitars.
- 18.25-18.50 Stand Up Guy - Not very comedy at all; actually darkest hardcore metal from Northern Ireland.
- 17.35-18.00 Sacred Betrayal - Speedy screamo, somewhat similar to Avenged Sevenfold, with added synths.
Bacardi B-Live
- 22.45-00.00 Kissy Sell Out - BBC Radio 1 DJ famed for his energetic peformances and eccentric electro productions.
- 21.30-22.45 A Skillz vs Krafty Kuts - This duo of renowned breakbeat DJs reunite, expect a fusion of hip-hop, dance and funk.
- 19.30-21.30 Greg Wilson - Manchester DJ who was an early champion of electro.
- 18.00-19.30 Lel Palfrey - A frequent guest at many Edinburgh nights who favours the slow, deep house vibe with a Detroit and disco influence.
T Break Stage
- 23.00-23.30 French Wives - Largely up-tempo indie-folk tunes with a nice line in fiddle melodies.
- 22.10-22.40 Be Like Pablo - With a sound comparable to 'Beach Boys vs Teenage Fanclub', this Forres quintet are worth a watch.
- 21.20-21.50 Meursault - Neil Pennycook's blisteringly beautiful merging of great songs and fizzing electronics.
- 20.30-21.00 Matthew P - Mr P's warm vocals and jaunty tunes confirm that the nu-folk explosion is in full swing.
- 19.40-20.10 White Belt Yellow Tag - Brooding, swelling indie from the Editors and Elbow school of thought.
- 18.50-19.20 Kobi Onyame - Ghanaian/Glaswegian hip hop/rap/soul with great pop potential.
- 18.00-18.30 The Seventeenth Century - From the four corners of Scotland comes some delicious experimental folk music.
Saturday 10th July
Main Stage
- 21.15-22.50 Eminem - Marshall Mathers' return will be the highlight of many festival-goers' weekend.
- 19.25-20.40 Stereophonics - The finest band to ever emerge from Welsh mining village Cwmaman return to T.
- 17.55-18.55 Paolo Nutini - Paisley's favourite son is sure to be a crowd-pleaser, especially with summery stuff from the Sunny Side Up album.
- 16.35-17.10 Vampire Weekend - Brilliant 'sunny afternoon bouncing-around-like-idiots' material from the New York Afro-beat preppies.
- 15.20-16.05 The Proclaimers - Sing-alongs are guaranteed during this set from Leith's bespectacled twosome.
- 14.25-14.50 Newton Faulkner - Ginger-dreadlocked Englishman with beguiling acoustic guitar technique.
- 13.00-13.40 Scouting For Girls - Chart-friendly harmonisers with brain-invading choruses about lovely ladies.
- 12.00-12.35 Chipmunk - Prodigal young rapper moving up from the streets of Bow to the top of the charts.
Radio 1/NME Stage
- 21.20-22.50 The Prodigy - Since The Prodge were absent last year, this'll be T's first exposure to the Invaders Must Die material. Cannae wait.
- 19.50-20.50 30 Seconds to Mars - Jared Leto's group of emo-rock titans are sure to set many a lady's heart a-flutter as they rock out in the evening.
- 18.30-19.20 The Courteeners - Indie rockers who include paean to lost youth, 'Not Nineteen Forever,' among their hits.
- 17.15-18.00 The Black Keys - Swampy American blues-rock group with a taste for the Deep South.
- 16.05-16.45 Shed Seven - The veteran indie kingpins already have a great track record at T; this year should be another belter.
- 14.55-15.35 Joshua Radin - Ohioan folkie beloved by many, including offbeat indie filmmaker and actor, Zach Braff.
- 13.55-14.25 The Sunshine Underground - Punky, funky indie foursome from Leeds, who take their name from a cracking Chemical Brothers song.
- 12.55-13.25 Local Natives - Portland people who like to dabble with both Afro-pop and the odd three-part harmony.
- 12.00-12.25 Twisted Wheel - Post-punk indie rock from two former members of The Children.
King Tut's Wah Wah Tent
- 21.50-22.50 Mumford & Sons - Marcus Mumford's soaring folk-pop should be a hit, and will they do their Vampire Weekend cover?
- 20.20-21.20 Rodrigo Y Gabriela - Thudding Hispanic acoustic metal? Yes, it works – fans include Metallica's Robert Trujillo.
- 19.15-19.50 The Coral - The Liverpudlian indie boys are here celebrating a sixth album release.
- 17.45-18.30 We Are Scientists - Cracking rock-pop tunes, and great stage banter to boot.
- 16.35-17.15 Frightened Rabbit - Scots favourites, rising ever higher with their richly resonant indie-rock.
- 15.25-16.05 Kate Nash - Mockney singer-songwriter, who's a dab hand on the old Joanna. She eats lemons, and they make her bittah.
- 14.15-14.55 Broken Social Scene - Brilliant Canadian collective with an ear for balancing the awkward with the tuneful.
- 13.15-13.45 Diana Vickers - Fulfilling T's pop requirement is this catchy starlet from the X-Factory.
- 12.15-12.45 General Fiasco - Much-touted pop-rock threesome from Belfast.
Red Bull Bedroom Jam Futures
- 22.05-22.50 Julian Casablancas - Lazy-voiced New York garage rock from The Strokes frontman.
- 20.55-21.35 Laura Marling - Marling's quirky nu-folk sits well on this bill alongside Mumford & Sons, but let's just remember, she was there first.
- 19.45-20.25 Mystery Jets - One of those indie-rock bands that inspire a sort of reverent fanaticism: if you like them, you really like them.
- Drake (CANCELLED) - Unfortunately, the Lil' Wayne-touted Canadian hip hop star has had to pull out due to family issues.
- 18.35-19.15 Example - Long-gestating Brit rapper emerges from Mike Skinner's Beats stable.
- 17.35-18.05 The Middle East - The folky post-rockers are not as confrontational as their name might suggest.
- 16.35-17.05 Lissie - Flaxen-haired US hottie, with a seemingly permanent case of tousled bed-head, and a love of heart-string-tugging covers of Metallica and Lady Gaga.
- 15.35-16.05 The Knux - From New Orleans, why not try some alternative hip hop/electro rock?
- 14.35-15.05 Never Means Maybe - Jumpy, shouty screamo from Chelmsford. With great hair.
- 13.35-14.05 Hearts Under Fire - An all-girl (or should that be grrl?) hard-rockin' four-piece.
- 12.45-13.10 You And What Army - Intriguing mix of trance, rap and rock that bears some comparison with 3OH!3.
Barcadi B-Live
- 12.00-14.00 Mikey Inglis - Up-and-coming house DJ who plays regular nights in Edinburgh and his home town of Dunfermline.
- 14.00-16.00 Craig Smith - Expect mostly dance mixes from this Edinburgh DJ who is a favourite of Trainspotting writer Irvine Welsh.
- 16.00-18.00 Horse Meat Disco - London quartet who mostly play underground disco, with some Italo and rarities thrown in.
- 18.00-21.30 Greco Roman Sound System - European collective known for their infamous parties and unusual remixes.
- 21.30-23.00 MJ Cole - Innovator of the UK garage sound, who also dabbles in house and drum and bass.
T Break Stage
- 22.00-22.30 Mitchell Museum - Richly orchestrated pop 'n' roll that doesn't take itself too seriously.
- 21.20-21.40 The Ray Summers - Riotous, fun-loving music from Falkirk that chops and changes genres, tempos and time signatures with gusto.
- 20.20-20.50 MOPP - Built on a solid synth foundation, MOPP covers a gamut of pop, disco and dance genres.
- 19.30-20.00 Sparrow And The Workshop - Powerful female-fronted folk-Americana, with noisy drums and guitars for accompaniment.
- 18.40-19.10 Pearl And The Puppets - Cotton-voiced melodies and gentle, folksy guitars, perfect for hazy summer afternoons.
- 17.50-18.20 Diagram Of The Heart - Sounds like a slightly more hysterical version of Pet Shop Boys, with added European dance influences.
- 17.00-17.30 The Boy Who Trapped the Sun - A few days before releasing his debut album, Fireplace, Colin Macleod, who hails from the Isle of Lewis, brings his heart-on-sleeve jangly folk-pop to T.
- 16.10-16.40 Kid Adrift - Muse-style theatrics combined with deliriously in-your-face electronica.
- 15.20-15.50 Rachel Furner - Bombastic, no-holds-barred pop, with Mika and Scissor Sisters resemblances.
- 14.30-15.00 Astral Planes - The artists formerly known as Paper Planes, with surf-rock stylings.
- 13.40-14.10 Kitty The Lion - Danceable folk-pop five-piece with a Glasgow accent.
- 12.30-13.20 The Draymin - Indie song structures, freshened up with techno instrumentalism. Strange, but alluring.
- 12.00-12.30 Stanley Odd - Witty lyrics and funky instrumentals from these Scotland-based hip hoppers.
Slam Tent
- 21.30-23.00 Carl Cox - The legendary techno and house DJ's gonna raise the roof.
- 20.15-21.30 Erol Alkan - Pioneering DJ famous for spinning indie-electro in the early noughties, now preferring disco.
- 19.00-20.15 Fake Blood - Theo Keating (aka DJ Touché, aka one half of Wise Guys) in his hard, fidget house guise.
- 17.40-19.00 Adam Beyer - Swedish techno DJ with a penchant for founding record labels in his spare time.
- 16.40-17.40 Paul Ritch (live) - Parisian techno-electro maestro with a slightly Latino twist.
- 16.00-16.40 D12 (live) - Eminem's buddies grab a cheeky daytime-set – a warm-up for the main event, perhaps?
- 15.00-16.00 Four Tet (live) - Formidable electronic talent Kieran Hebdan twiddling his knobs for your ecstatic pleasure.
- 13.45-15.00 DJ Yoda - The (scratch)master of cut 'n' paste DJing will be playing a bit of everything.
- 13.15-13.45 Hilltop Hoods (live) - Australian hip hop trio who have been trucking on since the early 1990s.
- 11.30-13.15 Greg Wilson - Expect electrofunk and disco re-edits from this resurgent former Hacienda resident.
BBC Introducing Stage
- 20.00-20.25 Young Fathers - Sharp-suited rap-dub-powerpop trio with a weakness for thick glasses.
- 19.15-19.40 Airship - Earnest pop-rock with driving bass lines and dreamy harmonies.
- 18.30-18.55 Real Dolls - A 'party band' fond of genre-mashing; sounds like Blondie played through a C64.
- 17.45-18.10 Hip Parade - Glaswegian pop punk, sure to inspire fandom along Dananananaykroyd lines.
- 17.00-17.25 Maxsta - The latest young garage-grime-hip hop artist from East London.
- 16.15-16.40 Lily McKenzie - Sassy, funky, jazzy female vocalist, not afraid of the occasional remix.
- 15.30-15.55 Admiral Fallow - It's folk music, Jim, but with a harder indie-rock edge.
- 14.45-15.10 Cattle and Cane - Acoustic guitar-led indie with a folky bent.
- 14.00-14.25 Gold Sounds - Accomplished, glossy sunny-pop – listen out for hand-clappy 'So It Goes'.
- 13.15-13.40 JKLMNO - Glorious, full-sounding choruses with playfully poppy bits in between.
- 12.30-12.55 Lou Hickey - Classy pop songstress with a cabaret twist from Glasgow.
Sunday 11th July
Main Stage
- 21.20-22.50 Kasabian - The Leicestershire boys beckon Balado into the Asylum.
- 19.30-20.50 Jay-Z - With Glasto securely under his belt, Hova sets his sights on T.
- 18.00-19.00 Biffy Clyro - The hairy Ayrshiremen ensure nobody steals their 'Most T Performances' crown.
- 16.40-17.30 Dizzee Rascal - OI! Fix up, look sharp – he's just a rascal, innit bruv?
- 15.25-16.10 The View - Same jeans for four days, Kyle? That's nothing to these crusty, hardened festival-goers.
- 14.10-14.55 Skunk Anansie - Anthemic, dynamic rock, coupled with Skin's stunning vocals, are an impressive combo.
- 13.05-13.40 The Stranglers - The legendary post-punk outfit get Sunday off to a great start.
Radio 1/NME Stage
- 21.20-22.50 Madness - The weekend's resident old-school skankers show the young pups how it's done.
- 19.50-20.50 Groove Armada - Long-time festival favourites with a feel-good, dubby vibe and an arsenal of dance-along crowd pleasers.
- 18.30-19.20 The Cribs - The Jarmans and Marr remind us how good indie-rock can be.
- 17.15-18.00 Babyshambles - Mr Doherty's other band soldier on ahead of August's Libertines reunion.
- 16.00-16.45 Rise Against - Noisy punk rock four-piece from Chicago.
- 14.50-15.30 Airborne - One of Australia's finest exponents of hard, metal-edged rock 'n' roll.
- 13.50-14.20 Billy Talent - Shouty shouty punk rawk from Canada.
- 12.55-13.20 Frank Turner - The ex-Million Dead frontman whips out some of his solo acoustic material.
- 12.00-12.25 Delta Maid - Solo female vocalist specialising in the rootsy, bluesy side of acoustic music.
King Tut's Wah Wah Tent
- 21.50-22.50 David Guetta - Supreme DJ and sometime Black Eyed Peas collaborator will have the crowd jumping.
- 20.20-21.20 Goldfrapp - Alison Goldfrapp's rainbow-coloured wardrobe and sulky-sexy style returns, with fresh material from new synth-pop number, Head First.
- 18.55-19.50 Empire Of The Sun - Flamboyant Australians desperate to avoid the 'next MGMT' label … who sound like MGMT.
- 17.40-18.25 Gossip - Please, Beth, more rocking out, less sniffing tights this year. Cheers!
- 16.30-17.10 Ellie Goulding - The 'Starry Eyed' singer proves her live chops on King Tut's hallowed stage.
- 15.20-16.00 Corinne Bailey Rae - Smooth-voiced soul-pop in the mid-afternoon – a perfect fit.
- 14.10-14.50 Kassidy - Old-school Americana with a decidedly funky streak.
- 13.10-13.40 Darwin Dee - New York indie-folkers from the Big Apple.
- 12.15-12.45 Daisy Dares You - Pop-rocking singer-songwriter behind the infectious Chipmunk-featuring 'Number One Enemy.'
Red Bull Bedroom Jam Futures
- 22.05-22.50 Ash - A tenner says Tim Wheeler comes on stage with a flaming guitar again.
- 20.55-21.35 Bombay Bicycle Club - Four-piece with a quirkier, melodic take on the guitar-driven indie rock sound.
- 19.45-20.25 The Drums - NME darlings and American indie upstarts show us what they've got.
- 18.45-19.15 Yeasayer - Oddball tropical-pop and quirky 80s balladry from Brooklyn. Don't be in the Portaloo queue when they play highly danceable new songs, 'Ambling Alp', 'O.N.E.' or 'Madder Red'.
- 17.45-18.15 Two Door Cinema Club - Chart friendly indie hooks from the up-and-comers.
- 16.45-17.15 Black Mountain - Canadian psychedelic rock that rests on solid grooves.
- 15.45-16.15 Hurts - Immaculate 1980s-heavy electro pop from Manchester.
- 14.55-15.20 Detroit Social Club - Actually from Newcastle, this dark and bluesy outfit have a Nick Cave-y flavour.
- 14.05-14.30 This Is Divine - Extremely heavy hardcore from the north of England.
- 13.15-13.40 Heights - Pounding Welsh hardcore outfit with epic, grandiose sound.
- 12.25-12.50 No Mean City - Accomplished grunge-metal from Derry, with odd funk/disco diversions.
Bacardi B-Live
- 12.00-14.00 Phil Lamb - An ecletic mix of disco, balaeric folk, synth-edged disco and house.
- 14.00-16.00 Gareth Sommerville - Former Sub Club resident DJ who was one of the first to promote house music in Scotland.
- 16.00-18.30 The Revenge - Edgy blend of rock, soul, funk and electronic music, perfect for raving.
- 18.30-21.00 Maurice Fulton - Dancefloor friendly house tunes from the darling of both the underground house and leftfield scenes.
- 21.00-23.00 Jaymo & Andy George - Unpredictable and fun combination of everything from synth pop to indie and disco.
T Break Stage
- 22.00-22.30 Make Sparks - Much-touted indie kids from Glasgow.
- 21.10-21.40 Lightguides - Indie foursome with a knack for crowd-pleasing choruses.
- 20.20-20.50 Night Noise Team - Edinburghian 80s-influenced indie-disco band with a French twist.
- 19.30-20.00 Unicorn Kid - Move over Calvin and Mylo, here's everyone's new favourite Scottish dance phenomenon.
- 18.40-19.10 Midnight Lion - This Glaswegian duo used to be in Drive-By-Argument, and now do a very fine job of dramatic electropop, with Scottish accents.
- 17.50-18.20 Alex Gardner - Steely-eyed, strong-voiced Euro-dance-pop from Edinburgh.
- 17.00-17.30 Eliza Doolittle - Soft-voiced odd-pop with an old school vibe.
- 16.10-16.40 Aaron Wright and The Aprils - This young Edinburgh gent is seemingly cornering the country music market at T.
- 15.20-15.50 A Band Called Quinn - Accomplished electro-indie tunes, fronted by the alluring Louise Quinn.
- 14.30-15.00 Ramona - Brighton four-piece with a name (and sound) seemingly based on a Ramones typo.
- 13.30-14.10 Three Blind Wolves - Countried folk, occasionally wandering into gospel territory, from Glaswegian singer/songwriter Ross Clark and co.
- 12.50-13.20 Washington Irving - Instrumentally-layered folk-pop – think a bouncier Mumford & Sons.
- 12.00-12.30 Fridge Magnets - This swingin' foursome sound like a French silent comedy soundtrack.
Slam Tent
- 21.55-23.00 Plastikman (live) - Dirty Detroit techno producer, Richie Hawtin brings new material, and a new live show — expect a wall of LED screens and an impressive light show to wrap up Sunday night.
- 20.50-21.55 Slam - The Glasgow dance duo do their residency bit once more.
- 19.20-20.50 Sven Väth - A German giant, not necessarily in stature, but in terms of his contribution to trance music and ambient techno.
- 18.00-19.20 Dubfire - The former member of Deep Dish is set to cook up some dark house and techno.
- 16.45-18.00 Crookers - Milanese dance titans playing some bouncy crowd pleasing house.
- 16.00-16.45 Tricky (live) - Endlessly inventive and enigmatic former Massive Attack member with a dark trip hop sound.
- 14.30-16.00 Andrew Weatherall & Ivan Smagghe - Ex-Two Lone Swordsman member plus ex-Black Strobe member equals techno excellence.
- 13.00-14.30 Pan Pot - Crisply minimal, coolly restrained techno mixed with hot and heavy house music.
- 12.30-13.00 Harvey McKay (live) - Intoxicating house/minimalist/techno DJ from Glasgow.
- 11.30-12.30 Gary Beck - Globe-trotting techno producer from Glasgow comes home for summer.
BBC Introducing Stage
- 20.00-20.25 Aerials Up - Foals-y verses and massive choruses from the band formerly known as The Ads.
- 19.15-19.40 ARP Attack - See this electro-pop trio purely for their impressive effects array.
- 18.30-18.55 Blitz Kidz - Ska/disco-infused spiky emo-pop-punk posse.
- 17.45-18.10 Silver Columns - High energy, sophisticated techno-pop from Johnny Lynch and Adem.
- 17.00-17.25 Smiler - Grimy rap artist with very heavy beats, from London.
- 16.15-16.40 Profisee - Remix-friendly dance-rapper known to collaborate with Cloak x Dagger.
- 15.30-15.55 Liam Bailey - Easy-going blues and soul from this Percy Sledge sound-alike.
- 14.45-15.10 The Arcadian Kicks - Brummie indie-rockers with hints of folk and country.
- 14.00-14.25 Jake Flowers - No relation to Brandon, this is good honest indie-folk from the Midlands.
- 13.15-13.40 Fixers - Spacey psychedelica with some Arcade Fire-esque touches.
- 12.30-12.55 North Atlantic Oscillation - A slightly poppier Aereogramme-style sound, with additional electro flourishes.