The Royal Festival Hall’s Level 2 foyer spaces are currently being refurbished, as we work to bring you a brand new cafe, bar, shop and Ticket Office. Find out more

Playlist: Massive Attack’s Meltdown

Graphic for Playlist of artists from Massive Attack's Meltdown festival, featuring Massive Attack and the word playlist

‘Theirs is a world where psychedelia and punk align, where sensual sophistication and urban grit share equal ground,’ said Glenn Max, our then producer of contemporary culture upon the announcement of Massive Attack as curators of the 15th edition of Meltdown festival. ‘All this would be enough, but equally important...’ he added, ‘few artists could throw a better party.’

Massive Attack were the first band to curate Meltdown, and as founding member Robert del Naja (alias 3D) put it; it was a ‘once in a lifetime’ opportunity. Whilst curating may have been a one-off, performing at their own Meltdown was more specifically a twice in a lifetime opportunity, as the band chose to bookend their 2008 festival themselves with two distinct live performances. 

Massive Attack performing on stage at Meltdown 2008
Massive Attack at Meltdown 2008: still taken from YouTube video

Curating a Meltdown festival is no easy feat, and del Naja was well aware of the pressure of following in the footsteps of the likes of Nick Cave, Patti Smith and David Bowie. ‘Yeah, it's every boy's treat but it comes with a price,’ he told Phil Johnson of The Independent. ‘You're following up a lot of really great curators and you don't want to be the first to fuck it up.’

“Our aim is to mix it up a bit by instigating collaborations that make sense and probably some that don't.”

Massive Attack on the announcement of their curation

Unsurprisingly Massive Attack’s Meltdown line-up reflected their broad stretch of influences. There were musical pioneers, with performances from our 2021 curator Grace Jones, Terry Callier, Horace Andy and George Clinton. Elbow and Fleet Foxes, rubbed up against the punk and post-punk of Stiff Little Fingers and Gang of Four. And there was a first UK live show since 1980 from the original line-up of Tokyo’s ‘technopop’ pioneers Yellow Magic Orchestra.

But there were also appearances from artists yet to make it big, including Aloe Blacc, two years before his track ‘I Need A Dollar’ would catapult him to international fame. And very much fulfilling the brief of ‘mixing it up’ was a special performance of Vangelis' Blade Runner by Heritage Orchestra mixed live by Massive Attack.

Heritage Orchestra perform as part of Massive Attack's Meltdown
Heritage Orchestra perform as part of Massive Attack's Meltdown: still from YouTube video

‘With Meltdown,’ wrote Johnson in The Independent, ‘[Massive Attack] get the chance to curate on a scale previously undreamed of. Their wide-ranging programme also hangs together unusually well.’ And you can join us in enjoying just how well it came together by listening to this playlist of artists from that 15th edition of Meltdown. It really was a party few others could have thrown better.