On the more slick and machine-like end of the spectrum, Muse have been recruited as a fairly last-minute replacement for original headliners Kings Of Leon. Judging by the size of the crowd – not to mention the quantity of band merch worn around the site today – it’s a move that’s worked wonders. The trio waste no time in showing why they’re the men for the job, kicking off with new single Unravelling before firing on all cylinders with the likes of Hysteria, Stockholm Syndrome, a pyro-filled Thought Contagion and Plug In Baby. They compellingly mix the sci-fi with their more human side, delivering futuristic graphics but also touchingly paying tribute to late Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and his brother Andre Silva – two native football players who recently lost their lives in a tragic car accident – with bassist Chris Wolstenholme wearing a Portuguese national shirt with Diogo J. and the number 21 on the back, to an immensely appreciative and emotional reception. It all comes to a triumphant head with Starlight and a spectacular fireworks display, and the feeling that Muse are still one of the most reliable festival headliners of recent times.
For whatever unjust reason, it seems like NOS Alive closers Nine Inch Nails don’t (yet) have that status. Having never topped the bill at Download, tonight’s final date on the European leg of their phenomenal Peel It Back World Tour makes the case that the industrial giants need to take over Donington. Immediately. Though they draw a slightly smaller crowd than their predecessors, Trent Reznor and the gang are on electrifying form from the get-go, with an opening run of a crushingly heavy Somewhat Damaged, Wish, Mr. Self Destruct and March Of The Pigs. “Sometimes it feels like you’re doing what you’re supposed to be doing, and you’re in the right place,” considers the frontman early on. “I look out and I see you out here and I see the moon up there, and it feels like I’m right where I fucking should be right now. Thank you.”
Really, the pleasure is all ours. Bringing along a festival variation of their Peel It Back show with their own camera man onstage revealing exhilarating up-close looks at the band – Atticus Ross plus longtime touring members Robin Finck, “hometown boy” Alessandro Cortini and an unstoppable Ilan Rubin – in their element, this is a total masterclass. The entire crowd gets their phones out for Closer, while Copy Of A and The Perfect Drug offer the perfect soundtrack to these final festival hours. “One by one, I think we’re all relocating here, if you’ll have us,” announces Trent as this distinctly NIN set draws to a close. “I don’t know if you’ve heard, but things are kind of fucked-up back in the USA these days…” Unveiling a winning closing trio of The Hand That Feeds, Head Like A Hole and Hurt, with a full moon beautifully glistening in the Lisbon sky up above, it’s safe to Nine Inch Nails will be welcomed back as kings absolutely any time. Fingers crossed that’s as soon as can be…