Parklife holds tributes for victims of Manchester Arena attack

Photo credit: Carolina Faruolo / FANATIC

UK: As Parklife prepared to welcome The 1975 to headline its main stage on June 10, screens were lit up with the words ‘We Stand Together’ as part of a tribute to the victims of last month’s attack at Manchester Arena. Messages of love from artists playing across the weekend were shown on screens, including Carl Cox and Goldie. Festival directors Sacha Lord and Jon Drape then led out a unified collective of those that were integral in helping the victims, including paramedics, fire services, nurses and members of The Greater Manchester Police.

Manchester City Councillor Pat Karney started the 15 minute tribute, alongside Carl Austin-Behan who expressed his love for the city and those affected by the incident, as well as a tribute from Andy Burnham that resulted in the crowd chanting “Manchester! Manchester!”. Matt Healy of The 1975 was then welcomed to the stage, urging the crowd to host a ‘minute of noise’ rather than silence.

Carl Austin-Behan expressed his love for those involved: “All of these people have helped the victims in the arena. The police protected us, the fire services protected us, the paramedics protected us. Let’s have a big round of applause…I want to thank all those people, from the hotels, to the taxi companies, the people on twitter, on Facebook, on social media – they opened their doors.”

“The fact that we’re so unique, so inclusive, so diverse – that is what Manchester is all about.”

Parklife Festival celebrated its eighth edition over the weekend, and completely sold-out. Saturday headliners included London Grammar, George Ezra and Chaka Khan, while Sunday saw Frank Ocean take to the stage for his first UK festival performance since 2014.

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