
Cruel World Music Festival
A month or so ago, Ted read that one of our favorite bands, ‘Til Tuesday, was reuniting for the Cruel World music festival in Los Angeles. They haven’t played together in decades, and with the all original lineup, it’s been about 35 years I think. We looked at the lineup for the concert, and it looked like a lot of fun, and the price wasn’t horrible, so we decided to go. We drove down on Friday, and came home on Sunday, so it was a quick trip for sure. We considered flying, but couldn’t find any flights that made money sense, especially since we would need to rent a car once we got there.

I’ve been to concerts before, and all day lineups with several bands, but never a festival like this where you have multiple bands playing simultaneously. With 2 or 3 bands plus a ‘club room’ (DJ) all playing at the same time, you need a big space, so this is on a golf course.

We didn’t know the early bands, and wanted to pace ourselves a bit, so while the festival started at 11:45, the first band we saw was Midge Ure at 2pm. I had never heard of Midge Ure before, but he was one of the bandleaders of Ultravox (who I did know), and co-organized the charity concerts Band Aid and Live Aid in the 80s. This guy kicked ass, and I would go see him again in a heartbeat. I thought, THIS is the highlight of this concert. What a voice, what a presence, what a charming Scottish accent.
After that, Ted wanted to see Nation of Language, which was on the other side of the golf course, near the Rose Bowl. I had to find the bathrooms, and when I got back I didn’t want to search the crowd for Ted, so I waited for him at our pre-agreed upon meeting place under a tree. I didn’t get any pictures of Nation of Language, but they are not an old 80s band, they are current and they are great.

Then it was back across the course to see Alison Moyet, singer of the band Yaz/Yazoo. OMG, she was so good! She said she’s usually pretty chatty during her concerts, but she only had 45 minutes, so she mostly stuck to music. I liked her dancing, she leads with her hips and shoulders, and I enjoyed imagining that that’s how she walks around the house. **Dances into room – “We’re having pancakes today” – Dances out.** (No one else thinks that’s as funny as I do.) I was a big fan of Yaz back in the day, and really enjoyed singing along to songs like Only You and Nobody’s Diary.

Now the event we came to see, ‘Til Tuesday. At this point it had started to rain a little harder (I didn’t mention that it was drizzling, did I? It was drizzling) and I kind of wished that I hadn’t left my hat in the car. Oh well, it was just a heavy drizzle. Aimee Mann has the most amazing voice, and this was for sure the highlight of the day for me. My favorite of their 3 albums is Everything’s Different Now, which came out in 1988 and was on heavy rotation at Ted’s little apartment in San Francisco. I wish they had played more songs from that album, but when they played The Other End (Of the Telescope), I had a George Bailey moment and started crying.

Ted used to sing this song to Maya when she was a colicky baby, and thinking about that, and about how we used to listen to it when we were first falling in love, and then about how we were here, together, celebrating Ted’s 60th birthday, I had a moment…I thought, “Wow, you’ve really had a wonderful life!” I was so happy. Ted saw me crying happy tears and knew (at least partly) why, and put his arm around me. His friend John took this picture. My hair is kind of wavy because we’re getting rained on and that’s what my hair looks like in a little bit of rain. The stage is a revolving stage, so one band can have their gear set up while another is playing, because the schedule is pretty tight. ‘Til Tuesday ran out of time at the end of their final song, Voices Carry, and were spun off stage, which seemed fitting as she was signing the final verses of ‘He said, Shut Up’.
We got a little bit of flack from FB friends for seeing ‘Til Tuesday instead of The Buzzcocks, which were playing at the same time. Obviously I have no regrets on this one.
Now is where a festival is not as good as other concerts. Our feet are hurting, we are hungry, and we want to sit down. If we want to sit, the ground is wet, and if we want to eat, we’re going to be in the middle of the venue, which means we will hear music from multiple stages at once, which sucks. We went and got something to eat, because who wants to be hangry? We missed OMD and Madness, who were both really good. I would have especially liked to see OMD, but I wanted a bathroom and some food even more. If it were a venue with seats, we could have gone, gotten our food, and come back. If it were a venue with just one band at a time, we would have been able to hear them better rather than the mixture that we did hear.

One benefit though was that the food trucks where we landed were close to one of the other stages, and we heard She Wants Revenge, which is a new to us band that were great.
Next we had to decide between Garbage and Devo. Ted wanted to see Devo, and we had seen Garbage a couple of years ago when they opened for Tears for Fears. Devo put on a great performance, and I really enjoyed the songs that I knew, but it was a bit of ‘That was very interesting music Marty’ for me. (From ‘Back to the Future’) The highlight was watching the teenagers in front of us dance with their mom and how they knew EVERY single word.

Next was a bit of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Cave had a lot of presence, and they put on a great show, but the only song I knew was Red Right Hand. I thought they were great, but not sure their music is my thing. Maybe I need to listen to more and find out. A lot of people were VERY into them though.

Now it was time for some upbeat fun, so we bailed on Nick and went to watch The Go-Go’s. It was great to see them, but they seemed muddled and the sound sucked and it was so shrill I had to plug my ears to hear them better. They were having some issues and seemed to be arguing a bit, which was too bad. Was I glad that I saw them? Sure, why not.
The last band was the headliner, New Order. I don’t have any pictures, we weren’t close, and at this point they are the only band playing, so instead of having the crowd divided, everyone is here. My feet hurt. My back hurt. When Ted whispered to me that he didn’t think he could do the entire hour set, let’s just stay for a few songs, I was quietly thrilled. I love New Order, we had a great time when we saw them in concert several many years ago, but this was not that day. So we left and I don’t regret it. As it was, we could hear several more songs as we made the long trek to our car.
What Worked

People Watching
I have never been a goth, but walking around I felt like, THESE ARE MY PEOPLE. I lived a few blocks from Haight Ashbury in San Francisco from ‘87 – ‘90, and there were always lots of goth folks hanging around. Also at school. Also downtown. Also on the bus. Also everywhere. It felt like youth to be in their presence.

There was so much black. So much mesh. Women in skirts so short that you could see the bottom of their butt cheeks. Lots of leather. Lots of face paint. The list of items you could bring included ‘black eyeliner’, which I thought was hilarious. No brown? Overall, IT WAS AWESOME.

I really liked being behind these young women at the Midge Ure performance, they were fun (and not too tall, which I appreciated, I spend a lot of time at concerts behind tall people).

The Food
There were a lot of options, and I chose to get my dinner from the Kogi food truck. I had the special, the Blackjack Quesadilla, which is described as: spicy pork, caramelized onions, cheddar and jack cheeses, and salsa verde. It was really delicious, a quesadilla with Korean flavors.
The Music (mostly)
If you have been reading and wish that you could have a glimpse of what we saw, Ted took some video and put together a highlight reel. The girls dancing to Whip It are near the end, at 9:22. I always think that live music is Ted’s thing (and it is). I always have to talk myself into going. But once I’m there, I always have a great time. Highlights for me were Midge Ure, ‘Til Tuesday, and Alison Moyet. Highlights for Ted were Devo, Midge Ure, Nick Cave, Alison Moyet, and Nation of Language.
The Weather
I know, it rained on us. Some of you might have resented this, but I absolutely did not. The previous Saturday it was 100 F, and a couple of years ago they had to evacuate due to lightning. A cool rainy day where I didn’t have to worry about sunburn? AWESOME, and so very goth.
What Didn’t Work
The Standing
We got there at about 1:30, and left at about 10:00. Between walking to and from our car, and back and forth across the course, my phone said we walked almost 11 miles on Saturday. Which is fine, but the standing still for hours on end watching a show is really hard on ones feet and back. I would have liked to stay and watch New Order, but we just couldn’t do it anymore.
The Lights and Noise
I know, that’s a ridiculous thing to say at a concert, but as the day became night, the noise seemed to get louder and more shrill, and the flashing lights and so on is just…a lot. It can feel overwhelming. And when you were too close to the middle of the venue (like when we were eating) you heard music from all 3 stages and sometimes the DJ/Dance area too. Unpleasant.
The Schedule
I didn’t like having to choose between bands when there was more than one I wanted to see.
Verdict
Am I glad we went? Abso-frikken-lutely, it was a lot of fun! Would I do it again? Ummm, MAYBE, depending on who is there. If I did, I would go in knowing that I was unlikely to stay until the end of the night. Overall, it was a great, great day.

20 Comments
AC
That looks fantastic for you but also a marathon of endurance.
J
That sums it up nicely!
Karen Meg
Wow, glad that you went, Julie! I’ve been following the Cruel World socials for the last couple of years and have been so envious as the bands in the lineup have been great. I would have loved to see Til Tuesday and the GoGos too and New Order and Devo- I would have been conflicted LOL; it seems like Alison Moyet was just as great there as she was here in TO a couple of weeks ago. Midge Ure played a small venue here last fall and he was amazing live – glad to see his resurgence on the concert circuit. I’m loving that all these amazing bands are touring again. We are seeing Simple Minds and OMD this summer and I can’t wait.
Too bad you had rain, when I visited my son in February I was surprised by how much rain they actually get in LA. But wow, that is real endurance, to be on your feet all day like that. Loving the pics – I had my own goth-ish vibe when in uni, for a bit. Dark eyeliner, midnight blu-ish hair, Docs etc.. those kids are wearing those looks well.
Chances are I will be in LA again at some point, seems I should try to schedule my visit accordingly :).
Thanks for the replay!
J
Karen, yes, you should plan to visit your son for next year’s festival! I am glad you saw this post, of all my blog friends, I feel like this one would speak to you the most, as you love concerts and we are the same age, and our musical tastes are so similar! <3
Margaret
Such an interesting adventure! All those bands, a few of which I’ve heard of. Whip it was my song; I enjoyed going to a local dive bar and putting it on the jukebox to rile up some of the other patrons who were more country western fans. 🙂 My bad. I think I would have made it a few hours and enjoyed the people watching. I’m not much for loud and crowded.
My older daughter makes a Korean taco that is out of this world.
J
LOL on Whip It on the juke box!
Margaret
I remember my late husband telling me that I was going to get him punched. (never happened)
J
HA! I’m glad it never happened, and that you enjoyed your Devo!
Birchie
This sounds like a blast! But also those downsides are real. People watching and a blackjack quesadilla tho…that’s my scene.
I’m amazed that all of these bands are still together after all these years.
J
Birchie, that quesadilla was legit.
Melissa
This looks like so much fun, but yes, standing all day gets harder. I think it’s been about 15 years since I’ve been to a festival like this, although luckily the bands we wanted to see didn’t clash for time. We did stay to the end because it was The Killers and they went off, but we also drank a lot so that probably made everything not quite so painful.
J
I’m thinking 15 years ago we would have stayed to the end for sure, but who knows. It was a lot of pain!
PocoBrat
I LOVE that photo of you and Ted… although your faces can’t be seen, it’s such a tender moment!
What a lovely, happy feeling to know life has been good <3
Whoa, the lineup! Young me would have lost my mind to see all these bands at one go. (Standing is tough for me too, so I understand what you're saying. I can walk miles, but standing around starts to hurt and feel uncomfortable.)
J
Yes, the STANDING. The walking was fine. We did sit on the grass at one point, wet or no wet, and that helped a bit, but it also meant we missed music we could have been enjoying, because we were far enough away.
nance
I’m so glad you went and had such a great time. I love the moment you had–overwhelming gratitude and love for your life, and appreciation of what you and Ted built together. Those realizations are golden, truly.
There’s no way I could have managed that festival. I talk to my younger sister all the time about going to concerts (she goes a lot), and we both agree that they are not the place for me. Even at an indoor venue with seats. In a perfect world, my idea of any concert is everyone sits down and listens to the performance they paid for. I don’t care if it’s the symphony or Bruce Springsteen or Kendrick Lamar. I want to be able to see and hear only the headliner, period, not thousands of people singing who have not put out a record.
Sigh. I’d like to say that this is because I am old, but I have always been this way.
J
I feel like that is my ideal concert too, though when my feet don’t hurt I enjoy dancing. Can we make it so everyone gets up when I want to and sits down when I want to?
San
Awww, what an incredible weekend, Julie. I used to go to festivals a lot as a teen/young adult and just looking at your pictures brought back so many memories to me (we camped way back when and it was so much fun!).
I love that you were able to see your favorite band after so many years and that it was such a nostalgic moment for you all <3 (so glad your friend snapped that photo of you and Ted!).
J
Thanks San! I think camping out would have been fun, too, with a big group of friends. Of course, my camping days are long behind me that this point.
Tobia | craftaliciousme
It looks like you had a lot of fun depsite being on your feet all day.
I personally am not a concert or festival girl and I probably would have only survived for an hour.
J
LOL, yeah, it can be a LOT. Pretty expensive for just an hour though, good thing you weren’t there.