Ezra returns to his spiritual home for Latitude festival's feelgood finale
Evening Standard|July 24, 2023
THE back of his double-denim jacket read Gold Rush Kid, but George Ezra ended his 18-month tour on the final night of Latitude as more of a Good Time Bloke returning to his spiritual home, four years after he last headlined Suffolk's cultivated weekend of music, comedy, debate and psychedelic sheep. 
Mark Beaumont
Ezra returns to his spiritual home for Latitude festival's feelgood finale

If Latitude had a face, it would be Marcus Brigstocke. A personality, Rachel Parris. A sound? Ezra's tropical soul pop.

Yet as Latitude has gently evolved the literary panels of old giving way to a podcast-apocalypse of Taskmaster alumni and the David Cameron set now wooed with a banquet tent - musically it has mastered blending the safe with the seditious. Headlining Friday over the synthetic alt-pop of Metronomy and Confidence Man, for instance, Pulp were a lesson in nefarious nostalgia, oozing from the melodically sublime (Disco 2000, Common People) to the seedily salacious (Pink Glove, This is Hardcore).

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