CHICAGO -- It can't be easy going up against festival head honcho Perry Farrell and Jane's Addiction just across the park, but The Killers managed to put on a raucous show to close out Lollapalooza's South Main Stage Sunday night with a bit of swag.
Kicking off the set with "Human," the Vegas four-piece immediately got the massive crowd jumping and for the first time all festival, the females outnumbered the men for a South Stage headliner ... and boy, did they scream and sing along! An early-set "Somebody Told Me" had the women going wild for that familiar feather jacket-clad singer Brandon Flowers, and he seemed to smile like he meant it all night long. During "Bones," Flowers played up the theatrics like a pitch-perfect "American Idol" performance.
"I know this is a Sunday Night," said Flowers, "but this is the Killers! Let's turn this into a dancefloor!" he encouraged the massive crowd while introducing "Joyride." The live horn blasts really added to the one-two punch of "Joyride" and "Bones" and helped keep the crowd moving.
Before "Mr. Brightside," Flowers told a story about how the riff was the first demo he ever got from guitarist Dave Keuning - and how far the Killers have come. Just five years ago they were playing the early-afternoon slot at the Coachella Festival in the California desert and now in 2009 they were rocking out a proper headlining slot at Lollapalooza, closing things out with "When We Were Young."
By Steven Roberts


By Steven Roberts
CHICAGO -- Los Angeles' The Airborne Toxic Event played to a small crowd of fans willing to rock and roll as the sweltering heat continued into a second day at Lollapalooza, but despite the misery index, Toxic's brand of bouncy emo-rock was very well-received by the head nodding crowd.
CHICAGO -- Now this is how you start the day properly! Continuing in the tradition of blue eyed English soul bands like the Style Council, UK dance machines Friendly Fires ripped open a blisteringly hot day three at Lollapalooza on Sunday with an ecstatic set of synth pop that got lunchtime feet moving immediately at the Budweiser north stage thanks to high-energy singer Ed Macfarlane. 

By Rich Sancho


CHICAGO -- This is one of the weirdest shows," said an atypically sedentary Randy Randall, one-half of Los Angeles rock duo No Age on Saturday afternoon at Lollapalooza. The normally physically active guitarist had his arm in a sling due to a dislocated shoulder sustained the previous evening at No Age's round-robin tour with Deerhunter and Dan Deacon -- he got hurt during an over-zealous dance-off against Deacon. Fortunately, Dean Spunt seemed to hit the drums twice as hard to compensate, driving fans into a frenzy during the band's daytime set.
By Steven Roberts and Rich Sancho
by Steven Roberts