… and Amy punched in on time

Jay-Z, the first hip-hop artist to headline the festival, pulled it off while Winehouse seemed determined to prove she can lose the plot

Review: The Chemical Brothers

5.5 out of 10: Sunday, 10.40pm, Other. The fact that Rowlands and Simmons are obscured from view, combined with the bizarre but oddly captivating graphics, seems to destroy all human element in the show, which is actually something the pair were very good a providing back in the day.

Review: The Who

7 out of 10: Sunday, 10.05pm, Pyramid stage. On the day Gordon Brown has become leader of the Labour party, Won't Get Fooled Again has a resonance beyond its crashing power chords.

Review: Kaiser Chiefs

9 out of 10: Sunday, 8:00pm, Pyramid stage. The Kaisers played all the hits from opener Every Day I Love You Less and Less to closer Oh My God.

Review: Vitalic

7 out of 10: Sunday, 7pm, Dance East. Pascal Arbez's impeccable timing makes the efforts of Simian Mobile Disco on this very stage yesterday look just amateur.

Review: Mark Ronson

9 out of 10: Sunday, 6.55pm, John Peel. Both Lily Allen and Amy Winehouse are no-shows, but the set is, as Ronson puts it, "awesome".

Review: Shirley Bassey

9 out of 10: 5.20, Sunday, Pyramid Stage. 'Arctic Monkeys - that's how it's done,' announced Dame Shirley at the end of Diamonds Are Forever.

Review: Cold War Kids

7 out of 10. Other stage, 2.40pm, Sunday. A really tight set that rolls around at a steady, heady pace without ever quite breaking into anthem territory.

Review: Cherry Ghost

Singer Simon Aldred's rough, sexy voice chills the bones and warms the soul. Looking like Daniel Craig's naughty younger brother doesn't do any harm either.

Review: Piney Gir

8 out of 10. Saturday, 2.40pm. The sun came out for forty minutes of skirt-swinging fun. Well, metaphorically, at least.