Pick-up Full of Pink Carnations review | The Vaccines are back - in forlorn form
"It’s hard to escape the nagging sense that The Vaccines’ febrile, firecracker indie is either showing its age."
"It’s hard to escape the nagging sense that The Vaccines’ febrile, firecracker indie is either showing its age."
Underground sensation Lynks announces debut album 'Abomination', featuring the catchy new single 'CPR', set to release on April 12th.
Florence Rose on Goldfrapp, borrowing from Ingmar Bergman, and the primordial urge in all women to run into forests unclothed.
Singaporean cyber-shoegazer Yeule plugs London’s digital Outernet district into a dystopian psychodrama.
The event in Brockwell Park is gearing up for a headline performance from the eclectic King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Special guests include Nas and Ezra Collective.
As hip-hop celebrates half a century, Normski's photographs offer a time capsule of its indelible impact on the UK's cultural tapestry.
The V&A East Museum has announced its maiden exhibition, The Music Is Black: A British Story, aiming to spotlight the influence of Black British music on both UK and global culture.
★★★★☆ After a 12-year hiatus, The Streets have returned with a welcome blend of old and new. The Darker the Shadow the Brighter the Light is comfortingly familiar and yet betrays subtle strands of maturity.
Griff has announced details of her first UK headline gig of 2023, and it's happening next month. Get the details below...
HAIM hit O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire for an exclusive performance of Days Are Gone, and it's going to be huge.
It's not just rain, okay? It's British rain. Jessica Furseth explores why the Apple weather app is rubbish at predicting the nuances of the UK's unpredictable weather pattern.
Harry Styles racked up a massive $6million for charity last month during his 'Love On Tour' tour, performing for five million people.
Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has encouraged the UK and Greece to "come to an accommodation" to share the Elgin (Parthenon) Marbles.
Gordon Brown has encouraged “every politician” to watch Steve McQueen’s film Grenfell, recently exhibited at the Serpentine, on the six year anniversary of the Grenfell Tower fire.
The final portrait by Gustav Klimt, Dame mit Fächer (Lady with Fan), is expected to sell for £65m at a London auction later this month.
★★★★☆ This summer the Serpentine is hosting Tomás Saraceno’s largest exhibition in the UK to date. But don’t expect a typical exhibition – Saraceno has injected a number of interventions into the format to shake things up.
whynow have joined forces with Verbal Diorama to launch the inaugural Independent Podcast Awards, with entries now open ahead of a ceremony in London later this year.
★★★★☆
In rural Wyoming, 1963, two sheepherders spark a passionate 20-year love affair – here’s our review of Brokeback Mountain at the @sohoplace theatre.
Is it nostalgia? Or a desire to suffer? Because it’s definitely not the taste. A Scandinavian weighs in on the quirky yellow powder that is Lemsip.
London's Hunterian Museum will reopen on 16 May after an extensive five-year renovation costing roughly £100 million, according to The Art Newspaper.
420 celebrations in Hyde Park make for a rather depressing sight and smell, but the event inadvertently highlights how obsolete Britain’s marijuana laws are.
When Father Jack (Ardal O’Hanlon) returns after a long absence, times start a changin’ in The National Theatre’s revival of Dancing at Lughnasa.
Robert Boulton's debut play examines cancel culture through a live-feed and a handgun.
★★★★☆
The Courtauld welcomes Peter Doig’s first show since moving back to London from Trinidad after 20 years away, with 12 paintings and a selection of etchings.
It’s a rainy Thursday morning at the start of what looks to be a particularly British (read: terrible) April, so of course the Elizabeth Line, now just over ten months old, smells of wet dog.
Bieke Depoorter, Samuel Fosso, Arthur Jafa and Frida Orupabo have been revealed as the four international artists shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize 2023.
Here’s some of the best gigs in London this month, featuring Kelela, Big Thief, Daniel Caesar, Billy Nomates and more.
April - the best month to check out meteor showers, astrology fans - is finally here, banishing the winter chills. So why not celebrate the equitability of indoor and outdoor temperatures with a trip to the hottest places in London: the interiors of West End theatres? Plenty of runs are coming to an end this month, so for your last chance to see The Unfriend, Medea or The Way Old Friends Do, check out the details below:
From video game festivals to espresso martinis, there's something for everyone in our pick of the best events in London this April.