Music

Django Django are starting a new chapter
Culture

Django Django are starting a new chapter

Lessons Learned — Founding band members Dave Maclean and Vinny Neff discuss the making of their latest album, Glowing in the Dark, and how the small mistakes that happen along the way often make for the best tracks.

Written by: Rhys Thomas

How the lost music of aunt Mirry was brought back to life
Culture

How the lost music of aunt Mirry was brought back to life

Unheard world — We speak to musicians and brother-in-laws Tom Fraser and The Verve’s Simon Tong about reviving a late relative’s legacy after stumbling on her music by chance.

Written by: Jeremy Allen

LD, godfather of drill, speaks out from behind bars
Culture

LD, godfather of drill, speaks out from behind bars

‘I‘m free to fly‘ — To mark the release of his new LP, the frontman of south London group 67 calls from prison to discuss his fraught past, dismantling the Tories and embracing the multitude of ways drill has evolved.

Written by: Dhruva Balram

Julien Baker is embracing a slower pace
Music

Julien Baker is embracing a slower pace

Lessons Learned — The 25-year-old artist has followed up a period of prolonged introspection with her most expansive work yet – a collection of songs that accept the messiness of modern life in all of its various facets.

Written by: Niall Flynn

Steelpan pioneer Fimber Bravo is a musical revolutionary
Music

Steelpan pioneer Fimber Bravo is a musical revolutionary

Still fighting — The Trinidadian artist, who has been living in Britain since the ’70s, has long used his instrument as a tool to fight oppression. His new album is the latest instalment in a life defined by resistance.

Written by: Jeremy Allen

South Africa’s jazz upstarts are imagining a new nation
Music

South Africa’s jazz upstarts are imagining a new nation

Moving pictures — A new release from some of the country’s most exciting musicians challenges the notion that the fight for freedom is a battle of the past.

Written by: Hugh Morris

The Mitchell Brothers, British rap’s forgotten duo
Culture

The Mitchell Brothers, British rap’s forgotten duo

Geezers with skills — In the early noughties, Owura “Tony” Nyanin and Kofi “Teddy” Hanson were signed to Mike Skinner’s label and two of the UK’s most influential MCs – then they disappeared. Now reunited over a decade later, the pair say the world wasn’t ready for them.

Written by: Sam Davies

Stewart Lee on the post-punk band that shaped his career
Culture

Stewart Lee on the post-punk band that shaped his career

King Rocker — The comedian discusses his new documentary about the relatively forgotten band, The Nightingales, and its renegade frontman, Robert Lloyd, which raises timely question around ideas of artistic success.

Written by: Fergal Kinney

Black Country, New Road make music for a warped world
Music

Black Country, New Road make music for a warped world

New sounds — BC,NR aren’t just anxious young people making music for other anxious young people: they’re a raw reflection of the society that surrounds them. Here, they explain why it’s important to find laughter in the darkness.

Written by: Charlie McQuaid

Why we started a club night for our teacher, Mark Fisher
Culture

Why we started a club night for our teacher, Mark Fisher

For k-punk — Ahead of an event hosted at the ICA in his memory, three of the late Mark Fisher's students remember their lecturer and describe the ways they have endeavoured to keep his fierce spirit and energy of his music writing alive.

Written by: Natasha Eves, Archie Smith and Kitty McKay

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