Welcome to my blog. I document my adventures in travel, style, and food. Hope you have a nice stay!
The voguish folk-rockers turn up the noise and retain the intimacy despite a jumbo crowd.
Five years since their last album, the Cali duo return with a fresh outlook – though they could do with some fresher hooks too.
The prolific, inventive Philadelphia musician assumes various characters on his ninth LP, though in parts he's also invigorated with a new lyrical directness.
IDER talk millennial angst and the making of their “genreless” debut Emotional Education.
The Heavenly Recordings-signed quartet are making waves across the North Sea, linked by history with the legendary John Peel. Their infectious melodies will rattle around your skull for days.
Irish soul’s leading man, Maverick Sabre, is wide awake as he swaps bombastic soul bangers for experimental sounds on his mighty third album, When I Wake Up.
On their third record ‘Serfs Up!’ the rancid rockers finally realise their ambitions. Repulsion still reigns, but this time they have the tunes to pull you in.
The Nigerian-raised, UK-based artist's spoken-word polemics are bringing a modern, energy-filled twist to the Afrobeat sound.
Like the soundtrack to a lost episode of ‘Black Mirror’, the avant-garde musician’s first album in 37 years is a remarkably intelligent and engrossing record, one whose ebb and flow reflects her entire career.
Sneaks switches up her minimalist format for a motley of synthetic textures and syncopated beats that call on bigger hip-hop influences.
As she drops her third album, GREY Area, Little Simz explains how she tempers the uncertainties of mid-twenties adulthood with bold, honest songwriting.
“There is a new movement of people coming. It’s with creatives, it’s with artists, it’s with women. We are no longer silenced by the things we felt we had to be.”
A diverse collection of muscular songs that traverse nostalgia, depression, love and motherhood with new-found confidence.
A rewrite of gender representation at the top of the Reading and Leeds Festival bill is long overdue.
The guitarist launches his solo project, Keuning, and says that he hopes to work with The Killers again.