As some of music’s biggest names lash out at the Spotify platform, former Faithless guitarist Dave Randall asks what setup would support new artists
A friend of mine used to have a theory about men and pubs. She’d noticed that as soon as they were settled in one they had an urge to move on to another.
Architect and Labour Lord Richard Rogers has a retrospective of his work at the Royal Academy this summer.
This is a story of people fishing from little boats off the north coast of Iceland, early in the 20th century when peasants were becoming workers.
As part of the BBC’s annual Proms season to bring classical music to a wider audience, BBC Four is showing three concerts a week throughout the summer months.
Despite a contrived setup, BBC’s We All Pay Your Benefits showed ‘taxpayers’ how hard life on benefits can be, says bedroom tax activist Honor Donnelly
On a council estate wall metres from east London’s Silicon Roundabout, the big eyes of a vivid tiger peek out from behind a fig tree.
This summer, Tate Britain presents a major exhibition of landscapes by the much loved painter LS Lowry—and we have a pair of tickets to give away.
George Monbiot’s new book Feral puts forward a radically unconventional philosophy of nature conservation—“rewilding”, writes John Sinha
The dance duo’s 12th studio album is a refreshing return to the upbeat tone of earlier records.
The Mexican Revolution in 1910 sparked an explosion of artistic creativity, writes Alex Smith
Fighting Fit tells an engaging tale of the lives socialists lead as they're busy making history, says Saoirse Mcdermott-Cox