Glaswegian post-electro band Errors formed in 2004 and quickly made a name for themselves on the local scene before attracting the attention of local heroes Mogwai, who signed them to their Rock Action label.
Blending spiky new-wave guitars with deep bass sounds and not afraid of a pop hook or catchy melody, they sound like a super cosmic version of Cocteau Twins.
They're an indecisive bunch, These New Puritans. They seem to pick all sorts of ideas out of the worlds of indie, electronica, dance and rock and manage to mush it altogether into something simultaneously...
Saints are more often associated with traditional sacred art than with contemporary work, but Michael Landy, current Rootstein Hopkins Associate Artist in residence at the National Gallery, has been inspired...
According to Ambassadors Theatre Group, "The West End just got hotter! "Um.. Yeah it has! These terribly well groomed people are coming together to perform a collection of songs "from the West End, Broadway ...
For lovers of a classic
farce, Harold Pinter's The Hothouse (1958) is the pinnacle of
thought-provoking comedy. But that's for people who love farce and in
Jamie Lloyd's production at Trafalgar ...
Daniel Radcliffle plays Cripple Billy in Martin McDonaugh's The Cripple of Inishmaan. Desperate to get off his tiny, gossip-starved Island, Billy is determined to get a part in Robert Flaherty's film 'Man...
Multi Olivier Award-winner Zoë Wanamaker returns to the West End for a play about a marriage falling apart in very dramatic fashion. Passion Play by Peter Nichols is a dark comedy that sees James and...
Bringing together pieces from Pennsylvanian artist George Catlins five visits to the western states back in the 1830s, the lost world of the Native American tribes is laid bare in this revealing exhibition...
Alan Ayckbourn's first major West End hit, Relatively Speaking is the usual combination of misunderstanding, farce, plotting and familial upper class incompetence. Intent on gaining her parents permission ...
For a long time, Marianne Jean-Baptiste has been the ONLY reason to watch Without A Trace. That's not true, Anthony LaPaglia is kinda fit in a troubled professor sort of way. Anyhoo, let's not do her ...
Keep Your Timber Limber (Works on Paper) explores how artists since the 1940s to the present day have used drawing to address ideas critical and current to their time, ranging from the politics of gender...