Jacob Kimmie's latest collection is bold, brave and relevant.
Sleigh Bells unleash a furious torrent of unidentifiable death metal during their NME Awards Show at Heaven.
Keira Knightley and Elisabeth Moss make a richly talented pairing; it's a shame the play's so poor
Two drum kits, a bonkers front woman and indecipherable lyrics. The Go! Team are back.
The banality of daily life in eight new works by South London painter/illustrator Lyndon Hayes.
That'll be bacon, sausage, eggs, tomato, white and black pudding, hash browns, minute steak, kidneys, baked beans, fried bread, liver, mushrooms and a pint of Murphy's stout.
Gang of Four take to Heaven to play their NME Awards show and play their first new material in sixteen years.
The obscure but much-admired electronica outfit launch their first album since 1996.
New Shoreditch exhibition for two influential urban artists.
Last night, the preview evening of the 23rd annual London Art Fair opened the doors of the Islington Business Design Centre to several hundred well-heeled art lovers who were able to enjoy a vast selection of modern and contemporary, mostly British art.
There is something particularly English - in fact, quintessentially London - about Saint Etienne. Performing what was, pretty much, a greatest hits packed set for their Christmas gig at the Kentish Town Forum on Saturday night, the band certainly looked and sounded like they were home.
"It's only rich folk can keep theirselves tae theirselves. Folk like us huv tae depend on their neighbours when they're needin help." Josie Rourke's new production of Men Should Weep takes Ena Lamont Stewart's Glasgow tenement-based play, and gives it the National Theatre treatment
Londonist
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