KIM GORDON’s second solo album is a bold departure from SONIC YOUTH
There’s no disputing that The Collective is a challenging listen, but while Kim Gordon's ex-husband dwells on the past, Gordon has her sights forwards.
There’s no disputing that The Collective is a challenging listen, but while Kim Gordon's ex-husband dwells on the past, Gordon has her sights forwards.
Richard Herring’s Leicester Square Theatre Podcast has been one of the most consistently engaging and illuminating shows around. The live Cardiff iteration is no different.
The resurgence of the Oi! scene continues and one of its most recent celebrated sons are on hand at The Globe in Cardiff to show us how it’s done.
Ahead of a UK tour that takes the regrouped shoegaze originators back to Wales for the first time in over 30 years, Buzz’s Teresa Delfino spoke with Slowdive’s Neil Halstead.
As they face increasing financial struggles and closures across the UK, we spotlight the urgent issues jeopardising grassroots music venues and the innovative solutions shaping their survival.
On William Doyle’s new album, Springs Eternal, the fount is not a source of spiritual sustenance but something in which to drown.
Idles’ fanbase is famously cultish – fortunately for the Bristolians, because fifth LP Tangk is likely to test that devotion to the limit.
Sarah Marsh’s A Sign Of Her Own provides a spotlight on the deaf community and the different methods of communication encouraged by the inventor Alexander Graham Bell.
Andrew McMillan's Pity follows three male generations of a family whose lives have been shaped by the mining industry’s demise.
Nige Tassell talks about his book Whatever Happened To The C86 Kids?, which tracks down musicians who created a vital underground scene nearly 40 years ago.