A feast of colour & joy: JOSEPH AND THE AMAZING TECHNICOLOUR DREAMCOAT
In Cardiff for just one week, Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat is a veritable feast of colour and movement – joyous, uplifting and fun.
In Cardiff for just one week, Joseph And The Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat is a veritable feast of colour and movement – joyous, uplifting and fun.
Swedish multi-award-winning metal gods Sabaton’s 10th album picks up where its predecessor The Great War ended and delivers further World War I history in a palatable way.
An Hour Before It’s Dark, the 20th studio album from Marillion, has profound and witty lyrics, great musicianship and a flow of undulating instrumentals.
Lipstick on Your Collar delivers an enthusiastically performed trip back to the 50s and 60s at Newport's Riverfront - but is dampened by a little less enthused audience.
J.P Bimeni - the Burundian singer who found refuge in Wales - takes his six-piece band the Blackbelts back to his roots on second album, Give Me Hope.
Bastille give us a glimpse into the future on their fourth album, Give Me The Future - and it's a bright one.
Palace's third album, Shoals, promises "chaotic" and "dangerous depths," but the laidback music on offer doesn't quite make good on this.
It’s easy to be sceptical when a Hollywood superstar turns to music, and though Kiefer Sutherland can really sing, new album Bloor Street has little edge to it.
Cultvr Lab's IMMERSDIFF programme of 3D cinema in Cardiff was not something Lynda Nash expected to be so awe-inspiring or profound.
On Can's Live In Brighton 1975 – the second in an apparently ongoing album series – the flavour is somewhat muddied.