Welsh 00s emo kings THE BLACKOUT take a victory lap live in Cardiff
It’s not clear whether this is a full return for The Blackout or just a victory lap; either way, the world feels just a little bit better with them back in it.
It’s not clear whether this is a full return for The Blackout or just a victory lap; either way, the world feels just a little bit better with them back in it.
An insightful read, In The Long Run explores the place of futurological thinking in various political events and ideologies throughout history.
Murder In The Dark is a unique, mind-bending thriller that will keep you in terrified suspense till the final scene.
The Fetishist is a dark novel, at its core dealing with the fetishisation of Asian women by white men, but also hugely readable.
From classical piano maestros to bedroom synth-prodders, hard techno to trap beats, here's the best in Welsh music you may have missed this February.
Now nine years into his musical career, R'n'B start Jason Derulo's explores hits and fresh tracks for Nu King, a 27-track opus.
The conventions of post-apocalyptic fiction are dispensed with in The Book Of All Loves, a fascinating hybrid novel written by the great Agustín Fernández Mallo.
For all its privacy and vulnerability, The Glorification Of Sadness from Paloma Faith makes a universally relatable album.
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.
Enter Shikari, a band that cannot be slotted into any particular genre, return to Cardiff for their A Kiss For The Whole World tour.
Feral Monster, a musical that breathlessly tackles everything from classism to addiction to neurodivergence to the postmodern nuances of queer identity, is a roaring success for NTW.
With all the love, happiness, and elation shown in the room tonight in Cardiff, it's perfect a reminder of just how bloody good Bombay Bicycle Club are.
With Dream Wife in town for a sold-out show, following the release of their third album Social Lubrication last year, tonight’s the night for bad bitches in Clwb Ifor Bach.
On William Doyle’s new album, Springs Eternal, the fount is not a source of spiritual sustenance but something in which to drown.
What Doesn’t Kill Us reflects on the revolutionary feminist movements around Leeds in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Georgian rocksters Blackberry Smoke’s eighth album Be Right Here keeps them true to form with 10 tracks of polished Southern rock.
Fiona Stafford explores the length and breadth of the British Isles with the forensic eye of a scientist and the questioning soul of a poet in her book, Time And Tide.
With What Now, Brittany Howard ups the stakes with an album that fuses a smorgasbord of style and emotion that works magnificently as a whole.
Subverting expectations at every turn, This Disaster Loves You is a poignant exploration of lost love and a rousing rally cry against the ennui of middle age.
Sixty-five years after her death, Paul Alexander’s Bitter Crop should help to set the record straight on Billie Holiday's final year.
Legendary prog rock guitarist Steve Hackett returns with The Circus And The Nightwhale, his 30th solo - and rite-of-passage concept - album.
For Valentine’s Day week, Techniquest’s adults-only events get a special V-Day edition, ‘Love On The Brain’, giving date night an edutainment twist.
Idles’ fanbase is famously cultish – fortunately for the Bristolians, because fifth LP Tangk is likely to test that devotion to the limit.
Sam Adams’ novel Jac on the experiences of boyhood in a wartime coal mining village captures the distinct spirit of the south Wales Valleys.