Noah Kahan, The O2 Arena
Rain-soaked shoes sticking to the floor of the O2. The air smells like a blend of damp denim and overpriced […]
Noah Kahan, The O2 Arena Read Post »
Rain-soaked shoes sticking to the floor of the O2. The air smells like a blend of damp denim and overpriced […]
Noah Kahan, The O2 Arena Read Post »
Somewhere in the density of sweat and flashing strobes, Win Butler is a prophet, or a guy from Montreal, or
Arcade Fire, O2 Academy Brixton Read Post »
The Pyramid Stage rarely gets to hold this kind of intimacy in a headline slot. The field may not be
SZA, Glastonbury Festival 2024 Read Post »
She materializes in a chrome-glinting blur, a heat mirage in black leather, the bass thrumming so deep it seems to
Dua Lipa, Glastonbury Festival 2024 Read Post »
Keanu Reeves plays bass. There, we said it. Now forget it. Forget the actor, forget the mythology, forget the weight
Dogstar, O2 Forum Kentish Town Read Post »
Was it in the third or fourth song…? —maybe “BICHOTA,” maybe an earlier reggaetón assault disguised as an empowerment sermon—Karol
Karol G, The O2 Arena Read Post »
Three minutes in and Pink is already upside down, dangling like a punk-rock Cirque du Soleil anomaly, mic in one
Pink, Tottenham Hotspur Stadium Read Post »
Somewhere between waking and dreaming, she emerges. Not so much a presence as a flicker—a wavering silhouette framed by the
Ethel Cain, Roundhouse Read Post »
The BBC Big Weekend stage is Sabrina Carpenter’s for 30 minutes or so, but time collapses when a pop show
Sabrina Carpenter, BBC Big Weekend Read Post »
Go Dig My Grave seeps in like a fog at ground level, low and creeping. The air inside Hackney Empire,
Lankum, Hackney Empire Read Post »