Don DeLillo: The Silence review - when the lights of technology go out

Pointedly prescient novella asks what happens to language in the aftermath of 'the event'

Don DeLillo’s latest novella, The Silence, has been marketed with an emphasis on its prescience, describing the shocked lacuna of time around a devastating event whose repercussions are yet to be truly felt. It is a compelling short read, but a little bit too pretentious to be read without a certain amount of cynicism (particularly when the characters reel off long, declamatory statements about cryptocurrency).

Album: Kylie - DISCO

★★★★ KYLIE - DISCO Much-needed escapism from Australia's finest export

Much-needed escapism from Australia's finest export

We’re eight months into a global pandemic, and Kylie Minogue is serenading us from her kitchen. “We’re a million miles apart in a thousand ways,” she sings, feather-light vocals floating over a driving disco beat. “Can we all be as one again?”

Sunnymead Court, Tristan Bates Theatre review - a lovely lockdown romance

★★★★ SUNNYMEAD COURT, TRISTAN BATES THEATRE A lovely lockdown romance

Socially distanced dramedy is short and sweet, with a knockout performance from Remmie Milner

The first words of Sunnymead Court, a new play at the Tristan Bates Theatre, are ominous. “We are transitioning from human experiences to digital experiences.” Oof. Thankfully, this isn’t another gloomy lockdown drama about the evils of Zoom quizzes – it’s the story of an unlikely romance between two women who live metres from each other, but have never spoken. 

theartsdesk in Hamburg: Ghost Light - a ballet in the time of corona

★★★★ THEARTSDESK IN HAMBURG: GHOST LIST A ballet in the time of corona

How the city is showing the world a way through the live-performance impasse

So the Royal Ballet is to make a live comeback, for one night only, on 9 October. Fielding the entire company of 100 dancers, suitably distanced, the enterprise is being hailed as a triumph of logistics. And so it is. But the fact remains that the vast majority of its audience will be watching on a computer screen at home. And the gala programme will be pulled from the company’s back catalogue, health precautions having apparently ruled out the possibility of making anything new since March.

theartsdesk on Vinyl 59: Johnny Cash, Bananagun, Fleetwood Mac, Romare, PJ Harvey, Kamaal Williams and more

THEARTSDESK ON VINYL 59: Johnny Cash, Bananagun, Fleetwood Mac, Romare, PJ Harvey, Kamaal Williams and more

The high summer's premium cross-section of record reviews

The usual summer vinyl release slump doesn’t seem to apply this year. During the COVID-19 crisis, the demand for vinyl has risen rather than fallen and theartsdesk on Vinyl reflects that again this month with another monster round-up of reviews, covering everything from extreme metal to country’n’western to contemporary jazz.

VINYL OF THE MONTH

New Music Unlocked 5: Biffy Clyro, Rave the Vote, Little Simz and AJ Tracey

NEW MUSIC UNLOCKED 5 Biffy Clyro, Rave the Vote, Little Simz and AJ Tracey

What to look out for online during the week ahead in music

Although Metallica are screening a freshly recorded concert across America’s drive-in cinemas at the end of the month, we’re no nearer to actual gigs anywhere, especially the UK. Hold tight. We’ll get there. In the meantime, here are three events worth taking a look at.

AIM Music Awards

Ali Smith: Summer review - a hopeful present, beautifully described

★★★★ ALI SMITH: SUMMER 'Seasonal Quartet' ends in a world turned upside down

Smith's Seasonal Quartet concludes in a world turned upside down

It is no surprise, given her Cambridge Intellectual literary style, that Ali Smith’s Summer is multi-layered, referential, and filled with cameos from giants in the fields of art and science. It is arguably the best of the four novels in her Seasonal Quartet, pulling through the threads from the previous three, without opting for easy conclusions or tying all the ends together neatly. Summer is also not as challenging as some of her texts can be, which (admittedly) is a bit of a relief.

New Music Unlocked 3: Dermot Kennedy, Lollapalooza and Cambridge Folk

NEW MUSIC UNLOCKED  Dermot Kennedy, Lollapalooza and Cambridge Folk

Save Our Venues and other tasty musical happenings this week

We are no nearer live music returning and, as venues across the country face financial collapse, it’s clear that even when we reach some sort of "new normal", far from all will be left standing. This is clearly a disaster for British music. #SaveOurVenues offers an opportunity to help over 500 UK venues stay alive: details here. In the meantime, as ever, there's still plenty happening online.

Songs for a New World, The Other Palace Digital review - chimes with our extraordinary 'moment'

★★★★ SONGS FOR A NEW WORLD, THE OTHER PALACE DIGITAL Abstract musical offers resonant tales of the unexpected

Jason Robert Brown's abstract musical offers resonant tales of the unexpected

We’ve already had The Last Five Years in lockdown; now, we get a digital production of American composer Jason Robert Brown’s earliest work. A series of wistful pop/jazz numbers loosely linked thematically, rather than narratively, this 1995 abstract musical features various characters responding to a moment that upends their lives.