Album: Kaidi Taitham - The Only Way

Rich dancefloor jazz fusions from enduring Brit mega talent

The broken beat movement, centred on West London around the turn of the millennium, wasn’t super press friendly. Its complex rhythms were eclipsed in the populism stakes by its close cousin UK garage, and serious commentators didn’t really know what to do with a broadly working class, multicultural scene that was aspirational and privileged virtuosic production and musicianship. Indeed there was a distinct inverted snobbery in the refusal refusal to treat it with the respect afforded other electronic music which fit into a scholarly vs “street” dichotomy.

Akedah, Hampstead Theatre review - long-separated sisters reunite to battle over their past

★★ AKEDAH, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE Long-separated sisters reunite to battle over their past

Michael John O'Neill's debut stirs up questions but not emotions

Michael John O’Neill’s first full-length play, premiering at the Hampstead's studio space downstairs, is a puzzler. There’s the title, to start with, a Hebrew word that means “binding” and is a reference to the story of Abraham preparing his son Isaac, at God’s command, to be sacrificed.

Album: Two Door Cinema Club - Keep On Smiling

★★★ TWO DOOR CINEMA CLUB - KEEP ON SMILING An uneven return, but a passing grade for the electronic-infused indie trio

An uneven return, but a passing grade for the electronic-infused indie trio

Three and a half years on from 2019’s False Alarm, Keep On Smiling comes album number five from Northern Ireland trio, Two Door Cinema Club. Known for having more bounce to the ounce than your average band, their brand of guitar-flecked electro pop has won hearts, minds and sales in roughly equal measure.

Prom 31, Alder, Ulster Orchestra, Rustioni review - a summer night's dream

★★★★★ PROM 31, ALDER, ULSTER ORCHESTRA, RUSTIONI A summer night's dream

Romantic favourites served with flair and care

The Ulster Orchestra’s Prom finished early to accommodate a late-night concert by the esteemed Tredegar Band – but by then, we’d already enjoyed one spectacular brass showcase. Under its justly-praised chief conductor Daniele Rustioni (formerly assistant to Antonio Pappano at Covent Garden), the Belfast-based outfit crackled and glowed in every department but especially at the back, where a robust, assured and often lyrical brass team delighted a virtually full house.

Album: Van Morrison - What's It Gonna Take?

Pernicious lockdown conspiracies, leavened by depressed confessions

The mystifying chasm between Van Morrison’s personality and music became total with last year’s Latest Record Project Volume 1, as masterfully sung, textbook R&B rolled under biliously paranoid words.

Belfast review - coming of age amid the terror of the Troubles

BAFTAS 2022 Kenneth Branagh's Belfast wins Outstanding British Film

Kenneth Branagh's emotional journey back to his childhood roots

For all his achievements as actor and director, Kenneth Branagh isn’t immediately thought of as a screenwriter, despite his multiple Shakespeare adaptations. That may all change with Belfast, because Branagh’s deeply personal account (he’s both writer and director) of a Northern Irish childhood in the early days of the Troubles has a little touch of magic about it.

The 4th Country, Park Theatre review – sympathetic and intriguing

★★★ THE 4TH COUNTRY, PARK THEATRE Sympathetic and intriguing

Northern Ireland’s contemporary problems get the meta treatment

History is a prison. Often, you can’t escape. It imprints its mark on people, environments and language. And nowhere is this more true that in Northern Ireland, where the history of conflict between the Republican Catholic community and the Loyalist Protestant community is both centuries old, and still raw from the legacy of The Troubles.

First Person: composer Conor Mitchell on challenging religious orthodoxy from a queer perspective in MASS

FIRST PERSON Conor Mitchell on challenging religious orthodoxy from a queer perspective in MASS

Finding the authentic gay 'me' in a new work premiered with the Ulster Orchestra tonight

A mass, in its simplest form, is the order of prayers that are said in a religious service. It is standardised and has been for centuries, in order to create a theatrical journey that takes us through a service. Composers have always been drawn to the mass as a structure because it has an inherent drama. It draws on themes of rebirth, change, redemption.