Question and answer interviews

Robert Glasper: 'When hip hop took over the world'

ROBERT GLASPER: 'WHEN HIP HOP TOOK OVER THE WORLD' Genre-straddling pianist on his covers project, and how the hip hop home studio denudes music

Genre-straddling pianist on his covers project, and how the hip hop home studio denudes music

Pianist and producer Robert Glasper is one of the most versatile and innovative musicians on the scene, working within jazz, R&B, hip hop and related genres. He has won two Grammys, one each for his two Black Radio albums, 2012 and 2015, recorded with his electronic band The Robert Glasper Experiment. He also has an acoustic trio, working more specifically in the jazz tradition.

We Made It: Hauser & Wirth Somerset

Gallery director Alice Workman on housing contemporary art in the threshing barn

Zurich, London, New York…Somerset. It may seem unlikely, but an 18th-century farm in the West Country is the new place to be for contemporary art aficionados. Last year, renovations were completed on the 10 buildings of Durslade Farm, left to fall into disrepair over decades. Now, the world-class arts centre boasts five gallery spaces, the Roth Bar & Grill – where locally sourced produce meets bold, eclectic installations – shop, guest house, library and learning room, backed by Piet Oudolf’s sumptuous 1.5-acre perennial meadow.

10 Questions for Musician Kevin Martin (AKA The Bug)

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN KEVIN MARTIN (AKA THE BUG) The electronica titan talks collaboration, fatherhood and the Supersonic Festival

The electronica titan talks collaboration, fatherhood and the Supersonic Festival

Kevin Martin is a musician, record producer and journalist. He is best know for recording and performing as The Bug, however, has been and continues to be involved in a variety of other musical projects including: GOD, Techno Animal, Ice, Curse of the Golden Vampire and King Midas Sound. During 2014, The Bug released both the Angels and Devils album and a collaboration with Dylan Carlson of American drone-metalists Earth, titled The Bug vs Earth – which sees its live debut at the Supersonic Festival in Birmingham on Saturday 13 June.

We Made It: Jonathan Thomas, Maker

WE MADE IT: JONATHAN THOMAS, MAKER The designer maker on the future of furniture and working with Thomas Heatherwick

The designer maker on the future of furniture and working with Thomas Heatherwick

Jonathan Thomas helped set up Thomas Heatherwick Studios, having met the man behind the Olympic Cauldron, new double-decker bus and potentially the controversial new Garden Bridge at university. Along the way, Thomas left to form Make Ltd and now Maker. He mixes modern materials and techniques with traditional craftsmanship to create bespoke and handmade furniture and installations.

SIMON MUNK: What attracted you to making things with your hands?

10 Questions for Musician Pokey LaFarge

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN POKEY LAFARGE American roots music's freshest face talks dancing, touring and 'dreamlike melancholia'

American roots music's freshest face talks dancing, touring and 'dreamlike melancholia'

Pokey LaFarge (b. 1983) is a singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and American history enthusiast. Based in St Louis, Missouri, but frequently on the road, he self-released his first album Marmalade in 2006, a well-received foray into American roots music, and consolidated his reputation playing mandolin for rowdy folk-revivalists the Hackensaw Boys.

10 Questions for Actress Pippa Bennett-Warner

10 QUESTIONS FOR ACTRESS PIPPA BENNETT-WARNER The rising star talks comedy, corsets and colour-blind casting

The rising star talks comedy, corsets and colour-blind casting

At just 26, Pippa Bennett-Warner has already achieved many actors’ goals, from treading the boards at the National and having a part written specially for her to sharing scenes with luminaries like Derek Jacobi and Eddie Redmayne. She debuted aged 11 as one of the young Nalas in The Lion King, but since graduating from RADA, she has focussed on “straight acting”.

theartsdesk Q&A: Musician Thea Gilmore

THEARTSDESK Q&A: MUSICIAN THEA GILMORE On looking forwards, not back; and why 'female singer/songwriter' is not a genre

On looking forwards, not back; and why 'female singer/songwriter' is not a genre

It takes a particular combination of talent, guts, perseverance and sheer bloody-mindedness for an artist to take the creative decisions that Thea Gilmore has across her approaching 20-year career and get away with it – thankfully, all qualities that the Oxford-born songwriter has in spades.

theartsdesk Q&A: Pianist Yevgeny Sudbin

Q&A: YEVGENY SUDBIN Phenomenal Russian pianist talks about thinking orchestrally, inspirations, partnerships and Scriabin

Phenomenal Russian talks about thinking orchestrally, inspirations, partnerships and Scriabin

Whatever the recording industry may try to tell you, there is rarely any such thing as a single “best” among today’s pianists. We’ve had Benjamin Grosvenor and Leif Ove Andsnes, excellent artists both, touted as a cut above the rest. But hearing pianists in all corners of the world, you realize how much phenomenal and ungradable talent there is out there.

theartsdesk Q&A: Spooks, the movie

Q&A: SPOOKS, THE MOVIE How the popular MI5 drama finally made it to the big screen

How the popular MI5 drama finally made it to the big screen

During its 10-season run on BBC One between May 2002 and October 2011, Spooks built a lasting reputation as a superior espionage thriller, charting the battle of a squad of MI5 agents to protect the realm against its fiendish and unscrupulous adversaries. Despite the inevitable plot-holes and sometimes incredible storylines, Spooks managed to keep itself anchored in the bleak realities of intelligence work, where it was wise to trust nobody and if you were paranoid, that's because the bad guys really were out to get you.

theartsdesk Q&A: Musician Peter Perrett

THEARTSDESK Q&A: MUSICIAN PETER PERRETT The Only Ones' elusive frontman tells all – a tale of love, sex, drugs and extraordinary music

The Only Ones' elusive frontman tells all – a tale of love, sex, drugs and extraordinary music

Peter Perrett (b. 1952) is best known as the singer and songwriter of The Only Ones, a group who originally flared to brilliant life between 1976 and 1981. Born to an English policeman-turned-builder and a mother whose immediate heritage lay amid the tragedy of Austria’s 20th-century Jewry, Perrett grew up in London. Already precociously bohemian, at 16 he ran away with his girlfriend, Xenoulla “Zena” Kakoulli. She would prove to be his lifelong soulmate and partner.