The Great Escape Festival 2025, Brighton review - a feast of music from across the world

★★★★ THE GREAT ESCAPE FESTIVAL 2025, BRIGHTON A feast of music from across the world

Hitting Saturday shows by deBasement, Dog Race, Chloe Leigh, Oh Dirty Fingers & more

Photographer Finetime and I have our first pints outside Dalton’s, a bar on Brighton seafront, at almost exactly midday. They are Beavertown Neck Oil IPA at 4.3%. The sun is out, glinting off the sea. Feels like the calm before the storm.

The Great Escape Festival 2025, Brighton review - a dip into Thursday

★★★★ THE GREAT ESCAPE FESTIVAL 2025, BRIGHTON A dip into Thursday

Running the gamut from Japanese hip-house to Welsh LGBT stadium pop

As every social space in Brighton once again transforms into a mire of self-important music biz sorts loudly bellowing about “waterfalling on Spotify”, it’s also a great time for those who relish gigs by new talent from all over the world. For three days (four, if you count warm-up Wednesday), every nook and cranny has half-hour showcases running from lunchtime until close. And on top of that are the freebie Alternative Escape fringe events.

Tallinn Music Week 2025 review - Estonia’s capital accommodates all flavours of music

TALLINN MUSIC WEEK 2025 Estonia’s capital accommodates all flavours of music

The festival where everything appears on an equal footing

Langenu are a black metal band. On stage at Estonia’s Tallinn Music Week, they are fearsome. Blood-vessel-burstingly intense. Tempering their force with twists into progressive, psychedelic-adjacent territory, they are a band any rock fan would dig.

Fat Dog, Chalk, Brighton review - a frenetic techno-rock juggernaut

★★★ FAT DOG, CHALK, BRIGHTON A frenetic techno-rock juggernaut

The rising London outfit deliver a sweaty Cossack-rave hoedown

Ro first saw Fat Dog, before anyone had heard of them, at the Windmill in Brixton in front of a crowd of about 25 people. Their manic energy blew her head off. Vanessa and Al K first caught Fat Dog at the Rockaway Beach Weekender in Bognor Regis Butlins in January ’24. The tightly choreographed, manic show was the best thing all weekend.

Northern Winter Beat 2025, Aalborg review - The Courettes, Dungen and Lubomyr Melnyk confront ideas of how to play

NORTHERN WINTER BEAT 2025, AALBORG Danish city hosts the festival imbued with a cool which doesn’t need expressing

Danish city hosts the festival imbued with a cool which doesn’t need expressing

The exhortations don’t seem necessary as the audience is already letting off the steam which has built up in anticipation of a full-bore show. Nonetheless, The Courettes’ Flávia Couri knows higher levels of excitement are there to be tapped, that it’s possible to get the crowd to liberate themselves from any restraint they may have left. Limits are there to be pushed.

theartsdesk at Wexford Festival Opera - let's make three operas

WEXFORD FESTIVAL OPERA Donizetti triumphs, with help from Bernstein, Rossini and two stars

Donizetti triumphs, with help from Bernstein, Rossini, two stars and director Orpha Phelan

Name three operas framing dramas within, and you’d probably come up with Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci, Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos and Prokofiev’s The Love for Three Oranges. You might be harder pressed to come up with three more, but Wexford Festival Opera has done just that, theming this year’s triptych of rarities in the shape of never less than interesting, if often dramatically flawed, comedies by Donizetti, Mascagni and Stanford as “Theatre Within Theatre”.

Supersonic Festival 2024, Birmingham review - another fine musical celebration far away from the mainstream

Birmingham again welcomes the weird and the wonderful to town

I’ve been a regular attender of the Supersonic Festival for about 15 years and much has changed in that time. When I first rocked up to see Swans, Stinky Wizzleteat, PCM and other sonic treats, the event was a bit of a white boys’ club, both in terms of the artists and the audience, despite being put together and curated by a couple of women.

Reading Festival 2024, Day Two review - Fontaines DC, Raye and Lana del Rey

★ READING FESTIVAL 2024, DAY TWO Fontaines DC, Raye and Lana del Rey

Technical mishaps didn’t detract from the Hollywood glamour and nostalgic romance

The sun coming out for our festival-organised boat shuttle down the Thames was relief indeed, as we ditched the wellies and reached for the Crocs on our way into the arena.

Saturday afternoon was a melee of young folk, festering in the mire of their GCSE exam results – something the organisers are obviously battling with, given the amount of drug searches, water hand outs and well-oiled system of pulling kids out of the mosh pit.

theartsdesk in Switzerland: Lucerne and Gstaad offer curious audiences fresh perspectives on much-loved works

THEARTSDESK IN SWITZERLAND Lucerne and Gstaad offer curious audiences fresh perspectives

Two summer festivals find ever new ways to make each concert a memorable event

The summer festival circuit in Central Europe can be a bit of a merry-go-round. Notices in festival towns promise world-class orchestras and soloists, but they are usually the same performers, making festival appearances as part of broader touring schedules.

Reading Festival 2024, Day One review - an eclectic line up and a perfect headline set


blink-182 revived Reading’s rock spirit with a celebration of their career at the legendary festival

Reading Festival’s 2024 line up was the embodiment of playlist culture. Once a key contender in the UK’s Rock and Alternative market, then a rite of passage for students partying their way into their first year of university, it’s fair to say that the festival has experienced some uncertainty in its identity in recent years.