Albums of the Year 2019: The Chemical Brothers - No Geography

★★★★★ ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2019: THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS - NO GEOGRAPHY Barnstorming album offers uplift during a year of terminal shodiness

Barnstorming album offers uplift during a year of terminal shoddiness

It was hard avoid bleak in 2019. Then the election hit and everything went off a cliff. Watching the world turn to a shit-bowl of ignorance and greed, the raging nihilism of the year’s key film, Joker, suddenly seemed appealing. The 2020s will be about a response, clearly, but in the meantime spirits need lifting. The album that has served that purpose round my way since its release in April has been No Geography by The Chemical Brothers.

theartsdesk in Hamburg: Reeperbahn Festival 2019 review

Hustle, bustle, Matt Dillon and forehead-slappingly forceful Mancunians in sin city

Hatari’s 10th placing in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest hasn’t done them any harm. Neither did ruffling the feathers of the European Broadcasting Union and host nation Israel with their stance on Palestine. Based on their performance in Hamburg at 2019’s Reeperbahn Festival, Iceland’s favourite BDSM-leaning popsters haven’t smoothed-off their rough edges.

BBC Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park review – Pet Shop Boys, Westlife and Status Quo deliver the hits

★★★★ BBC RADIO 2 LIVE IN HYDE PARK Pet Shop Boys, Westlife and Status Quo deliver the hits

Cheery nostalgia is the name of the game at this annual crowdpleaser

You might think that being first on the bill with a half-hour slot at 1.15pm would be an affront to a band who’d had a 12-times platinum album and ruled the 90s airwaves, but if they are offended Simply Red aren’t showing it. A weatherbeaten Mick Hucknall and his beaming companions are kicking off BBC Radio 2’s annual "Festival in a Day", a highly civilised affair (you can pre-order 80-quid picnics and it finishes at 9.30pm) featuring sets from huge pop names and chatty links by cheerful Radio 2 presenters.

Foragers of the Foreshore - London's mudlarks on show

FORAGERS OF THE FORESHORE London's mudlarks on show at 'Totally Thames'

The director of Totally Thames introduces this year's festival, including an exhibition of mudlarks and their finds

Over the weekend, exhibitions and installations have started to bubble-up on the riverside walkway in London. Still-life photography of mudlark finds and a "scented history" of Barking Creek outside the National Theatre. Artwork from a dozen national and international river cities at the Royal Docks. An installation of 550 jerry cans at the Oxo Tower. A 60-foot wooden Ship of Tolerance on the Thames (main image) by Millennium Bridge.

Edinburgh Fringe 2019 review: How Not to Drown

★★★★ HOW NOT TO DROWN Autobiographical refugee story feels like a boy's own adventure

Autobiographical refugee story feels like a boy's own adventure

Urgent, fast-paced, seemingly never pausing for breath, How Not to Drown is a real-life boy’s own adventure, an appeal for compassion towards refugees, and an interrogation of nationality and identity. That’s quite a mix for a show of 100 minutes.

theartsdesk at the Pärnu Music Festival 2019 - super-orchestra, top clarinettists, transcendent strings

PÄRNU MUSIC FESTIVAL 2019 Super-orchestra, top clarinettists, transcendent strings

Paavo Järvi motivates an ever-growing family of musicians in Estonia's summer capital

Little has changed about Pärnu, with its concentric rings of eight-mile sandy beach and dunes, wooded gardens and wooden old town, in the five years I've been going there. It came as a bit of a shock to find that voters in the region favoured the far right, which now has an unwelcome white-supremacist father and son in an otherwise progressive parliament; but the town in July is full of Tallinn folk heading south to Estonia's "summer capital".