New Music Lockdown 9: Chic, Laura Marling, Billy Bragg, Steel Panther, Wendy James and more

NEW MUSIC LOCKDOWN 9 Chic, Laura Marling, Billy Bragg, Steel Panther, Wendy James and more

From Los Angeles to Wakefield, the latest guide to new music events you can enjoy from home

For better or worse, the lockdown may be easing in the UK but there’s no sign of any gig action, even on the far distant horizon. So it’s back to our screens for all that, and here’s the latest, liveliest selection of concerts, conversations and virtual festival action for the coming week! Dive in!

The Other Songs/Brit School Festival

Album: Westerman - Your Hero is not Dead

★★★★ WESTERMAN - YOUR HERO IS NOT DEAD High-gloss Eighties sonics conceal chasmic emotional depths

High-gloss Eighties sonics conceal chasmic emotional depths

Will Westerman is not afraid of sounding retro. It's clear his influences are diverse, from jazz fusion to the bedroom proto-house experiments of Arthur Russell. But in their final form, his high gloss production, highly literate songs and fretless bass sound like something out of a creatively leftfield but megabucks studio-produced mid Eighties record: the likes of Talk Talk, Kate Bush, Roxy Music's Avalon and above all The Blue Nile loom large.

Maria Reva: Good Citizens Need Not Fear review - tales of gloomy humour and absurdist charm

MARIA REVA: GOOD CITIZENS NEED NOT FEAR Inventive short stories

Inventive short stories capture Soviet and post-Soviet Ukraine with a surrealist squint

Maria Reva’s humorously gloomy debut collection, centring on the inhabitants of a block of stuffy apartments in Soviet (and post-Soviet) Ukraine, starts, predictably enough, with Lenin. Instead of an austere symbol of ideology, he’s a statue who “squinted into the smoggy distance.

New Music Lockdown 6: David Gilmour, Taylor Swift, Prince, Bat For Lashes and Blossoms

NEW MUSIC LOCKDOWN 6 David Gilmour, Taylor Swift, Prince, Bat For Lashes and Blossoms

This week's freshest stay-at-home music recommendations to keep things lively

As the music industry slips into the rhythm of lockdown, so the spigot slowly becomes untapped and events, livestreams and similar start to flow more steadily. This week a host of big names are up to a bunch of different stuff, all worth checking. Dive in!

A Theatre for Dreamers/Von Trapped Family Livestream + Dave Gilmour Live at Pompeii

Reissue CDs Weekly: Bob Stanley & Pete Wiggs Present The Tears of Technology

BOB STANLEY & PETE WIGGS PRESENT THE TEARS OF TECHNOLOGY A celebration of the synthesizer as an enabler for expressing emotion

Winning celebration of the synthesiser as an enabler for expressing emotion

“Like mellotrons before them, synthesisers could project a strange and deep emotion – something in the wiring had an inherent melancholy. Previous generations had often disparaged synths as dehumanising machines but, at the turn of the 80s, a new generation of musicians appeared who could coax them into creating modern and decidedly moving music.

The Rise and Fall of The Clash, Now TV review - London falling

Absorbing blow-by-blow account of the great British punk band’s destruction

Open-mouthed incredulity is a reasonable reaction to this 2012 documentary on one of the UK’s prime punk-spawned bands, available on catch-up via streaming service Now TV’s tie-in with Sky Arts. There’s not much “rise” but there’s an awful lot of “fall” in The Rise and Fall of The Clash.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The Monochrome Set

The reappearance of 1980’s ever-delightful ‘Strange Boutique’ and ‘Love Zombies’

 “An exercise in bizarre mixtures, combining the bleak acid hangover of half-hearted Velvet Underground impersonators with muted razzmatazz: a long and rather stylish joke.”

Wonderland, Hampstead Theatre online review - a major play about the miners

★★★★ WONDERLAND, HAMPSTEAD THEATRE A major play about the miners

Beth Steel award-winner makes for muscular, eerily apposite fare

The talk is of an “economy in ruin [with] unemployment through the roof”: a précis of Britain in lockdown? In fact, this is one of the many eerily apposite remarks to be found in Wonderland, the Beth Steel drama set in the early 1980s that marks the second in the Hampstead Theatre’s sequence of three productions streamed across as many weeks: Howard Brenton’s Drawing the Line comes next, and last.

theartsdesk on Vinyl Lockdown Special 1: Napalm Death, Brazilian jazz-pop, 1980s indie and more

THEARTSDESK ON VINYL LOCKDOWN SPECIAL 1 Stay-at-home music for stay-at-home times

Stay-at-home music for stay-at-home times: the first of our twice-weekly vinyl specials

For the duration of this C19 Lockdown, rather than the usual sprawling monthly epic, theartsdesk on Vinyl will be presented regularly in bite-sized editions, roving across the pile of releases we have already, since those incoming have been whittled down a trickle. Welcome, then, to a cross edition of plastic ranging from the beautiful to the bizarre. Dive in!

Napalm Death Logic Ravaged by Brute Force/White Kross (Century Media)