• Album Review: Maroon 5- Red Pill Blues

    Following the release of their seminal breakthrough record Songs About Jane, Maroon 5’s career has been a mixed bag. For every major hit (‘Moves Like Jagger’), there’d be forgettable filler (‘Daylight’), and some of their best songs (‘Payphone’) have been marred by unnecessary rap sections. And as the band...
  • LIVE: London Grammar @ Rock City

    With a double platinum certified debut album already under their belts and their most recent album, ‘Truth is a Beautiful Thing’ having debuted at number one in the UK Albums Chart, elegantly minimalist trio London Grammar have certainly come a long way from writing music in Lenton. Since meeting...
  • LIVE: Fickle Friends @ Rescue Rooms

    After rising through the ranks of BBC, having their songs played on mainstream radio (making Radio One’s B and C playlists no less) and undertaking their biggest headline tour to date, 2017 is most definitely the year of Fickle Friends. With their 80s melodies, infectious energy and their adornment...
  • LIVE: Pale Waves @ Bodega

    Fresh from playing to a sold-out crowd with The 1975 at New York’s Maddison Square Gardens, Pale Waves are leading the pack when it comes to the recent resurgence in female lead grunge. Fronted by guitarist and vocalist, Heather Baron-Gracie, they are becoming quite the talking point within the...
  • Miley Cyrus: Younger Now- Album Review

    On September 29th Miley Cyrus released her sixth album, ‘Younger Now’. This album was arguably just as shocking as her extremely controversial ‘Bangerz’ album of 2013, with the singer song-writer reinventing herself once again. However, this time it was for the better, with Miley leaving behind her infamous dancing...
  • Wolf Alice: The Visions of a life- Album Review

    North-London indie outfit Wolf Alice make an impressively bold return to the spotlight with new album ‘Visions of a Life’. Following 2015’s ‘My Love Is Cool’ was set to be a difficult task indeed, but Roswell and her boys may just have pulled it off. The album certainly contains...
  • Album Review: King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Sketches of Brunswick East

    Emerging from the smouldering, eldritch ruins of King Gizzard’s Murder of the Universe, the Aussie psych-powerhouse’s third album of 2017 beckons the listener into an entirely different experience. While King Giz are no strangers to variety, the sonic transition between their last three albums and Brunswick East is like...