New music
CD of the Year: Mara Carlyle - FloreatSaturday, 31 December 2011![]() It's the effortlessness that does it. So many singer-songwriters strain like billy-oh to make obvious their artistry, their auteurship, their emotional authenticity, when behind it all they're doing something really quite ordinary. This album, on... Read more... |
We recommend: theartsdesk's New Music CDs of the YearSaturday, 31 December 2011![]() With more than 200 discs of the day picked by our new music writers this year, there's been no shortage of good stuff to plug into. Here our writers select their crème de la crème of 2011. Or you can browse back through the whole year's selection.PJ... Read more... |
2011: Morrissey, Manics and the Resurrection ShuffleSaturday, 31 December 2011![]() I have always fought hard to resist nostalgia, but 2011 was the year when I succumbed. Maybe the present – and the future – was just too awful to contemplate, but I found myself constantly looking back. Whether it was onstage, onscreen or on a hand-... Read more... |
2011: Siren Songs, Top Tales, and Farewell to the MavericksFriday, 30 December 2011![]() We have, thankfully, long since moved beyond the point where there's any need to delineate or categorise works of art according to gender. However, looking back at 2011 it's hard to escape the conclusion that the most compelling music emerged from... Read more... |
2011: The Rave ReturnsFriday, 30 December 2011![]() Against all the odds, I find myself going into 2012 with a strong sense of optimism. And the reason? I am a born-again rave zealot. I saw it at Outlook Festival in Croatia, I saw it at Sónar in Barcelona, and I saw it at the Big Chill where I was... Read more... |
2011: King Lear, Breaking Bad and Afro-FuturismThursday, 29 December 2011![]() The Mayans say 2012 is The End, so this may be the very last round-up of the year. I saw possibly the best Shakespeare I’ve ever seen – a chamber version of King Lear at the Donmar Theatre directed by Michael Grandage with Derek Jacobi as the mad... Read more... |
CD of the Year: Bon Iver - Bon IverThursday, 29 December 2011![]() The albums that work their way under your skin are few and far between. The second CD by Justin Vernon, aka Bon Iver, is one of those earworm-laden offerings that leave you wanting for more and haunted by seductive phrases and catchy tunes. There is... Read more... |
2011: Ladies With Ukuleles and Blockbusters With BiteThursday, 29 December 2011![]() 2011 was an excellent year for highly original music from female musicians, two of whom brandished ukuleles yet found quite different ways of using them.New England’s Merrel Garbus (otherwise known as Tune-Yards) put her foot down on the effects... Read more... |
CD of the Year: Laura Marling - A Creature I Don't KnowWednesday, 28 December 2011![]() This was the year I finally fell in love with Laura Marling’s music. I liked her first two albums well enough, but I couldn't quite shake the feeling that the endless chorus of critical hosannas was more about what people wanted her to be than what... Read more... |
2011: Anthemic Elbow, Iranian drama, and Fear and Loathing in ElsinoreWednesday, 28 December 2011![]() The Barbican has always led the way in London in international theatre programming. The year there ended on a high, with Thomas Ostermeier’s Hamlet from the Schaubühne laying down new markers for transgressive commitment. I was sceptical about it... Read more... |
2011: Tintin, Tallinn and a Year of SurprisesTuesday, 27 December 2011![]() The surprises linger longest. The things you’re not prepared for, the things of which you’ve got little foreknowledge. Lykke Li’s Wounded Rhymes was amazing, and she was equally astonishing live, too. Fleet Foxes's Helplessness Blues was more than a... Read more... |
2011: Glastonbury, Gaga and Charlie SheenMonday, 26 December 2011![]() 2011 was a year when the wheels of global history cranked noticeably forward, the news always full of images that will be in school text books within a decade. It was also the year when, for most of us, “a bit peeved” became “utterly livid” that... Read more... |
