Michel Faber’s tin ear
The novelist’s arresting study of the power of music is marred by a clumsy structure and snobbish tone.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The novelist’s arresting study of the power of music is marred by a clumsy structure and snobbish tone.
ByWe know Spotify exploits artists. We shouldn’t let it exploit music fans too.
ByThe poet’s music revealed his impulse to innovate and disrupt. Did it also hasten his slide towards fascism?
ByIt’s too long, and unavoidably corny. But this is such a fun endeavour that it’s hard to resist.
ByA new Netflix series can’t explain how the singer’s bombastic, revealing songs made him the self-flagellating poster-boy of a generation.
ByFor 50 years, the “mean old daddy” immortalised in one of Mitchell’s best-loved songs has been an enigma. Now he…
ByOn “Now and Then”, created using AI, John Lennon’s voice is punchy and crisp. Does that make it a great…
ByThe album Up captured the dehumanisation and sexless ennui that defined the late Nineties.
By