Jump to navigation
Search
-

After a swift rise and fall in the 1980s, Belfast's original indie act St. Vitus Dance return with a third album worth listening to
-

Malojian justify the hype with an accomplished debut album that draws from their back catalogue and features classic alt-folk influences
-

David Park chronicles our shared journey toward a post-Troubles future
-

Forget the past, photographer Jonny Roberts captures Northern Ireland's diverse present
-

Americana with hip-hop beats and added synths – the brothers get the barmaids singing along
-

Malojian, sans Cat, packs emotional masochism, lost love and simple beauty into his solo EP
-

'A Cookstown skinnymalink mumbling for a bit' - Nick Laird warns his Aspects audience what to expect.
-

The perfect gig to close the Open House Festival, despite the chattering classes
-

Poets and prose writers keep the Crescent Arts Centre audience entertained
-

Countdown to Zero producer Lawrence Bender believes the 'time has come' to campaign
-

With Father's Day around the corner, Jim Meredith writes about a shared love for Merle Haggard
-

Cinematic adaptations can be hit and miss, as James Meredith demonstrates
-

The folk singer-songwriter leads from the front - but James Meredith misses the man with the trumpet
-

The poet on his new collection, A Hundred Doors, keeping it fresh at readings and how he only cares about one critic - his wife
-

Robyn G Shiels finally releases some new material - James Meredith thinks it was well worth the wait
-

Wireless Mystery Theatre perform classic CBS radio plays - including the ad breaks - in faultless period style
-

Two folk musicians, poles apart, bring a taste of water and wine to the Black Box
-

The illustrated sections are unnecessary, but Beat aficionado James Meredith is impressed nevertheless
-

Would you like to swipe your 'loyalist card'? The leftie tunesmith brings the funny to the Empire Music Hall
-

BBC NI show brings together archive footage and interviews to show Northern Ireland in a new light
-

The Brooklyn rockers aim to reconnect with their audience after a series of lukewarm album reviews
-

The Aussie bluesman brings back the addictive rhythms of a bustling 1920s New Orleans saloon
-

The secret to a long life is to dance a lot and drink some vodka, according to the nonagenarians in Susie Rea's exhibition
Pages