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A developer has bought a former Dorothy Perkins and Burton store in Stoke-on-Trent after striking a deal with administrators.
The shop in Market Street, Longton, never reopened following lockdown after the collapse of the Arcadia Group.
Now the empty unit has been taken on by the ALB Group, which has also acquired stores in Derby, Long Eaton, Worksop, Scunthorpe and Stockton on Tees.
The news comes after GAPE Equity Limited - a subsidiary of ALB Group - snapped up the 30,000sqft Moxon Island building, at the apex of Piccadilly and Stafford Street in Hanley, last year.
Generations | Part1: John Foxx
John’s most recent albums have been credited to John Foxx and the Maths, a duo comprising John and synth wizard Benge (left).
In a new three‑part series, DJ, producer and remixer Dave Clarke meets key figures from half a century of electronic music.
In this series, I will be interviewing leading figures from three generations of electronic music: people who have shaped, are shaping, and will shape the future of these genres. My aim was not just to find out about their studio and music‑making techniques, but to dig a little deeper and work out what makes them tick creatively. For this first instalment, I elected to interview John Foxx.
Written by Andrea Domanick, produced by Rosalie Atkinson
May. 10, 2021Hollywood MORE “You were the composer, you were the performer, you were the sole arbiter of your creation,” electronic pioneer Suzanne Ciani says in the new documentary “Sisters with Transistors.” Photo courtesy of Suzanne Ciani.
Electronic music is a global phenomenon, but all of today’s highest paid electronic musicians are men, such as the Chainsmokers, Calvin Harris, and Tiësto. Lesser known is the history of women who pioneered electronic music beginning in the 20th century. Their story is told in a new documentary called “Sisters with Transistors,” narrated by electronic luminary Laurie Anderson.