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Supercharging their beloved blues music with rock’n’roll swagger and a complete disregard for the rules – of both music and the authorities – The Rolling Stones laid the template for all rock’n’roll outlaws to follow. The best Rolling Stones 60s songs trace their evolution from bratty upstarts to voices of their generation, throwing down the gauntlet to anyone else who dares challenge their claim to the throne. Think we’ve missed one of yours? Let us know in the comments section, below. Listen to the best Rolling Stones songs on Apple Music and Spotify. Scroll down to read our pick of the best Rolling Stones 60s songs. ....
Tony Coke s new commission on Piccadilly Lights screen spotlights struggle for civil rights in 2021 Cokes is the author of politically resonant works that appropriate and reframe diverse texts to challenge narratives in media produced under late capitalism. LONDON .- American visual artist Tony Cokes is broadcasting four powerful new films confronting police violence and the questions we face in the post-pandemic era, exploiting the Piccadilly Lights screen to put on the largest public display of Cokes distinctive colour and text compositions. 4 Voices / 4 Weeks presents Cokes translation of words by John Lydon, Judith Butler, US civil rights hero John Lewis and Elijah McClain, a 23-year old African American man who died after being put in a chokehold by police in 2019. The works move from punk provocation to peaceful self-sacrifice, recalling McClains final words and expounding our deep responsibilities in the wake of violence against the vulnerable. Acro ....
/ 28 January 2021 1849 Views Expecting the unexpected has been the listener’s default position since Steven Wilson called time on Porcupine Tree and embarked on an increasingly storied solo career. Since 2008’s eclectic debut Insurgentes, he’s done a jazz-inflected opus (Grace For Drowning), indulged his love of classic prog (The Raven That Refused To Sing) and inched ever closer to the mainstream via the poignant Hand. Cannot. Erase. and the eminently accessible To The Bone. Whether he likes it or not, Wilson remains prog’s poster boy and he teeters on the very tipping point of major mainstream success as he releases his sixth full-length solo LP. At such a stage, lesser performers might freeze like rabbits in the headlights and bottle it completely or play it safe and simply whack out To The Bone Vol 2. If you’ve followed Wilson’s career, though, it won’t surprise you to discover he’s stuck his neck out and done something completely ....
Photo: Depositphotos.com On Rachel’s Round-Up, Rachel Arts talks about her start-up life in the Netherlands, assimilating a new culture, celebrating her British-ness, and some life (and business) lessons along the way. Not long into my arrival in the Netherlands, I felt a gaping hole where certain elements of British culture used to be. The radio has long been part of my existence, BBC Radio, to be precise. Which channel would depend on who was in the car. My older children would switch on the thumping beats of Radio 1, whereas I preferred the steady rhythms of Radio 2. There were certain key times of the week that were a highlight for me, in radio terms, like catching Jo Whiley, with her smooth vocals and warm manner, interviewing the latest bands while driving home of an evening. Her infectious enthusiasm for new music, hearing the stories behind the songs, the personalities behind the band members, was enough to keep me up to date. ....