계정
Shon Faye pays tribute to the pioneering musician and producer whose generation-defining music will live on in the exultations of the dance floor
In the latest episode of frieze’s Autumn Sessions, the two friends play and discuss records that create or bridge distance
frieze editor Andrew Durbin speaks to the author about his new essay on Bollywood for the November/December issue
Can the story of performer and activist Paul Robeson help us reconcile universalism with Black progress?
Presented in partnership with BMW, Lianne La Havas gave an exclusive solo performance followed by a live conversation with frieze’s Jennifer Higgie for a special episode of podcast Bow Down
The musician’s retrospective album proves he has long been ahead of his time – and out of this world
Charles Aubin, Aruna D’Souza, Brendan Fernandes, Ligia Lewis and Paul Maheke take stock of the performance world in the wake of COVID-19
The writer and musician’s latest album, Mandinga Times, is a bracing ode to apocalyptic collapse
The album is a timely affirmation for the global African diaspora, but it can’t be accepted as a universal representation of global Blackness
Pop Smoke’s posthumous release is an authoritarian play on the senses
The artist’s ambitious fourth studio album is a genre-bending journey of defiance and radiant elation
For David Grubbs, an onrush of music has led to a rethinking of musical ‘speed’ itself
After Hours is filled with a familiar, sometimes crushing, sense of yearning for something more
For her latest show at Kerlin Gallery, the artist incites a state of half-recognition reminiscent of Alzheimer’s
The 2013 album is a compelling record of our collective fracturing
The restless, rageful ‘No Home Record’ lures as much as it discomfits
From blues to jazz to the baroque – new fiction from Claire-Louise Bennett
Ian F. Martin traces the life and career of the pioneering Japanese musician, on the 50th anniversary of his first record
Recent R&B albums by Kelela, Lafawndah, serpentwithfeet and Solange tune to newly radiant blues
‘I was 13, with a group of friends, and it was my first time hearing anything so Black and British – and, also, so working class’