Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen and Florence Welch have towered over pop music in recent years. So why, asks Fiona Sturges, does the backstage arena remain almost entirely dominated by men?
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Friday, 25 June 2010
Thursday, 24 June 2010
The great rock'n'roll swindle
Glastonbury is the worst offender, but many other supposedly family-friendly events are charging sky-high prices. By Fiona Sturges
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Friday, 18 June 2010
Book review: Shadowplayers by James Nice
James Nice's history of Factory Records begins at the end, with the death of its principal founder Tony Wilson from cancer in 2007
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Monday, 7 June 2010
I'm sorry they haven't a clue
The same few hackneyed comedians keep cropping up on TV panel shows. Fiona Sturges doesn't see the funny side
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Wednesday, 2 June 2010
Music review - Natalie Merchant, Brighton Dome
It's not often that a gig is set in motion by the click of a slide projector but then we have come to expect something more from Natalie Merchant, the 46-year-old singer-songwriter who has long left behind the folk-pop proselytising of her 10,000 Maniacs days and settled into her role as a solo artist of rare maturity and depth
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Friday, 28 May 2010
It's only rock'n'roll but are you prepared to die for it?
As Ian Curtis is remembered 30 years after his death, Fiona Sturges looks at the myth of the tortured artist and asks why fans reserve their reverence for the stars who suffer
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Monday, 24 May 2010
Circolombia: Urban, Freerange, Brighton
Circolombia are a youth troupe from Cali in Colombia who met at the Circo para Todos ("Circus for All") school, a collective set up by the British ex-circus performer Felicity Simpson in order to get adolescents from deprived backgrounds off the streets.
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Friday, 21 May 2010
Sarah Blasko - The star from down under
Sarah Blasko, the daughter of missionaries, has three top-selling albums in Australia but has struggled to be heard in the UK. Her latest album has changed that. She talks to Fiona Sturges
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Wednesday, 19 May 2010
Theatre review - Electric Hotel, Brighton
In Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window, a helpless James Stewart glimpses the goings-on in the opposite apartment block, his relentless curtain-twitching leading him to conclude that a murder has been committed
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Tuesday, 11 May 2010
Theatre review - I, Malvolio, Pavilion Theatre, Brighton
A man stands in a horned headdress and sagging, stained undergarments. His shoulders droop, his limbs hang as if dragged downwards by invisible weights and his face is clouded with defeat. "I am not mad," he murmurs, and sets about making the case for his defence.
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Friday, 7 May 2010
Ronson, Winehouse and that special chemistry
Artists from Amy Winehouse via David Bowie to U2 have had musical masterminds in the control room. Fiona Sturges looks at their influence
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Thursday, 6 May 2010
Theatre review - Before I Sleep. Old Co-op Building, Brighton
There's a sign at the end of Dreamthinkspeak's new work, a promenade piece in a defunct department store, which implores the departing audience not to tell others about the contents of the show lest they give too much away.
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Saturday, 1 May 2010
24-hour room service: The Colonnade Hotel, Boston, US
With its Seventies concrete façade, you could mistake it for a car park. But look again, because The Colonnade fancies itself as one of the smartest hotels in Boston
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Tuesday, 27 April 2010
American drama: Hit the road, Jack
They outclass their British counterparts, but some American drama series are starting to lose their lustre, says Fiona Sturges
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Friday, 23 April 2010
Out of Africa: David LaChapelle's strange visions of a continent
David LaChapelle made his name with mash-ups of trashy glitz, Old Masters and portraits of Angelina Jolie, Courtney Love and Madonna. But on the eve of his first seriously political show in the UK, he tells Fiona Sturges that he has put commercialism behind him
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