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The Art Dealer in Dr Birds Advice for Sad Poets

  • How Scottish football fans (and Norse warriors) inspired a modern masterpiece

    The Berserking by James MacMillan is U.k.'south greatest piano concerto for one-half a century, so why isn't information technology performed more often?

    Unlikely inspiration: Celtic fans in full-throated support
  • Keith Urban woos west London with polished Nashville energy - is the Country cowboy cracking United kingdom?

    Urban is best known in the UK as Nicole Kidman's married man, but he had the crowd eating out of the palm of his hand at the Hammersmith Apollo

  • The erstwhile Marvel magic is gone – fourth dimension to learn some new tricks

    Marvel films were once thrilling, surprising movie theatre – now they're but a profitable plate-spinning exercise. Hither's how to relieve them

  • The Terror: Infamy, review - mixing Japanese horror and US history with surprisingly boring results

    The latest series of the horror-drama anthology, set in US Second World War internment camps, struggles to friction match the standards of the outset

  • Tv Baftas 2022 predictions: who should win... and who will win

    Russell T Davies'south Aids crunch drama It'south a Sin is existence tipped to bulldoze the competition – simply should it?

Comment and assay

  • How Scottish football fans (and Norse warriors) inspired a modern masterpiece

    The Berserking past James MacMillan is Britain's greatest piano concerto for half a century, then why isn't it performed more frequently?

    Unlikely inspiration: Celtic fans in full-throated support
  • The former Marvel magic is gone – fourth dimension to learn some new tricks

    Curiosity films were one time thrilling, surprising cinema – now they're just a assisting plate-spinning practice. Here's how to save them

    In a pickle: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
  • Sam Ryder may finally provide Britain a winning shot at Eurovision

    The charismatic TikTok metal head is the U.k.'due south Eurovision entry for 2022, and may represent our best chance in decades

    Sam Ryder UK Eurovision song contest winner winning entry 2022 official music
  • Why I will never watch a Marvel motion-picture show

    The superhero leviathan is infantalising viewers and impoverishing our culture

    Zendaya and Tom Holland in Spider-Man: No Way Home, 2021

Reviews

  • Nuclear ability is unwieldy, terrifying – and the globe's all-time bet

    Atoms and Ashes, the new book from Chernobyl author Serhii Plokhy, delves into the disasters that have made the world fear nuclear energy

    Book review Atoms and Ashes Serhii Plokhy
  • A celebration of Claude Vivier's distinctive soundworld, plus the all-time of May's classical concerts

    The Southbank Heart gloat the work of Canadian composer Claude Vivier − the victim of a grisly murder in Paris in 1983

     Ilan Volkov
  • Keith Urban woos west London with polished Nashville energy - is the Country cowboy peachy Britain?

    Urban is best known in the UK as Nicole Kidman'due south husband, only he had the oversupply eating out of the palm of his hand at the Hammersmith Apollo

    Keith Urban
  • Ingather circles, Falklands trauma and 'fields full of stories' – this novel's a hymn to rural England

    A Falklands veteran and a New Age traveller fill up Wiltshire with crop circles in Benjamin Myers's new novel The Perfect Golden Circumvolve

    Benjamin Myers
  • Wicked Enchantment by Wanda Coleman review: poems of spitfire passion and rare intelligence

    The first United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland collection for the tardily American poet introduces British readers to a thrilling, sardonic voice

    Book review poetry Wanda Coleman Wicked Enchantment
  • Punchy, playful and sexy, this Oklahoma! is an absolute knockout

    Showtime seen in New York, this revelatory product, now at the Young Vic, interrogates the landmark musical to within an inch of its life

    Oklahoma! at The Young Vic

Behind the music

Stone'south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

This night'south TV

  • What's on TV tonight: the return of Beck, Queen: A Stone History and more

    Your complete guide to the week's television, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular serial telling the stories behind film and Television set's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • 'I was certain that now I would die': read Wittgenstein's explosive state of war diaries

    Fearing for his life, tormented by sex activity: the not bad philosopher bares his soul in his diaries, finally decoded and translated after 100 years

    Ludwig Wittgenstein
  • Nuclear ability is unwieldy, terrifying – and the earth's all-time bet

    Atoms and Ashes, the new book from Chernobyl author Serhii Plokhy, delves into the disasters that have made the globe fright nuclear free energy

    Book review Atoms and Ashes Serhii Plokhy
  • Crop circles, Falklands trauma and 'fields full of stories' – this novel's a hymn to rural England

    A Falklands veteran and a New Age traveller fill Wiltshire with ingather circles in Benjamin Myers's new novel The Perfect Golden Circle

    Benjamin Myers
  • Wicked Enchantment by Wanda Coleman review: poems of spitfire passion and rare intelligence

    The first UK collection for the belatedly American poet introduces British readers to a thrilling, sardonic voice

    Book review poetry Wanda Coleman Wicked Enchantment
  • Is Picasso's 'Primtivist' art still acceptable?

    Museums take long been wary of this period in the artist's professional life. In an era of 'counterfoil', it is even more pertinent

    'A radical new visual language': Pablo Picasso
  • Featherbrained, cartoonish, offensive... and selling for millions. Is it time to take digital art seriously?

    Last yr, in that location was outrage when a digital collage past Beeple sold for £55million. Our critic meets the artist touted as 'the new Warhol'

    Art's destroyer or its saviour? A detail from Everydays: The First 5,000 Days, a digital artwork by Beeple which sold at auction last year for £55 million
  • Donald Baechler, divisive New York painter who paid prisoners and drunks to draw for him – obituary

    His cartoonish images, often culled from fine art by social outcasts, were touted in the 1980s as a Pop Art renaissance only reviled by others

    Donald Baecher pictured at a New York charity auction in 2008
  • Radical Landscapes: a bracingly unlike kind of ramble through the British countryside

    Tate Liverpool's new show is only partly dark-green and oft far from pleasant – and that'south precisely what's then enjoyable virtually it

    Peter Kennard's Haywain with Cruise Missiles (1980)

In depth

More stories

  • Is Picasso's 'Primtivist' art even so adequate?

    Museums have long been wary of this period in the creative person's professional life. In an era of 'cancellation', it is fifty-fifty more than pertinent

    'A radical new visual language': Pablo Picasso
  • The 400-yr-old play that became a cultural phenomenon

    War, plague, persecution, dearth: Oberammergau'due south famous passion play will strike a cord with the modern world

    'Jesus's lines about the sounds of war will strike a chord'; Christ entering Jerusalem in dress rehearsal
  • 'I was certain that now I would die': read Wittgenstein's explosive state of war diaries

    Fearing for his life, tormented past sex activity: the neat philosopher bares his soul in his diaries, finally decoded and translated after 100 years

    Ludwig Wittgenstein
  • Nuclear ability is unwieldy, terrifying – and the world'due south best bet

    Atoms and Ashes, the new book from Chernobyl author Serhii Plokhy, delves into the disasters that have made the globe fear nuclear free energy

    Book review Atoms and Ashes Serhii Plokhy
  • What's on TV tonight: the return of Beck, Queen: A Rock History and more

    Your complete guide to the week'southward tv, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

    Beck
  • How Scottish football fans (and Norse warriors) inspired a mod masterpiece

    The Berserking by James MacMillan is United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland's greatest pianoforte concerto for half a century, so why isn't it performed more often?

    Unlikely inspiration: Celtic fans in full-throated support
  • A commemoration of Claude Vivier's distinctive soundworld, plus the best of May's classical concerts

    The Southbank Centre celebrate the work of Canadian composer Claude Vivier − the victim of a grisly murder in Paris in 1983

     Ilan Volkov
  • Keith Urban woos westward London with polished Nashville energy - is the Country cowboy not bad Britain?

    Urban is best known in the Britain as Nicole Kidman's married man, but he had the crowd eating out of the palm of his mitt at the Hammersmith Apollo

    Keith Urban

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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