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On my radar: Zadie Smith’s cultural highlights

The writer on Netflix’s brilliant plague tragicomedy, the best British debut novel she’s read in a while, and her deep love of singer Chappell Roan

Britons splash out on get-togethers as events industry toasts summer boom

Venues and companies report rise in bookings, from family bashes and weddings to date nights, book clubs and Dungeons & Dragons

Earth to Moon by Moon Unit Zappa review – rock and a hard place

Frank Zappa’s daughter on her wildly inappropriate upbringing and its aftermath

Vivaldi taught Venetian orphan girls – did they help write his music in return?

A chance discovery introduced me to the composer’s work with abandoned children. The more I learned, the more I wondered about the creative role they played in his music

On my radar: Ade Adepitan’s cultural highights

The wheelchair basketball star turned TV presenter on swimming with sea cows in Mozambique, a vegan-friendly Nigerian restaurant, and a brilliant podcast about race in America

Five of the best books about classical music

Great writers make words sing on the page. These five authors, including Rose Tremain and Ian McEwan, put music on the main stage

‘The drugs were so new, they weren’t illegal yet’: the debauched rise of New York’s wildest bar

It was a seedy hotbed of sex, drugs, edgy music and A-list celebrities where Lou Reed and Andy Warhol partied alongside Blondie and Bowie. How did Max’s Kansas City fall apart?

Earth to Moon by Moon Unit Zappa review – waspish, funny account of life as Frank Zappa’s daughter

This memoir about being fathered by the 70s rock oddball and ‘pagan absurdist’ is an extraordinary tale of survival

A poem by Paul Kelly: ‘My lyrics are often stolen from songs, poems, novels, conversations’

Each week during Australian Poetry Month, a poet walks us through one of their works. Here, singer-songwriter Kelly explains his collaboration with poet Dana Gioia

Darcus Howe’s son Darcus Beese and his activist mother, Barbara: ‘He was imbued with the spirit of the struggle’

He was the first black boss of a UK record label. She was a British Black Panther and one of the Mangrove Nine. They reflect on the ‘madness’ of his childhood, and his memoir that records their groundbreaking legacies

Tchaikovsky was not tragic but had a ‘Monty Python’ sense of humour, says biographer

A new book claims that the Russian composer is not the tormented genius he is portrayed as, but a fun-loving man with ‘a fabulous life’

Rare Singles by Benjamin Myers review – northern soul and second chances

Once again, the author of Cuddy develops a deep sense of place, for a story that takes joy in its characters and their passions

The Piano Player of Budapest by Roxanne de Bastion audiobook review – music and survival

The musician traces the story of her grandfather, from his life as a pianist and composer in Hungary to surviving the concentration camps in wartime Austria

Britney Spears memoir The Woman in Me headed to the big screen

Universal has acquired the rights to the bestselling tell-all, with Wicked’s Jon M Chu set to direct

Meshell Ndegeocello: No More Water: The Gospel of James Baldwin review – a fire reignited

Baldwin’s stinging words on race and America are matched with the kind of musical eloquence that the great writer himself so admired

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  • Song Sung Blue review – Neil Diamond tribute act gets sweet treat of movie thanks to Jackman and Hudson
  • The 10 best folk albums of 2025
  • Bowie: The Final Act review – moving and enjoyable tribute to music legend’s last stand
  • Police end investigation into Bob Vylan’s IDF chants at Glastonbury
  • Bold docuseries or dull branding exercise? What The End of an Era really told us about Taylor Swift
  • ‘Haunted and cursed’: Lake Lanier has a deadly reputation. A darker tale hides beneath the surface
  • CDs return to Christmas shopping lists as gen Z embrace ‘retro renaissance’
  • ‘It contains the greatest song ever about an ice cream truck’: readers’ favourite albums of 2025
  • Striking a cord: the return of wired headphones is restoring friction to our convenience-addled lives
  • ‘A sense of anarchy and misrule’: the osses, warring oaks and lobbed sprouts of Penzance’s Montol festival
  • The 10 best global albums of 2025
  • Despite his knack for slick pop, the principled and passionate Chris Rea never took the easy road
  • Barry Manilow to undergo surgery for lung cancer
  • Chris Rea obituary
  • Chris Rea’s Driving Home for Christmas is an evergreen, everyman anthem that captures the season’s true spirit
  • Joe Ely obituary
  • Manchester music and football stars gather for funeral of Stone Roses’ Mani
  • Chris Rea, rock and blues singer-songwriter, dies aged 74
  • The 16 best Australian albums of 2025
  • Hugh Cutting/ Refound review – countertenor’s darkly compelling recital is an imaginative treat
  • Timeless Christmas hit is the gift that keeps on giving for Wizzard
  • Organ-tuning books in English churches provide notes on a warming climate
  • The 10 best experimental albums of 2025
  • Match the celeb to the panto – and other puzzlers in our bumper Christmas culture quiz
  • MacMillan’s Christmas Oratorio review – a magical choral performance
  • Flamboyant, furious and full of hope: CMAT is the sound of 2025
  • Christmas past comes alive as Sheffield pubs, halls and theatre celebrate hyper-local carols
  • ‘My dog hates my singing’: Beverley Knight’s honest playlist
  • The Guide #222: From Celebrity Traitors to The Brutalist via Bad Bunny – our roundup of the culture that mattered in 2025
  • From Avatar to Amadeus: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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