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Post your questions for Kermit the Frog and Fozzie Bear

What do you want to ask the comedy besties as they get ready to celebrate three decades since the release of The Muppet Christmas Carol?

Faith, Hope and Carnage by Nick Cave and Sean O’Hagan review

From heroin addiction to band breakups, the singer-songwriter opens up about his past and the agony of losing a son

Country star Margo Price on her memoir: ‘My editor said whiskey is basically a character’

Price survived alcoholism, hardship and tragedy to become a star, as she recounts in her brutally honest new book. ‘I had panic attacks, thinking about all of this being out there,’ she says

Fingers Crossed: How Music Saved Me from Success by Miki Berenyi review – a shoegaze star’s painful past

The Lush frontwoman’s memoir is a nuanced, honest portrait of a troubled childhood – and a corrective to a much-mythologised era

On my radar: Claes Bang’s cultural highlights

The Danish actor on a horror film from his homeland, the physical impact of Francis Bacon and his favourite London restaurant

Fingers Crossed by Miki Berenyi review – trauma, stage-dives and stardom

From a difficult childhood to the absurdities of pop celebrity, the Lush singer’s story breaks the mould of music memoir

‘In all manner of things, we were creative’: the Byrds reflect on music and fashion

As a new book explores the band’s influence on 60s fashion and beyond, its surviving members look back on the trends they pioneered

The Book of the Gaels by James Yorkston review – a lyrical, child’s-eye view of an Irish road trip

The folk musician’s picaresque tale of a struggling Scottish writer and his sons en route from Cork to Dublin quietly captures artistic failure and redemption

Jann Wenner on Rolling Stone: ‘Some reviews were just insufferably nasty’

The founder of the legendary magazine discusses his rise to the top, navigating famous friendships and hiding his sexuality

Jackie Brown review – Tarantino’s most romantic film is a stone-cold classic

Pam Grier and Samuel L Jackson are explosively good in this stylish crime thriller, with superb supporting turns from Robert Forster, Robert De Niro and Bridget Fonda

Charlie’s Good Tonight by Paul Sexton review – chronicles of a reluctant Stone

The authorised biography of the Rolling Stones’ late drummer is warm and diligent on his love of jazz and family – while ducking any difficult issues

On my radar: Claire Denis’s cultural highlights

The French director on being mesmerised by the film Memoria, and her love of Tindersticks, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and the Mediterranean

Love and Let Die by John Higgs review – Fab Four plus 007 doesn’t quite add up

This Bond versus the Beatles study works best as a series of lively historical nuggets rather than a fight for the nation’s cultural soul

The Guardian view on BookTok: a welcome disruptor of the status quo

Editorial: The social media platform is revolutionising bookshops and galvanising publishers. Enjoy it while it lasts

Re-Sisters by Cosey Fanni Tutti review – take three outsider women

The Throbbing Gristle co-founder communes with electronic pioneer Delia Derbyshire and 15th-century mystic Margery Kempe in her account of female artists who fought to be heard

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  • The 20 best podcasts of 2025
  • 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

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