
PunkPerfectAwful: a decade and a bit of Beat magazine
Since 2010, Beat has blended music genres with a punk ethos and a Mystic Meg eye for emerging talent.
What do we mean by “folk”? Certainly not the genre. Rather, we mean the way in which very regional artists have absorbed the traditions of their communities: selecting them, evolving them, passing them on.
Since 2010, Beat has blended music genres with a punk ethos and a Mystic Meg eye for emerging talent.
Roo Oxley, lifelong casual and author of new book Clobber, discusses what it means to belong to one of Britain’s most contentious subcultures.
Hooray, it’s the final pit stop. Starting off with Vaquera and Hodakova (and ending with a long, long lie-in).
PUMA is bringing terrace culture to Terroni of Clerkenwell to celebrate the revival of the Palermo shoe, featuring secondhand clobber and Italo tunes. Sign up now to get on the list and for a chance to score a personalised Palermo FC tee.
Daily Beauty Rituals: As she embarks on the UK leg of her world tour, the singer-songwriter tells us what she’s slapping on her face pre-show, post-show and the morning after.
As her retrospective Happy Gas opens at Tate Britain, the original bad girl of art talks bogs, raves and not giving a toss.
The BFI’s new programme pays homage to working-class men on screen, featuring films such as The Football Factory, My Beautiful Launderette and Sexy Beast – all of which tell us more about the class divide than any arthouse flick will.
Fashion news of the week: Plus, the denim brand collabs with Crocs, Fred Perry and Raf Simons toast the final farewell, Telfar does denim with UGG and Asics does Otto.
What do we mean by “folk”? Certainly not the genre. Rather, we mean the way in which very regional artists have absorbed the traditions of their communities: selecting them, evolving them, passing them on.
In just a few years, Taylor Russell has established herself as a critical darling, fan favourite and fashion muse. Now, the Bones and All star has taken her skills to the stage, starring in The Effect at London's National Theatre.
In an age of hyper-sharing, Mixie and Munchie are a mystery, a myth, a glimpse and a glitch. But their TikTok account, 2girls1bottl3, is the portal to a fully-formed world.