Rated by The Face: a weekly playlist
Featuring M.I.A.’s show-stealing verse on Franchise, a cheeky bassline banger from Bad Boy Chiller Crew, plus object blue and TSV1’s hard-hitting body music.
Featuring M.I.A.’s show-stealing verse on Franchise, a cheeky bassline banger from Bad Boy Chiller Crew, plus object blue and TSV1’s hard-hitting body music.
British Fashion Council sponsored designer Hattie Crowther, is making one-off garments taking influence from her working-class, northern roots and The Beautiful Game. And it’s sustainable. It’s a win-win!
If ever there’s a time to call up Chuck D, it’s in this burning trash can of a moment. The leader of legendary rap group Public Enemy is as politically and socially conscious as ever on the eve of their 15th studio album, What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?.
Following a 90 day will-it, won’t-it speculation over Trump’s US TikTok ban, a rival app has welcomed an exodus of disenfranchised, renegade-dancing TikTokers. But how will this impact Triller’s hip-hop DNA that has traditionally elevated its Black creators?
The Arizona-born actress takes a wild road trip with co-star Barbie Ferreira in Unpregnant, the Superbad of abortion movies.
Historian and local Richard Yeboah took lockdown by the horns to pursue his passion project. The Regeneration of Hackney: Transforming Modern Utopias is a detailed examination of gentrification in one of London’s most populated areas.
Twenty-twenty has been challenging for everyone, not least for people from the African and Caribbean diasporas. Here, Rainbow Milk author Paul Mendez joins the monthly birdwatching club aiming to show that nature is for everyone.
Fluff is the Melbourne-based start-up giving the industry a make-under with their consciously curated products and no nonsense approach to sustainability.
Whether through Stüssy prints or opera coats, Ghanaian art collabs or Air Jordan drops, Kim Jones is pushing the envelope pour homme right now. Tremaine Emory chats with the James Joyce-Judy Blame-Larry Levan-loving artistic director of Dior Men.
The superfly spy leads from the front in Tehran, an addictive Israeli TV thriller series.
The artist pays homage to the people and places that have shaped his northern identity – the pub, football pitches and boxing gyms – in his debut exhibition, Contender.
The Bradford trio have risen from local jokers to global viral sensation. But is Full Wack No Brakes good enough to sustain the hype?
At 16-years-old, McKenzie is hoping that her ownership of a Brooklyn-based beauty supply store – while going to school and taking college classes – will show other young Black girls that they can do it too.
Get to know Sie7etr3 with their drill, dembow and baile funk blended sounds.