Sprinter is the song of the summer. What does the future hold for Central Cee?
On this week's episode of THE FACE Podcast, we chart the unstoppable rise of the West London rapper.
On this week's episode of THE FACE Podcast, we chart the unstoppable rise of the West London rapper.
The Strike Diaries: Students can't graduate as the marking boycott leaves many in limbo, while September's freshers might be starting teacher-less. A 25-year-old lecturer, tutor and research assistant explains why.
A new study has shown acid’s mind-altering effects on filmmaker Federico Fellini, who arguably produced some of the most important features of the 20th century and influenced many future directors in the process.
We spoke to Archy Marshall’s dedicated followers before he hit the stage in London.
After 2023, PC Music will stop releasing new music, while cutting-edge artists at the forefront of the sound are switching up their style. Does hyperpop have a life beyond the label that birthed it?
100%: With three EPs and a few viral TikTok tracks under his belt, the 20-year-old is cooking up a distorted, breakbeat-influenced flavour of R&B. We asked him all about Lorde, Mexican food and the perils of indecision.
On this week’s episode, we discuss the sinister concept of dynamic pricing in pubs.
Co-hosted by FACE Editor Matthew Whitehouse and taking place at Quo Vadis in Soho, London, Olivia was joined by FACE family including Central Cee, Madeline Argy, Amelia Dimoldenberg and Joe Locke.
From Becky Hill’s belters to Jess Glynne’s jams, chart dance music has long had a distinctive quality. Think: pitch-shifted vocals, catchy hooks and house beats. Welcome, dear listener, to Happy Huncore.
Mani Minutes: The co-host of ITV’s reality show reboot heads to the nail salon for a fresh set of gels and a chat about her new gig.
Britain’s youth have been failed by a failing government. They’re angry, not being listened to and are retaliating in ways they see fit to make some noise.
The Strike Diaries: As homelessness in the UK spirals out of control, we meet a council officer working in Croydon's homelessness department, which is crippling under constant cuts and increased demand.
Once the preserve of greedy airlines and Ticketmaster, dynamic pricing has arrived in one of Britain's most sacred spaces: the boozer. And Swifties thought the cost of gig tickets was bad...
“Blobby is absolutely queer in a ‘fuck the boundaries, destroy the system, embrace anarchy, live authentically on your own terms’ way.”
Sackings, Saudis, haircuts – here’s what we think is going to go down this year.
Doja Cat is beefing with her own stans and no star is safe from being pelted with random objects during their live performances. Is this the year that music fandom fandom got out of control?