Can Rachel save Love Island?
This series of Love Island seems to be a dud. But this bombshell’s arrival might just shake things up...
This series of Love Island seems to be a dud. But this bombshell’s arrival might just shake things up...
The Zimbabwe-born singer talks South African party culture, Nigerian amapiano and collaborating with the best producers in the scene.
Dropping a few amapiano tracks in your DJ sets? Please, do your research. Here’s a guide to help you explore.
As we approach Peak Festival Weekend, here's a rundown of the who, what, where – and infection rates – of the summer’s previous music events.
London Film Festival: the director of the Sundance-winning Danish film on his 25-year connection with his friend and leading man.
In his photo story, Ride, photographer Tom Marshak explores the fascinating bond between race vehicles and the men behind the wheels.
Photographer Jermaine Francis’s Rhythms of the Metroplex explores life without proximity and how time really can be of the essence.
From steamy gay porn scenes to anonymous fetishists on Twitter, the sexual lust for football kits is at an all-time high. But what lies beneath the knee-high socks? THE FACE finds out.
The vibes are off and the producers’ tactics are questionable, but we still can’t look away. As the 2021 series comes to a close, Paula Akpan asks whether it’s possible to ethically enjoy Love Island.
Jewellers like SANTANGELO, Janky Jewels, Alterita and Shulian Nell are designing playful, sea-themed pieces inspired by nature, hedonism and the ocean. British weather, be damned.
Since its premiere at Sundance, the indie has received critical acclaim for its arresting take on Eighties "video nasty" aesthetics. Slightly scared, we meet its creative team.
The rapper is set to release his tenth studio album, Donda, tomorrow – and he’s enlisted America’s fastest woman for the No Child Left Behind video.
LFF: The Wes Anderson-approved French-Algerian follows fellow César winners Charlotte Gainsbourg, Vanessa Paradis and Audrey Tautou – and now she’s disarming Timothée Chalamet.
The writer and youth worker discusses the social significance of the UK drill, Afroswing and rap tracks referenced in his lauded book about serious youth violence.
Penned by photographer Eddie Otchere and writer Andrew Green in 1995, the cult classic novel told the story of how Jungle shaped the Black British music scene. Now, it’s being republished.
The UK Afrobeats hitmakers are running Accra’s hottest new venue, where Headie One and Stormzy have been seen propped at the bar.
The hotly-tipped animator talks rap fandom, weird aesthetics and the Christmas collab with DMX that could have been.