Here’s the report from the Turin, nose plaster and all. Thanks for your company this afternoon during a very entertaining game. We’ll be back tomorrow
Author: Sarah Mitchell
ATP Finals: Alcaraz aided by nasal band as he bounces back against Rublev
Carlos Alcaraz made light of feeling under the weather as he dispatched Andrey Rublev in impressive fashion to revive his ATP Finals hopes on Wednesday.
Bob Dylan review – melancholy, reflective, but still utterly unpredictable
You could infer a lot from the way Bob Dylan’s backing band arrange themselves on stage. They form a kind of huddle around their leader,
The Long Wave: How Juls journeyed the Black Atlantic to curate his sound
Hi everyone. The first thing you’ll notice about this newsletter is that I’m not Nesrine. But don’t worry, we don’t need her to have a
‘Bad boy come again!’ The life, death and resurrection of jungle MC Stevie Hyper D
‘Steve is the Jesus Christ of MCs, man. He died for all these guys.” With a chuckle, Darrell Austin is lionising his uncle Steve –
Beabadoobee review – singer-songwriter cautiously ups the rock ante
Beabadoobee’s stage decor – huge white drapes, an artfully placed stepladder and a dozen cans of paint – heavily implies that the indie rock singer-songwriter
Joy review – warm and intensely English portrayal of the birth of IVF
There is sympathy, warmth and directness – though perhaps not much in the way of explicit joy – in this intensely English true story that
Roy Haynes, jazz drummer whose career spanned nine decades, dies aged 99
Roy Haynes, a drummer who was one of the last remaining musicians of jazz’s swing and bebop eras, has died aged 99. His daughter Leslie
Diego Forlán: ‘Playing with professionals, just for one game, you never know’
Before the start of the Uruguay Open, the organisers of the second-string ATP Challenger tournament had an announcement. After flooding their social media pages with
Mystery surrounds John Smyth after leaving UK and Zimbabwe for South Africa
The evangelical Christian barrister John Smyth abused as many as 130 boys and young men in the UK, Zimbabwe and possibly other African countries but