Rockness with Drambuie
Drambuie returns to the banks of Loch Ness for the RockNess Festival from 8 –…
Drambuie returns to the banks of Loch Ness for the RockNess Festival from 8 –…
First there was the achingly glamorous Proud Cabaret; now Alex Proud sets pulses racing once again, bringing the stars of London’s burlesque circuit to Proud Kitchen for his latest venture, Burlesque After Dark…
Battersea Dogs & Cats Home, one of the UK’s best loved animal welfare charities, is…
The Arbuturian likes to think of itself as a well-heeled, well-fed, well-read, well more than…
“Play it and be glad,” instructs the front cover of a miniscule booklet entitled Rules and Hints for Playing the National Game. Miss York explores a somewhat forgotten pastime with a very British characteristic. Sorry…
One doesn’t associate classical music with the traditional grass-and-mud rock festival. Surely the two sit at the opposite ends of the musical and cultural spectrum? Due to the efforts of some very clever people, that’s all about to change.
Natalie Cole and her seven-piece band arrived in London for her only UK performance this year, on a worldwide tour celebrating a lifetime in the music business that began at the age of six where she debuted on her father’s Christmas album.
What sort of venue could possibly be appropriate for the nine-time Grammy award-winning singer and daughter of the legendary Nat King Cole? We sent Lawrence to a roundabout at the southern end of Westminster Bridge to find out.