BAZAAR's Royal Editor at Large, Omid Scobie, and royal correspondent Carolyn Durand, Finding Freedom has been serialized in The Times, The Sunday Times, and People magazine.
20.07.2020 - 17:27 / nme.com
Miles Kane is to lead the acts playing the UK’s first public live series of music events since the coronavirus lockdown began earlier this year.The singer will play Camden Market this Saturday (July 25) to kick off the ‘Camden Unlocked’ series, which will take in eight ticketed, free open-air weekend performances until August 16.A single act will perform on alternating Friday, Saturday or Sunday afternoons, with Kane joined on the line-up by the likes of Newton Faulkner, Shaun Escoffery, Stone
.BAZAAR's Royal Editor at Large, Omid Scobie, and royal correspondent Carolyn Durand, Finding Freedom has been serialized in The Times, The Sunday Times, and People magazine.
Muse‘s Matt Bellamy has shared a new cover by his supergroup The Jaded Hearts Club.The band, which is made up of frontmen Nic Cester (Jet) and Miles Kane (The Last Shadow Puppets), guitarists Graham Coxon (Blur), British guitarist Jamie Davis as well as Bellamy on bass and The Zutons’ Sean Payne on drums, have covered Vera Lynn’s 1939 song ‘We’ll Meet Again’.Blending it with their recent cover of Four Tops’ ‘Reach Out I’ll Be There’, the mashup was featured at the end of the BBC‘s Saturday
Andreas Wiseman International EditorEXCLUSIVE: Production quietly began last month in London on pandemic-inspired feature Alone, which marks the directorial debut of Kirsty Bell, CEO of UK financier Goldfinch.
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry selected an incredibly romantic song for the first dance at their wedding.According to the new book, Finding Freedom, Meghan and Harry's first dance was to "I'm in Love" by Wilson Pickett.An excerpt from the book published in People revealed (via Harper's BAZAAR UK), "Meghan also delivered her own toast at the reception." Finding Freedom: Harry and Meghan and the Making of a Modern Royal Family amazon.com $27.99 $17.50 (37% off) READ NOW Most of the world is
The show took place yesterday evening at the 1250-capacity Clapham Grand, with Frank Turner performing to just 200 socially distanced attendees — less than 20% of their normal capacity.The pilot event was supported by the UK government as a trial run for enforcing safety measures at gigs during the coronavirus pandemic.However, Clapham Grand venue manager Ally Wolf told BBC News that the style of show that was trialled last night was not a financially viable model for other venues to follow
Frank Turner is to play the UK’s first show to be requested by the government as a pilot for the return of live music.The punk singer-songwriter will play The Clapham Grand tonight (July 28), with the South London venue operating at less than 20% capacity.Performing to a crowd of 180 fans, Turner’s show will be used to provide a clear understanding on how indoor UK venues can return to their full functioning capacity in the near future.Ally Wolf, manager of The Clapham Grand, said: “Preparing
Kate Garraway updated fans on her dramatic Sunday afternoon on Instagram – and they were quick to wish the presenter well. The Good Morning Britain host shared two photos to her account.
Miles Kane has kickstarted the UK’s long road to the full return of live music with an acoustic set at London’s Camden Market.The singer defied the rain on Saturday (July 25), to kick off the ‘Camden Unlocked’ series – which marks the UK’s first major live series of music events since the coronavirus lockdown began earlier this year.A step into the unknown, the tell-tale signs of a gig in the new normal were all present and correct before Kane’s arrival at 3PM.The crowd of roughly fifty fans
Tina Turner is in line to make a glorious chart comeback this week with what could be her first UK Top 40 single in 16 years on the Official Singles Chart this Friday (July 24).
Queen Elizabeth will be part of a knighthood ceremony on Friday, July 17, marking her first face-to-face duty since the COVID-19 lockdown. And, the man of honor will be Captain Tom Moore, the 100-year-old who famously raised more than $40 million for the UK’s National Health Service during the pandemic by walking 100 laps in his garden.
hereFigures published last week by the National Records of Scotland showed that 4,173 coronavirus deaths had been registered in the country up to July 5, while 839 deaths had occurred in Northern Ireland up to July 3, according to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency.Together these figures mean that so far 55,710 deaths have been registered in the UK where Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate, including suspected cases.A further 181 deaths have occurred in England,