
Father John Misty, review: The eccentric star turns the Albert Hall into a church of rock
Part rockstar, part preacher – and totally mesmerising. How else to describe Father John Misty (or, as his evangelical parents baptised him, Joshua Tillman)? At Tuesday night's superb gig at the Royal Albert Hall, the 43-year-old bearded bard of the dispossessed hipster proved, once again, that he is the most striking talent in contemporary indie: sexy and pretentious yet self-deprecating, with a voice so effortlessly powerful that the walls of the Hall seemed to shake with every note.
Backed by a terrific band – a particular shoutout goes to saxophonist Tony Barba, whose feverish playing on the opener I Guess Time Just Makes Fools of Us All and flagship single Mahashmashana, the title track from Tillman's latest album, made the evening feel like a sort of jazz-soundtracked special congregation. Tillman shimmied across the stage, lithe and charismatic in a tailored black suit. His pointing fingers seemed to incite more of that religious fervour – an apparent invitation for his adoring subjects to submit themselves wholly to him.
Following the universal acclaim for Fear Fun (2012) and I Love You, Honeybear (2015), Tillman could have rested on his laurels and established himself as the saviour of commercial indie rock. But the nihilistic old-school Americana of Pure Comedy (2017), and the big-spirited jazz and Big Band standards on 2022's epic Chloë and the Next 20th Century, hinted that he wasn't content with playing it safe. Late last year, his sixth album Mahashmashana took it further, with its long, slow songs proving challenging on first listen – but joyfully, they came alive at the RAH.
Frantic, pounding percussion heralded the start of that album's standout track, She Cleans Up, as flashing orange lights bounced off the opulent red velvet curtains covering the Hall's private boxes and turned the space into the depths of Hell itself. Respite came – for both the audience and Tillman's brooding baritone, stretched to its limit by his frenzied, impassioned delivery – courtesy of Screamland, a beautiful, Leonard Cohen-worthy rumination on clawing your way out from rock bottom ('Like a sucker with a scratcher / Like a f--- up with a dream').
Tillman's varied catalogue must make choosing a setlist difficult, but the mix of older, humorous tracks and more serious new material made for an endearing victory lap – songs written when he was a 'precocious 33-year-old', he said, felt embarrassing to perform now, but it didn't stop him dropping to his knees and going full throttle for Chateau Lobby #4 ('I wanna take you in the kitchen/ Lift up your wedding dress/ Someone was probably murdered in').
The ghostly Mental Health was introduced as 'another beautiful ballad about getting gaslit by capitalism', while the closing masterpieces Holy S--- and I Love You, Honeybear tightened his grip on the already spellbound audience; you could hear a pin drop for much of the set.
Tillman's 'modern life is rubbish' message is not that different from other artists': the internet is making us stupider, religion can be dangerous, and sex can indeed be weaponised. But it's how he says it – beautifully, devastatingly – that sets him apart.
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Daily Mail
05-06-2025
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Rise of the TikTok Organist: How a vicar's daughter bewitched royalty and sold out the Royal Albert Hall in hours - as her viral organ performances see her branded the 'Taylor Swift of classical music'
She has been dubbed the ' TikTok Organist' and received widespread praise for her accessible, charismatic and playful videos about her favourite instrument. Now, Anna Lapwood - who is seen as classic music's answer to Taylor Swift - has been handed her biggest role yet as the Royal Albert Hall's first official organist. Aged just 29, she has racked up more than two million social media followers and is fast becoming a trailblazer for young women in a field traditionally populated by men. Buckinghamshire-born Miss Lapwood first performed at the iconic London venue as a teenager in 2012 when she was a member of the National Youth Orchestra. The BBC and Classic FM presenter attended Oxford High School and then Magdalen College, Oxford, where she was its first female organ scholar and then joined Pembroke College, Cambridge in 2016 where she became director of music. In June last year Miss Lapwood – who uses the hashtag #PlayLikeAGirl - was made an MBE for services to music in the New Year Honours, urging Princess Anne upon receiving the award that she should take up the organ and play at Windsor Castle. She stepped down from Pembroke in February to focus on her career as a concert organist, and was named last month on the Sunday Times' Young Power List, celebrating the most powerful 30 people under 30 in the UK. Miss Lapwood had been a Royal Albert Hall associate artist from 2022, and her latest headline performance at the venue on May 15 sold out in under 24 hours. Anna Lapwood regularly posts videos on TikTok of her practicising and playing to huge crowds Anna Lapwood has played the music from films such as Interstellar and Top Gun on the organ In four-star reviews for the show, the Guardian said she was 'charismatic enough to sell out a midweek gig and have a packed hall eating out of her hand', while the Times told how she 'mixed the music with an almost Adele-like level of personal chat'. She was also a soloist during the 2021 BBC Proms season, and has since headlined the venue - as well as teaching Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Cruise about its famous organ. Miss Lapwood can also play the piano, violin, viola and the harp. Now, the venue has created a new role for her as the first 'Organist of the Royal Albert Hall' with the aim of increasing national access to organ and choral music. She will be headlining auditorium concerts and making guest appearances with artists, while also trying to increase accessibility to the organ by holding open sessions. The venue's organ was the biggest musical instrument in the world when it was unveiled 154 years ago, described by its builder Henry Willis as 'The Voice of Jupiter'. It was played at the Hall's opening ceremony in 1871, where its wind system was powered by two steam engines. Musicians who have performed on it include Camille Saint-Saëns, Anton Bruckner, Pink Floyd's Richard Wright, and the rock band Muse. Miss Lapwood - who has played with artists such as Bonobo, Aurora, Raye and Florence and the Machine - was described by Harper's Bazaar as 'classical music's Taylor Swift'. The publication added: 'Like Swift, Lapwood is a once-in-a-generation talent: she's irreverent, charismatic, a born performer and a whip-smart communicator. Dispel all your preconceptions about what an organ recital might ordinarily entail.' The New York Times has called her 'the world's most visible organist'. Miss Lapwood, who opened the Baftas in 2019 at the Royal Festival Hall, has also just released a new album called Firedove which includes original compositions - and has curated an all-night BBC Prom taking place in August. Speaking about her new role, she said: 'I feel very lucky to have been allowed access to the incredible instrument at the Royal Albert Hall over the last few years and it has taught me so much, so I'm incredibly excited to be continuing my partnership with the Hall as its official organist.' She added that she was looking forward to opening up access to the instrument to more organists, starting with the launch of a new organ scholarship. It comes after Miss Lapwood discovered the organ aged 15 when it was brought to her attention by her mother, a paediatric nurse. Back in June last year, Miss Lapwood - whose father was a Church of England priest - revealed she had told the Princess Royal to take up the organ and play at Windsor Castle. She said at the time: 'I said 'Have you ever had to go on the organ?' and she said 'No, I haven't, I think it's a bit late'. And I was like 'Oh, I think you can I think you could do it, you should do it'.' Miss Lapwood also said that they had talked about the importance of making women feel comfortable in music, adding that the organ was a 'previously male-dominated world'. In September 2022, she famously had an impromptu duet with a passing security guard at London Bridge station in the days after Queen Elizabeth II died. Miss Lapwood stopped to play the organ at the station when she was approached by a security guard called Marcella, who revealed she was a classically trained singer. The pair performed the national anthem, God Save The King, and then at the request of Marcella, Miss Lapwood launched into a rendition of Lascia ch'io pianga by Handel. In January 2021 Miss Lapwood hit the headlines for her humorous reaction to being put on hold to the same movement of a Mozart symphony for over an hour, when she started playing along Miss Lapwood posted a clip of her duet with Marcella on X and the video quickly went viral, racking up over three million views. And back in January 2021 she hit the headlines for her humorous reaction to being put on hold to the same movement of a Mozart symphony for over an hour. Miss Lapwood found herself listening to the same segment of the piece whilst stuck on hold to Energy for 70 minutes - so she started playing along with her electronic pipe organ at home. Speaking to Classic FM in 2019, she said: 'When I took up the organ, I really had no idea what world I was getting into. 'I feel there's a responsibility to help provide the opportunity for young girls to realise they could be an organist too. I think the reason they don't take it up is because they don't even think about it. 'They don't see visible female role models playing the organ. It tends to be seen as either something for a certain kind of man or a little old lady, and that's not something a little girl is going to aspire to be.'


Time Out
02-06-2025
- Time Out
The 15 best things to see at SXSW London 2025
SXSW London isn't just the debut South by Southwest festival in London but the first in all of Europe. This week the event – for which Time Out is an official media partner – is taking over dozens of iconic Shoreditch venues for a week-long feast of talks, panels, music concerts and film screenings. Between June 2 and June 7 SXSW London will host literally hundreds of events: a total of 420 talks and panels, 250 film screenings and over 500 gigs. The lineup for the Texan festival's first London event is stacked with big names: included are talks by the likes of actor Idris Elba, comedian Katherine Ryan and footballer Cesc Fàbregas, and gigs from names such as Tems, Mabel and Erykah Badu (the latter performing under her alias DJ Lo Down Loretta Brown). Heading to SXSW London but still undecided on who or what to see? Here's Time Out's list of the top things to look forward to at SXSW London, featuring the insights of our global film editor Phil de Semlyen and music expert Georgia Evans. Music Chosen by Georgia Evans. Uncle Junior These kids are far cooler than most of us were at 17 (did we all dress like we were desperate to be in Skins?), bursting onto the London underground music scene in a frenzy of harsh noise, hardcore and experimental rock. Erratic performances at The George and Shacklewell Arms have earned Uncle Junior cult status, despite only dropping two singles so far. The first, 'I Love You, Kenneth Copeland', is a fantastic summation of what the three-piece is all about: ironic lyrics, jagged production and chaotic, youthful energy. Jaguar Shoes (Main Room), June 2 2025, 7-7.30pm. Village Underground (Village Underground), June 3 2025, 4-4.30pm. Pa Salieu Rapper Pa Salieu first made headlines with his single 'Frontline', which was the most-played track of 2020 on BBC Radio 1Xtra. The following year he released the Ivor Novello-nominated mixtape Send Them to Coventry, cementing his place as one of the UK's most exciting emerging acts. Despite a break in releases (due to being incarcerated) Salieu is still making hits, such as the dancefloor-ready Disclosure single 'King Steps'. Catch him at SXSW to hear his blend of afrobeats, grime and UK drill in an intimate setting at Village Underground. Village Underground (Village Underground), June 4 2025, 8-8.40pm. TWST Informed by the likes of AG Cook and Charli xcx (who played her lead single from the TWST0002 (Upgraded) EP, 'Upgrade (Crook's System Update)' in a DJ set), twst is a hyperpop protégé ready for global domination. Growing up in rural Wales, they spent their early years working at their father's chicken factory. Eventually, twst swapped the countryside for supporting slots with MØ, interviews on BBC Radio 1 and writing with K-pop powerhouse record label, HYBE. Prepare for a dynamic live performance that's filled with glistening electronic flourishes and ethereal vocals. Jaguar Shoes (Main Room), June 6 2025, 10-10.35pm. Jasmine 4.t Manchester-based singer-songwriter Jasmine 4.t's debut album You Are The Morning was produced by US supergroup boygenius and received widespread critical praise upon its release earlier this year. The first UK act to be Phoebe Bridgers' Saddest Factory Records, Jasmine uses her music to shine a light on the saving graces of queer friendship and formative experiences of being a trans woman in this country. Her production methods span sorrowful string arrangements to ferocious guitar solos, all backed with intimate lyrics that make her an absolute must-see. 93 Feet East (Live Room), June 7 2025, 6-6.30pm. DJ Lo Down Loretta Brown aka Erykah Badu Performing as DJ Lo Down Loretta Brown, Erykah Badu will be performing alongside multi-instrumentalist Henry Lau on the House of R&B stage. Expect a cosmic blend of jazz, R&B, pop and experimental dance music closing the day of DJ Ace's carefully curated programme Everything R&B. This is an enticing and unusual way to catch the five-time Grammy winner in an intimate setting. Shoreditch Town Hall (Shoreditch Town Hall Stage), June 6 2025, 11-11.59pm. Film Chosen by Phil de Semlyen. The first ever SXSW London film programme offers a typically provocative, edgy and enticing array of movies, shorts and talks from the UK offshoot of the world-famous Austin arts festival. You'll find new films and new voices in its line-up – all of them exciting, all carefully curated to fit the new festival's ethos of discovery. There are two world premieres and 30 UK premieres at the festival – but plenty to look out for across the programme. Here's four films to look out for. The Life Of Chuck Love Stephen King? SXSW London is here for you with two new adaptations of the Maine horror legend's work. Alongside a serialisation of his 2019 sci-fi horror The Institute, a spiky sci-fi horror about telekinetic kids being experimented on in a mysterious facility, you'll find Mike Flanagan's (Doctor Sleep) take on this short story from the cheerier end of the King oeuvre. Tom Hiddleston plays an ordinary joe called Chuck Krantz who may hold the key to an impending apocalypse. Mark Hamill, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Karen Gillan co-star. June 7. Rich Mix Screen 1, 8.40pm-10.30pm and Curzon Hoxton Screen 1, 9.15pm-11.15pm. Stans The film strand of the festival kicks off with a sideways look at fan culture courtesy of Slim Shady himself, Eminem. The rapper co-produces a doc that turns the camera on fans and fan culture – from the enthusiasts to the obsessive stans – in a 'revealing, edgy, and disarmingly personal journey into the world of superfandom'. Its SXSW London world premiere should give the film programme a turbo-charged lift off. June 2. Barbican Centre, Cinema Screen 1, 6.30pm-8.55pm. June 5. Barbican Centre, Cinema Screen 1, 9.15pm-11pm. Queer as Punk One of the joys of any good film fest is the chance to dive into new cultures and learn a thing or two about what makes them tick. In the case of this raucous rock doc, it's raw, punk energy as embodied by queer Malay band Shh…Diam ('shut up'). It's a perceptive, empathetic and high-energy journey into what it's like to be trans and queer in a country where same-sex relationships remain illegal. Expect a music doc like no other as this unique four-piece lets rip. June 5. Rich Mix Screen 1, 8.30pm-10.23pm. June 7. Curzon Hoxton Screen 3, 2pm-3.38pm. Everyone Is Lying To You For Money Crypto bros come under the spotlight in The O.C. star-turned-filmmaker Ben McKenzie's cryptocurrency exposé, another SXSW London world premiere. Filmed over three years and spanning New York, London, Austin, El Salvador and Miami, it'll open your eyes to the shadowy corners of the crypto industry. McKenzie even tracks down big-name fraudsters like Sam Bankman-Fried and Alex Mashinsky to get the scoop on the dark side of crypto. Planning on investing your life's savings in Bitcoin? Book a ticket. June 6. Rich Mix Screen 1, 6pm-7.55pm. Cielo A British film shot entirely on location in Bolivia, Cielo offers SXSW-ers an upliftingly spiritual escape from the hubbub of London life and a passport into the clouds of the Andean altiplano. The movie tells the story of Santa (Fernanda Gutiérrez Aranda), an eight-year-old girl who must transport her body across the desert and closer to heaven. This'll be the film's UK premiere and director Alberto Sciamma and his lead actress will both be there for post-screening Q&As. June 6. Curzon Hoxton, 8.30pm. June 6. Curzon Hoxton screen 1, 8.30pm-10.42pm. June 7. Rich Mix screen 2, 3.10pm-5.22pm Talks and panels Idris Elba Award-winning actor and household name Idris Elba is one of SXSW London's headline conference speakers. The actor, who is also a musician, entrepreneur, anti-knife crime campaigner and rumoured future candidate for London's mayoralty, will be speaking in a talk named 'Creativity as Capital for Change'. He'll be talking about how creativity can be used as fuel for real economic and social transformation, as well as to 'challenge injustice and unlock new economic models'. If you can't get enough of Elba, he'll also feature in a Q&A alongside rappers Giggs and Nas after a showing of Meji Alabi's film Victory on Saturday (June 7). Idris Elba in Conversation. Creativity as Capital for Change: Truman Brewery (SXSW London Stage), June 4 2025, 4.45pm-5.30pm. Victory + Q&A. Shoreditch Town Hall (Shoreditch Town Hall Stage), June 7, 2025, 2pm-3.20pm. Dame Jane Goodall Dame Jane Goodall has spent over six decades studying chimpanzees, and at SXSW London she'll impart some of that wisdom upon lucky Londoners. What's more is that Dame Jane won't just be chatting chimps – the 91-year-old ethologist, conservationist and UN Messenger for Peace will be talking (with CNBC broadcaster Tania Bryer) about a wider range of topics including 'hope, humanity, and the future of our planet'. Couldn't be timelier and more essential, if you ask us. In conversation with Dr. Jane Goodall, DBE. Truman Brewery (SXSW London Stage), June 3 2025, 3.10pm-3.55pm. Bimini Former Time Out cover star Bimini Bon Boulash will host a live episode of podcast The Pieces with Bimini at SXSW London, with reality TV star Olivia Attwood (of Love Island and The Only Way is Essex) as their guest. Drag queen, author, recording artist and model Bimini's podcast is all about revealing the moments that shaped their guests' identities, and the live edition will be at Shoreditch Town Hall on Friday. The Pieces With Bimini. Shoreditch Town Hall (Shoreditch Town Hall Stage), June 6 2025, 12.05pm-12.35pm. Dina Asher-Smith Former world championship gold medal-winning runner Dina Asher-Smith will be joined by ELLE editor-in-chief Kenya Hunt to talk about the relationship between women in sport and luxury fashion. Asher-Smith, who is currently a contributing editor at ELLE and has been on the cover of the mag several times, will talk about the 'growing relationship between sport and luxury fashion', as well as delve into her career on and off the track. How The Power of Women in Sport is Influencing Luxury Fashion. Shoreditch Town Hall (Shoreditch Town Hall Stage), June 6 2025, 1.05pm-1.35pm. Various AI talks Still baffled by AI? Over its six days SXSW London will host some of the biggest cheeses in artificial intelligence, here to discuss how AI will impact stuff like videomaking, business, journalism and industry, as well as talk about AI ethics. Our picks? 'The AI Voice Revolution' with Mati Staniszewski (CEO of AI audio firm ElevenLabs), 'AI in 2030' with Azeem Azhar (founder of future-focusing newsletter Exponential View) and 'The Video Revolution' with Victor Riparbelli of AI video company Synthesia. The Video Revolution. Truman Brewery (SXSW London Stage), June 5 2025, 12.40pm-1.05pm. The AI Voice Revolution. Truman Brewery (SXSW London Stage), June 4, 2025, 11.45am-2.10pm. AI in 2030. Shoreditch Electric (Shoreditch Electric Stage), June 2, 2025, 10.15am-10.45am.


Daily Mail
31-05-2025
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Pete Tong on life as a legendary DJ: How the music star went from playing £100 sets in Kent villages to taking over the Royal Albert Hall
Despite his name being slang for things going wrong, it has all gone right for Pete Tong and his career. The veteran DJ, who over the years has become one of the biggest names in dance music, as well as being the BBC 's longest-serving DJ, started out by playing village halls in Kent and earning just £100 a set. Now, the 64-year-old has once again taken to the iconic stage at the Royal Albert Hall to perform his Ibiza Classics with Jules Buckley and the Essential Orchestra, as it celebrates its tenth anniversary. But life wasn't always big stages and crowds for Pete, as he shares with MailOnline how his first gig was at a school disco, where he performed for free and had to work a 'normal job' on the side. During an exclusive interview, Pete explained: 'The first time I ever played was a school disco, and I got paid nothing because I was learning how to do it. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'Then I rented a village hall. It was quite entrepreneurial looking back, and I stuck posters up around the village and did this party and ended up with £100 on the kitchen table. 'I was around 16-years-old at the time and that was quite a lot of money back then.' While finding his feet in the music industry, Pete worked at Blues & Soul magazine, before landing a day job as an A&R man at London Records. 'My way into raving was being the DJ. I was out a lot, looking back at my old diaries I was playing six or seven times a week, but I wasn't raving I was playing. I obviously did go to clubs occasionally,' he added. Pete grew up in Dartford alongside his father who was a bookie and mother who was a former publican. Despite neither of them being musicians, Pete's love for music started to show at a young age. He shared: I didn't come from a musical family, but my dad did collect a lot of records. It just became a hobby early on in my life, then became a passion and then a life. 'My parents told me I was attracted to music as a baby, banging things, strumming things. I got a toy drum kit and then a real drum kit and went from there.' Recalling the moment he knew he wanted to be a DJ, he said: 'I saw a school DJ and it changed my life. A humble DJ at a school disco and I thought, "that would be fun to do". Pete admits 'staying healthy and relevant' has been the biggest challenge throughout his career. 'I don't lose sleep over it, but certain opportunities come along and you kind of reinvent yourself in ways you never thought,' he says. 'The best example being right now with the orchestra. If you had asked me 20 years ago, "what are you going to do in 10 years, how can you take your career to a whole other level?" I can guarantee I wouldn't have said an orchestra. 'There's lots of different challenges but it is just making the most of the opportunities and being grateful.' Pete said it was also hard juggling his busy schedule with family life, but admits it was his kids who kept him grounded. He shares three children with his ex-wife Deborah. Their marriage broke down in 2003. Pete also has another child and two step-children with his second wife Carolina Acosta, who he married in 2006. The broadcaster explained: 'It is definitely a challenge, and you learn a lot along the way. It also keeps you really grounded, with that responsibility and that to go home to, and I would like to think that is a big reason why I'm still doing what I'm doing. 'When I started DJing, I made a decision early on that I would only do the bits I really wanted to do and loved. I didn't want to be on radio seven days a week and I didn't want to be gigging seven nights a week. 'I wanted to pick and choose, and so I kind of always had a day job when I first started, because DJing wasn't seen to be the be all and end all, and the money wasn't the same from when I started to what it is now so that created a more regular environment around my kids.' Now, Pete and Jules are celebrating a decade of their Ibiza Classics with a string of shows at London's iconic Royal Albert Hall. The pair first teamed up in 2015 to perform for BBC Proms, an annual summer series bringing daily classical music to the Royal Albert Hall, but have went on to tour Europe with the orchestra. Each of the four shows will feature unique programming, including appearances from guest vocalists Becky Hill, Jacob Lusk (Gabriels), Jazzy, Clementine Douglas, and Barbara Tucker. Guest DJs Seth Troxler, Damian Lazarus, David Morales, and Paul Oakenfold will also join the show. Speaking about returning to the Royal Albert Hall after ten years, he said: 'It is surreal and inspiring to come into such a historical place doing what we are doing. 'But it isn't a nightclub, so you treat it in a different way. We are all super excited to be back.' And fans will be thrilled to hear that Pete has no plans to stop after ten years: 'There was a time five years ago when we said we would probably end it if we made it to ten, but now we never want to end it!' Pete Tong Ibiza Classics is at the Royal Albert Hall, London, May 29 - June 1. The broadcaster is also due to bring his acclaimed show to six UK arenas in December 2025. Kicking off in Glasgow on December 4, the upcoming run of shows also includes stop-offs in Nottingham, Manchester, Leeds and Birmingham. The tour, which Pete describes as a 'giant mobile disco', will conclude with two gigs at The O2 in London on December 12 and 13.