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The other side of London in photographs — from David Bailey to garage raves

The other side of London in photographs — from David Bailey to garage raves

Times12-05-2025

In the late 1990s the raw power of London's nightlife was captured in a series of images by the photographer Ewen Spencer — at a time when house and garage music were evolving into something faster and more frenzied: 'speed garage'. As the tempo rose from 125 beats per minute to 145, Spencer caught dancers in euphoric poses at Sunday night parties called Twice as Nice, at The End nightclub in Bloomsbury.
Spencer is among more than 30 photographers whose images of the capital are celebrated at the tenth edition of the Photo London photography fair this week in a special London Lives exhibition. David Bailey's East End portraiture, Julia Fullerton-Batten's recreations of historical scenes along the Thames, Nick Turpin's steamy shots of night bus passengers, Nigel Shafran's portraits of teenage shoppers and many more will be on display.Photo London's London Lives is at the Embankment East and West Galleries of Somerset House from Thursday to Sunday

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Watch the moment overwhelmed husband wipes away tears after partner romps with another woman in Open House threesome
Watch the moment overwhelmed husband wipes away tears after partner romps with another woman in Open House threesome

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Watch the moment overwhelmed husband wipes away tears after partner romps with another woman in Open House threesome

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Alan Yentob's last interview to be broadcast on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer
Alan Yentob's last interview to be broadcast on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer

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timean hour ago

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Alan Yentob's last interview to be broadcast on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer

Alan Yentob's last interview, When Alan Yentob Met Jenny Saville, will be broadcast on Sunday 8 June on BBC Two and iPlayer. Jenny Saville is one of the most successful figurative painters working today, first coming to prominence as part of the YBA movement in the late 1980s and early 1990s. She has been reluctant to discuss her work for many years on television, until now. Alan Yentob was working with Jenny on a film for his imagine strand and earlier this year, they met in Vienna on the eve of two major exhibitions she is mounting. This was the last interview Alan Yentob conducted in a career spanning six decades at the BBC, bringing many of the world's leading artists and creatives to the screen. Alan also persuaded Jenny to allow cameras into her painting studio for the first time in almost three decades. Suzy Klein, Head of Arts and Classical Music TV says: 'Alan Yentob was a titan of arts broadcasting and a passionate supporter of so many of the leading creative artists of the last half century. His final interview, in conversation with Jenny Saville, is testament to his relentless curiosity and advocacy for the arts across many decades - part of a night dedicated to celebrating his work as a programme maker, channel controller and visionary television executive.' Jenny Saville says: 'Alan and I were beginning to work on a documentary about my paintings from across the years. It was an honour to know Alan, who I'd met in my early twenties and we reconnected to make this film.' When Alan Yentob Met Jenny Saville airs as part of a tribute night on Sunday on BBC Two and iPlayer alongside some of the legendary programme maker's best loved films, including imagine… Mel Brooks: Unwrapped, imagine… David Bowie: Cracked Actor, Salman Rushdie: Through a Glass Darkly, imagine… Diana Athill: Growing Old Disgracefully, imagine… Tom Stoppard: A Charmed Life, and Ella Fitzgerald at Ronnie Scott's, as well as Alan's iconic BBC Two idents, from 9.15pm. When Alan Yentob met Jenny Saville is a BBC Studios production for BBC Arts. The Producer / Director is John O'Rourke and the Executive Producer is Tanya Hudson. The commissioning editor for BBC Arts is Mark Bell. Watch When Alan Yentob met Jenny Saville on BBC iPlayer AM2

Glastonbury: Who are Patchwork and the festivals other secret stars?
Glastonbury: Who are Patchwork and the festivals other secret stars?

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Glastonbury: Who are Patchwork and the festivals other secret stars?

After the full Glastonbury timetable was published this week, one band's name was on everybody's lips. Except no-one knows who they actually have a prime place on the festival's line-up - third from the top of the bill on the main Pyramid Stage on the Saturday night. The only thing is, there's no band called a fake name for a mystery guest - just as an unknown band called The ChurnUps were on the Pyramid bill in 2023, and turned out to be the Foo immediately went into overdrive to try to work out Patchwork's identity - part of the frenzied guessing game surrounding the festival's "surprise" sets. Who are Patchwork? The main theories include:Pulp - The Britpop heroes, who stepped in to headline in 1995 (and did a secret set in 2011), have just released their first album for 24 years and have a gaping hole in their tour schedule around Glastonbury. Plus, eagle-eared fans noticed that keyboardist Candida Doyle talked in a BBC Radio 2 interview this week about her patchwork hobby. Their spokesman has said it's not them. But is that a bluff?? Likelihood rating: 9/10 but because of the official denial, actually 3/10Haim - The singing US sisters also have a new album and have a UK show in Margate on the Friday of Glastonbury weekend - so it would make sense. Plus fans have discovered that Patchwork is the name of an obscure 2011 German novel by author Sylvia Haim (no relation) and an obscure 2015 film about three young women. Conclusive?! 7/10Mumford and Sons - The 2013 headliners are also on the comeback trail, but if they're Patchwork some might think it a bit underwhelming. 6/10 Oasis - It would be a bit overwhelming if the Gallagher brothers returned to Glastonbury to reunite a week before their first official gig. But they have categorically ruled it out. 0.5/10Robbie Williams - He has a new album called Britpop with artwork using a photo him at Glastonbury in 1995. 5/10Oasis and Robbie Williams - The name Patchwork could suggest a supergroup, so how about the real reunion we've all been waiting for, after they famously partied together in 95? 1/10 that Robbie plays and Liam rocks up to shake a tambourine for one conclusion: I don't know. "Radiohead also are in the mix of rumours because they've been teasing some tour action," suggests music journalist and broadcaster Georgie Rogers, who was a judge for Glastonbury's emerging talent competition this year and is DJing at the festival."Or could Elton John be returning to do something with Brandi Carlile?" Sir Elton headlined in 2023, and Carlile, his collaborator on his last album, is on the Pyramid Stage bill on the same day as Patchwork. The Patchwork slot is just one of several tantalising gaps in this year's mystery Pyramid performer is listed as "TBA" for Friday afternoon, while the smaller Park and Woodsies stages - which have hosted secret sets by big names in the past - each have an empty space on the line-up."They're quite prominent sets, and they do tend to put in massive artists," says Rogers. Unfinished business One group of fans think they know who will fill those gaps."Of the four main slots, I think we've got three of them, maybe four, nailed down," says Ad, one of the people behind the Secretglasto social media account."I think it's definitely people who have got relationships with the festival who will be doing the big slots. An emotional return for one or two, I think. Some unfinished business." Ad doesn't say any more, but that could point to Lewis Capaldi, who struggled to finish his set in 2023 before announcing a break from touring to get his "mental and physical health in order". He made a tentative comeback last month, and would be a popular Del Rey also has unfinished business - her 2023 set was cut short after she breached the curfew. She's back on tour in the UK, with free days on the Friday and Sunday of Glastonbury stars who have been rumoured include Lady Gaga, who hasn't played Glastonbury since earlier this year what it would take for her to return to the festival, she replied: "Not much". Gaga has already played Coachella and been on tour this isn't on the bill either, but told BBC Radio 2's Jo Whiley this week she's "pretty keen" to be."The album's gonna be coming out right around that time," she said. "I am quite tempted by what's going on because I've got lots of friends playing as well. We'll see if I can pull some strings and get there." The Secretglasto team have gathered and posted information about secret sets for more than a decade, and interest in their tips has gone "a bit crazy" in recent - who doesn't want to give his full name - says they have built up a network of reliable sources. "We've got loads of contacts at different stages and record labels and whatever else. And people trust us to be sensible with the information," he says."And the bands themselves don't want empty secret sets do they? So we have had occasions where they have come to us."The six people who work on the account aren't music industry insiders themselves. Another team member, JB, says they sometimes approach acts directly to seek confirmation. Hype machine "Now that we've been around for 10 years and have a decent bit of clout, we will contact some of the artists via their inboxes, and quite often they're happy to confirm."Sometimes they don't. Sometimes they block us. But generally we're able to piece all that together fairly quickly."He adds: "By the time the gates open, there aren't many things we don't know."In the past couple of years, some acts have begun harnessing the buzz about secret sets for PR purposes for their album or tour, Ad believes."It used to just be friends of the festival, whereas now people are like, 'If we do the secret set we're going to get loads of hype and media attention'." Ad was among the lucky few to see Lady Gaga play an after-hours set in Club Dada following her main appearance as her career was taking off in 2009."She did three or four hits and then disappeared," he recalls."Because the phone signal was so bad, you couldn't ring or text your mate to let them know. So only the people who happened to be there got to experience it, which was a few hundred."I'm surprised she hasn't come back. Yet."That was one of the more exclusive secret sets in Glastonbury history. Others draw huge crowds when the word gets out - which it usually was in the right place when she a rumour swept the site that Radiohead would play in 2011."We were over that side of the festival anyway, so on a wing and a prayer, just in case it was true, we dashed over to the Park Stage in good time, and we got pretty close to the stage," she says."There are reports that it was the biggest crowd on the Park Stage for a secret set ever. I'd waited my whole life to see Radiohead live, and then suddenly here we are, and they did this amazing set."As my first ever time seeing them, and being in prime position, and it being a genuine surprise - it was just pure glee. I was just so happy, and I couldn't believe it." Secret sets have been a feature of the festival for 1992, the line-up poster wasn't topped by a star name but the promise of "a special guest that we can't announce". That turned out to be Welsh pop stallion Tom Glastonbury's greatest ever secret set didn't happen at the festival at 1995, indie gods The Stone Roses pulled out of headlining after guitarist John Squire broke his by the time organiser Michael Eavis threw his annual low-key autumn gig in the local village to thank residents for putting up with the main event, Squire was back in the band played their first UK gig for five years in a marquee on a Somerset playing field to a couple of thousand lucky still haven't appeared at the festival itself, business? Tick. Emotional return? Tick! Could Patchwork in fact be The Stone Roses making a long-awaited and triumphant appearance?Who cares if the likelihood rating is -100/10. Add them to the list!

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