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Ivor Novello Awards 2025: Charli XCX, U2 and Robbie Williams win big

Ivor Novello Awards 2025: Charli XCX, U2 and Robbie Williams win big

Euronews23-05-2025

This year's Ivor Novello Awards marks its 70th year of celebrating outstanding achievements in the field of songwriting and composition.
2025's ceremony, held last night at Grosvenor House in London, saw 22 songwriters and composers collecting awards over 14 categories, with over 70% of winners being first-timers.
Charli XCX, Lola Young, Self Esteem, U2 and Robbie Williams were among the winners.
Check out the full list below.
Charli XCX was named Songwriter of the Year. Her album 'Brat', which featured in Euronews Culture's Best Albums of 2024, was praised for its global and cultural impact.
"I'm sure you all agree, I am hardly Bob Dylan," she joked to an audience that included Bruce Springsteen, "but one thing I certainly do is commit to the bit".
Berwyn won his first Ivor Novello, taking home the award for Best Album. The judges commended his album 'Who Am I''s 'vivid storytelling that transcends generations, race and social differences, offering a voice to those often unseen by society'.
Lola Young received the Rising Star Award, Self Esteem took home the Visionary Award, and Raffertie won Best Original Film Score for their work on the soundtrack from the Oscar-winning film The Substance.
Check out our interview with Coralie Fargeat, the director of The Substance.
Elsewhere, winners include Orla Gartland (Best Song Musically And Lyrically), Sans Soucis (Best Contemporary Song), Robbie Williams (Music Icon) and U2 (Academy Fellowship).
U2 became the first Irish band to win the Ivor Novello fellowship, with the award recognising almost 50 years of hits, including 'Sunday Bloody Sunday', 'I Will Follow', 'With Or Without You' and 'One'.
Speaking on stage, Bono paid tribute to the power of music. "Songs can be arrows through time if they come from the right place," he said. "They can fly higher and farther, last longer, hit harder. They can pierce the hardest armour of the human heart. I don't know if they can change the world, but they changed us."
Here are the Ivor Novello 2025 winners in full:

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Sex, sleaze and subversion: Inside London's new grindhouse cinema
Sex, sleaze and subversion: Inside London's new grindhouse cinema

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Sex, sleaze and subversion: Inside London's new grindhouse cinema

On an unassuming street in central London, a red-painted building peeks at passersby — its facade plastered with a close-up of The Man with the X-Ray Eyes. Inside, I'm watching Ruggero Deodato's The Washing Machine, an Italian murder mystery involving psychosexual mind games, fridge fornication, and bleeding appliances. It's the kind of filmic fever dream only The Nickel would dare to screen: a new micro cinema in London founded by filmmaker and programmer Dominic Hicks. Imbued with the frenetic spirit and sleazy charm of retro American grindhouse theatres, it's a shrine to the deranged gems of exploitation cinema: gritty, boundary-pushing B-movies. Or as Hicks puts it: 'A safe place for weirdos and outsiders.' June's inaugural screenings include everything from Todd Browning's silent horror The Unknown, to Roman Polanski's erotic thriller Bitter Moon, to David Winters' Cannes-set giallo The Last Horror Film. 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Before raising nearly £14,000 (€16,640) for its permanent space, Hicks ran The Nickel as an event programme for his local pub and The Cinema Museum. Much of what he shared was on rare 16mm prints, tapping into the sensory ambience of physical formats. Similar to the revival of vinyl, the crackle and click of film reels have become a way for people to connect with art more tangibly. 'You can't come close to the aesthetic experience of watching an original film print being projected in public when you're streaming things digitally,' Hicks says, citing one magical moment at The Cinema Museum when the projector got stuck and burned a film print: 'Everybody was just delighted. It was like we'd seen a shooting star.' Though The Nickel is still under construction when I visit, the vibe already feels special. Obscure physical media lines the entrance's shelves, their lurid covers begging to be fondled. 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Iran summons French diplomat over praise of Palme d'Or-winning film
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Euronews

time4 days ago

  • Euronews

Iran summons French diplomat over praise of Palme d'Or-winning film

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When Sebastião Salgado explained his 'Genesis' to Euronews Culture
When Sebastião Salgado explained his 'Genesis' to Euronews Culture

Euronews

time24-05-2025

  • Euronews

When Sebastião Salgado explained his 'Genesis' to Euronews Culture

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