• St Andrews Sands: Part Eleven

    As we know all too well, as lovable and quaint as St Andrews is, there come moments where not even the sight of the never-ending North Sea can alleviate the feeling that we’re being held hostage within the town’s three streets. Here’s a thought: imagine if you were stranded on the sands of St Andrews..? [continued]

  • Jimmy Edgar: I Am Me

    Jimmy Edgar: I Am Me

    Musical wizard, fashion photographer, designer and visual artist Jimmy Edgar can hold deep conversations on a whole range of topics. His multifaceted musical style, which spans from everything techno to electro, from funk to house is filtered through the metaphysical prism of his fascination with the supernatural and meditation. Edgar is not a stranger to [continued]

  • Album Review: Chromeo

    The eighties are forever eternal. Recycled through popular culture, we pine over the John Hughes movies, we secretly long for the touch of fluorescent polyester and the reassuring nostalgia of decades past. But what of the music? For too long we’ve shunned the synths and stadium drum sounds of our parents’ generation, shelved them somewhere [continued]

  • An Homage to DJ Rashad

    An Homage to DJ Rashad

    On April 26th, 2014, music lost a legend. The 34-year-old footwork pioneer DJ Rashad passed away in his Chicago home, and with his death, the music world was shaken. [continued]

  • Ryan Hemsworth: Lover of Scotland

    Ryan Hemsworth: Lover of Scotland

    After 25 minutes of wandering around the Cowgate area in Edinburgh and several profuse apologies, I finally found the very tall Ryan Hemsworth (see below). I greeted him with a hug and presented him with cupcakes to celebrate his 24th birthday, launching into a chat about his secluded hotel, as well as his journey to… [continued]

  • MoeLogo and The Rise Of Afrobeats

    Afrobeats is a genre on the come up. The past few years have been phenomenal for a genre which has only just started to be noticed in the UK. From an unknown, niche music genre found only in underground clubs and on pirate radios, Afrobeats is now hitting the mainstream. [continued]

  • Duke Dumont at May Ball

    While both Duke Dumont’s set on the night and May Ball entertained their guests, just as Duke Dumont played a set as a warm-up for an event in Edinburgh one might view May Ball as a preliminary charade to next year’s social structuring. [continued]

  • St Andrews Sands: Part Ten

    As we know all too well, as lovable and quaint as St Andrews is, there come moments where not even the sight of the never-ending North Sea can alleviate the feeling that we’re being held hostage within the town’s three streets. [continued]

  • Album Review: ‘Indie Cindy,’ Pixies

    ‘Indie Cindy’ is fantastic because Pixies are fantastic but even as their biggest fan and even as someone who thoroughly enjoyed their first album in twenty years and who accepted the changes in their sound, it would be ignorant to brush over the obvious point that there are points on this album where some tracks… [continued]

  • St Andrews Sands: Part Nine

    As we know all too well, as lovable and quaint as St Andrews is, there come moments where not even the sight of the never-ending North Sea can alleviate the feeling that we’re being held hostage within the town’s three streets. [continued]