All posts tagged: playful

‘We did a seance for Beethoven, to see what he thought’: the playful, pioneering life of field-recording maestro Annea Lockwood | Experimental music

‘We did a seance for Beethoven, to see what he thought’: the playful, pioneering life of field-recording maestro Annea Lockwood | Experimental music

A broken upright piano, tilted like the sinking Titanic, stands part-buried in a garden at Glasgow’s Counterflows festival. Experimental composer Annea Lockwood swipes a hand across its exposed strings and beams at the metallic clang. “Great piano!” she says, inviting other musicians and the audience to make their own strange noises by scratching and tapping it with garden debris. It’s one of many pianos Lockwood, 86, has buried, burned or drowned since the 1960s, exploring their changing sounds as they are destroyed – though she says “transformed”. A pioneer of field recordings, her work has ranged from “sound maps” of entire rivers to music made with the peace walls demarcating areas of mid-Troubles Belfast. As she revisits two significant works at Counterflows and prepares a new release of 1975’s World Rhythms, she takes me through her radical career from the very start. Annea Lockwood in October 1968. In the background, a burning piano from which Lockwood is making a live recording. Photograph: C Maher/Getty Images In her hotel, she laughs as we watch a 1966 …

A Midsummer Night’s Dream review – a playful, punchy Shakespeare romcom made easy | Children’s theatre

A Midsummer Night’s Dream review – a playful, punchy Shakespeare romcom made easy | Children’s theatre

How to make Shakespeare accessible to a young audience? Cut out the tricky bits or throw them headfirst into the original? Co-directors Rachel Bagshaw and Robin Belfield have gone for a bit of both. This is a tightly trimmed version of the Bard’s romantic comedy with the original language intact. Playful captions have been fully integrated into the design and slapstick comedy woven throughout. It’s fun in fits and starts, although, like so many of the characters in this woozily magical play, it feels caught between two worlds. This is the Unicorn’s first major co-production with the RSC and it feels like the start of a brilliant venture, still finding its feet. Belfield’s editing is smart but could have been more radical. The framing story in Athens – lots of complicated business with dukes and betrothals – has been cut down but not excised, which only makes it harder to understand. The magical elements are kept low-key and gently engaging. Titania’s fairies are conjured up using childlike voiceovers, Holly Khan’s delicate soundscape and Will Monks’ …

A Playful Chronicle of a Faked Pregnancy

A Playful Chronicle of a Faked Pregnancy

Following her justly acclaimed documentaries (The Mole Agent, The Eternal Memory) that play like dramas and a scripted feature inspired by actual events (In Her Place), Chilean director Maite Alberdi continues to blur, smudge and gleefully mess with the lines between fiction and fact in her latest, the by-turns highly comical and then suddenly moving A Child of My Own (Un hijo propio). Revolving around a news story from the early 2000s that brings Alberdi north of the equator for her first Mexican-set feature, Child layers interviews with the actual participants in this strange tale with a scripted and performed re-enactment of the events. But don’t worry, this is nothing like the tacky reconstructions one often sees in made-for-TV docs to break up the monotony of talking heads telling the story, thanks in part to Alberdi’s deft narrative footwork. It helps that the cast is led by the immensely engaging Ana Celeste Montalvo Peña, who stars as Alejandra, a young hospital administrator who fakes a pregnancy and takes drastic measures to assuage her intense maternal …

Duchess Sophie dons ‘playful’ sheer dress for special occasion

Duchess Sophie dons ‘playful’ sheer dress for special occasion

Duchess Sophie never misses in the style stakes. From statement wide-legged trousers to daring animal print, the wife of Prince Edward always looks brilliant, and tonight was no exception. The Duchess of Edinburgh joined King Charles and Queen Camilla for a reception at Windsor Castle to honour carers across the UK, alongside Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife, Victoria Starmer. For the emotional event, Duchess Sophie opted to wear a timeless monochrome polka dot dress with sheer sleeves – and it isn’t the first time she’s slipped into the patterned number. © Getty ImagesDuchess Sophie first wore the dress in 2021 Back in 2021, Duchess Sophie wore the Carolina Herrera dress to an event at Hillsborough Castle in honour of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association’s 50th Annual British Isle and Mediterranean Region Conference (BIMR). Back then, she swept her blonde hair into an updo, but for the Windsor Castle reception, the 61-year-old wore her hair loose around her shoulders, adding subtle jewelled earrings and a matching necklace. © Getty ImagesDuchess Sophie’s dress is playful Feeling playful …

A$AP Rocky: Don’t Be Dumb review – a charismatic, playful return, but it’s no slam dunk | A$AP Rocky

A$AP Rocky: Don’t Be Dumb review – a charismatic, playful return, but it’s no slam dunk | A$AP Rocky

It has been eight years since A$AP Rocky, once and future king of New York rap, released an album. In the world of hip-hop, where even A-list stars such as Rocky’s friend and collaborator Tyler, the Creator are prone to releasing multiple albums a year, this is a lifetime. In the time since Rocky released his third album, 2018’s Testing, Kanye West has rebranded as a born-again Christian, swerved to the right and released five albums. Rocky hasn’t been sitting around: he’s been a press mainstay, thanks to his relationship with pop superstar Rihanna, with whom he now has three children, and last year was acquitted of firing a gun at a former friend, dodging up to 24 years in prison. He has also found acclaim as an actor, starring opposite Rose Byrne in the lauded dark comedy If I Had Legs I’d Kick You and Denzel Washington in Spike Lee’s Highest 2 Lowest. The artwork for Don’t Be Dumb. Photograph: Publicity image Aside from a few one-off singles, such as the Tame Impala collaboration …