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Issue 255

Invasion of the body stingers! Machumans! Compu-biology! A suigenocidal nuclear apocalypse! Solar superstorms! No, it's no film (although it may have made for a much-needed hit for Harvey Weinstein); we're living the sci-fi dream, baby! Sweet NASA, next we'll be frickin' mating with aliens! First stop: jump aboard Branson's intergalactic Love Plane, next move txt ur m8s to come too, then take a leaf out of the book of dipsomaniacal shrews and get all bacchanalian on board (make sure you avoid having a coke stroke though) and beckon seductively, with one hand, to other-worldly call girls using a #1 foam hand, while waving goodbye to the global freshwater crisis, the US' war on terror, the war on drugs, 24/7 secret surveillance, radical fundamentalism (nay Gulenism) and juvenile gay hate crimes!

From sci-fi to something more high brow (yeah, we can do both these days -- it's part of the cultural evolution, one eye on Batman the other on Balzac's love letters). How about reading about an Amis, musing on Edward Said's music recommendations and Ray Bradbury's thoughts on literature and love, or checking out a sporno star -- oops, sorry, back to the low brow, how strangely the brain works! OK, so, we'll have a cup of clover coffee and start over. In mixed-brow news, Tate Modern and MoMA play celebrity death match. Valentino chats about his culture crush on Richard Prince and Kay Saatchi sticks two fingers to Nigella. Pre-Olympics, China's art scene is booming. Nazi chic is investigated and functional sculpture is poopooed. Damian Hirst will use Sotheby's as a market stall and Avril Lavigne makes $1 million from YouTube downloads. The shortlist for the first World Building Of The Year award has just been announced. Whispers abound of a music download tax as vinyl's stocks shoot up, although those of rock 'n' roll tours go down. Goldman Sachs takes over the world, the super rich use their art collections as collateral while foreign investors buy up metropolitan landmarks. While it's still British, the British Museum thinks of expanding.

Aaah. News bulletins: tiring stuff to take in -- it's summer for Pete's sake, and time to bunk off for our August break. We're back on September 17th, and our fantasy holiday includes wandering through Robert Irwin's Getty Gardens, boating about in Venice at the film festival and nipping to Kuwait's City of Silk -- what we won't be dreaming about is wearing Zaha Hadid's shoes on either John Pawson's or Norman Foster's yachts. So there.

Finally, our header/photo essay is by French street artist Blek le Rat. Tonight he gives a free talk at Tate Modern on the history of the movement.

Headlines

Architecture: Rosemary Hill: Augustus Pugin; John Gray + Hari Kunzru

Art: Vilhelm Hammershoi; Mat Collishaw; Chantal Ackerman + Anya Gallaccio; Cy Twombly; Ben Turnbull; Blek le Rat + Rough; Shimabuku; Fashion In The Mirror

Classical Music: Prom 40: Boulez - Janacek; Prom 20 + 21: Stockhausen; Prom 64: Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Wagner + Messiaen

Club: Thomas Bullock...; Simian Mobile Disco + Egyptian Lover + Shit Robot...; Freeform Five + Little Boots + Jona...; The Bug + Flying Lotus (live) + Kode9...; Swayzak...; Stevie Kotey + Toby Tobias + Danny Clark...

Concert: Santogold; Hauschka + Dustin O'Halloran; Polar Bear; Wire; Matthew Herbert Big Band

Dance: Matthew Bourne: Dorian Gray

Design: Sam Hecht (Industrial Facility)

DJ: Thomas Bullock...; Simian Mobile Disco + Egyptian Lover + Shit Robot...; Freeform Five + Little Boots + Jona...; The Bug + Flying Lotus (live) + Kode9...; Swayzak...; Stevie Kotey + Toby Tobias + Danny Clark...

Fashion: Fashion In The Mirror

Festival: Publish And Be Damned; LIAF 2008; The Opera Festival

Film: Chantal Ackerman + Anya Gallaccio; Sakuran; El bano del Papa; Somers Town; Man On Wire; 8 1/2 + Dr Strangelove...; Baltasar Kormakur: Jar City; Two-Lane Blacktop + C'etait un rendez-vous; LIAF 2008

Jazz: Polar Bear

Opera: The Opera Festival

Q&A: Baltasar Kormakur: Jar City

Retrospective: Vilhelm Hammershoi; Cy Twombly

Talk: Prom 40: Boulez - Janacek; Prom 20 + 21: Stockhausen; Prom 64: Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Wagner + Messiaen; Rosemary Hill: Augustus Pugin; Blek le Rat + Rough; John Gray + Hari Kunzru; Blackwater: The New Mercenaries (with Jeremy Scahill...); Sam Hecht (Industrial Facility); Alain de Botton + George Soros

Theatre: Robert Lepage: Lipsynch

Artworker: Pipilotti Rist

 
FRIDAY 1 AUGUST
Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue        Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

FILM MAN ON WIRE

Ends Tuesday 1 July

various cinemas across London
check press for times and ticket prices

Part heist movie, part tense docudrama, part luminous flight of fancy, Man On Wire is an extraordinary feat. It tells how, after reading an article in 1968 about the construction of the World Trade Centre, high wire acrobat and single-minded fantasist Philippe Petit set out on a six-year course to dance between the two towers (which he did for 45 minutes), on nothing but 3/4 inch of metal wire between him and a 110 story drop. Recreated scenes of the "heist" in action, spliced with both archive footage of Petit and his compatriots plotting, and of the team today as they reflect upon the poetry of the crime, make for a cripplingly tense, awesomely audacious and breathtakingly beautiful film, the like of which has never really been seen. Cast in the shadow of 9/11, the film makes no reference to the destruction of the towers, but the unspoken narrative about the loss of innocence since that day reverberates with heavy melancholy.

NB: Man On Wire is released in London on 01/08. Other new films of note are El bano del Papa (01/08), Jar City (12/08), Somers Town (22/08), Ben X (29/08) and Sakuran (29/08).

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ART / TALK BLEK LE RAT + ROUGH

Tate Modern

Friday 1 August [6:30pm]

Bankside, SE1 T:020.7887.8888 Tube: Southwark/Blackfriars
FREE

Once upon a time in a land before Banksy, there was another rat who scrawled on the walls of Europe. Blek le Rat was the scourge of many a city in the 1980s, having been inspired by the New York scene in the late '70s. He brought a little bit of US urban cool back to Europe and mixed it with a slice of Italian Fascism for good measure, adopting the stenciled image as his medium, itself borrowed from an Italian trend under Mussolini. The walls of Paris were his first canvas and muse, and where he learnt to respond to the political and social resonances of the city and its limits. Le Rat represents the once anarchic gesture embodied in grafitti art and the street. He joins his UK counterpart, Rough, to discuss street art now and then.

NB: this event is free but seated on a first-come, first-served basis. Also of note at Tate Modern is the free Graffiti: Utopia Or A Bit Boring? talk with Ben Lewis and on 15/08 (6:30pm). Both talks have been programmed in conjunction with Tate's Street Art exhibition which runs till 25/08.

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ARCHITECTURE / TALK JOHN GRAY + HARI KUNZRU

Serpentine

Friday 1 August [7pm]

Kensington Gardens, W2 T:020 7298 1515 Tube: Knightsbridge/Lancaster Gate
general £5 | concessions £4

Soaring timber, garden parties, a flock of butterflies and a military catapult by Leonardo da Vinci: these make up the symphony of ideas behind Frank Gehry's temporary structure for the Serpentine. This year the pavilion will play host to some serious intellectual postulating from John Gray and Hari Kunzru. This promises to be a meeting of fascinating and vibrant minds, if not opinions. Gray, renowned for his conservative scepticism of global capitalism, is an Oxford-educated philosopher, who has never been afraid of the big themes. Faith, globalisation, the state and fundamentalism have all met with the sincere, Gray treatment. Writer and journalist Kunzru occupies the space of the "hot young thing" in literary circles. With three successful novels under his belt, and a wealth of prizes to his name, Kunzru has also written for Wallpaper* and as travel journalist for the Guardian and Time Out.

NB: Frank Gehry's Pavilion will on view till 19/10. Throughout August and September the pavilion will play host to the Serpentine's Park Nights series of events.

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CLUB / DJ SIMIAN MOBILE DISCO + EGYPTIAN LOVER + SHIT ROBOT...

Fabric

Friday 1 August [10pm - 6am]

77A Charterhouse St., EC1 T:020.7344.4444 Tube: Farringdon
general £13 | concessions £10

A DeLorean might be the quickest way back to Los Angeles circa 1985 but Egyptian Lover's bulging synths and anarchic beats will get you there too. Anyone who needed a reminder of what the term electro used to mean will get it from the big man, jetted in by Simian Mobile Disco, two of the most unashamed music geeks who revel in the history of analogue noise. The excuse? The Simians are joining the illustrious Fabric Live series. If you're only familiar with the singles it will surprise and refresh: they mesh old hands Metro Area with members of the new class of European disco-bleep enthusiasts like Discodeine (featuring the re-edit maestro Pilooski), Smith N Hack and Mancunian girlie group Sisters Of Transistors. The Sisters also appear, as does DFA darling Shit Robot, who provide another sterling example of the label's stripped-back funk that never quite seems to tire.

NB: on 23/08 you can also catch Metro Area at Frabric.

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SATURDAY 2 AUGUST
Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue        Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

CLASSICAL MUSIC / TALK PROM 20 + 21: STOCKHAUSEN

Royal Albert Hall

Saturday 2 August [Prom 20 - 6pm / Prom 21 - 10:15pm]

Kensington Gore, SW7 T:020.7589.8212 Tube: South Kensington
£6 - £35 / £10 - £15

Famously included in Sgt Pepper's hall of fame, and an inspiration to musicians as popular as Bjork, Stockhausen was one of a generation of post-war composers who brought the "new music" of Schoenberg and Webern into the electronic age -- not simply creating new music, but also entirely new sounds. In celebration of the composer, who died last December, these two concerts explore Stockhausen's continuing presence with three early works and two premieres. In the first concert, the massive orchestral piece Gruppen, in which three ensembles perform around the audience, and Kontakte, which explores relations between traditional percussive and electronic sounds, are juxtaposed with two new works from the monumental sequence Klang, including the world premiere of a BBC commission for solo trumpet. In the second concert, Stockhausen's extraordinary Stimmung presents six singers with each voice modulated by live electronics. Not to be missed.

NB: at 4:15pm before both concerts catch a talk centred around the works being performed with Paul Hillier, Morag Grant, Robin Rimbaud, Robert Worby and Ivan Hewitt. The Prom season runs till 13/09. Other dates of note are Prom 40 (15/08) and Prom 64 (02/09).

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CLUB / DJ THOMAS BULLOCK...

Secret Location, E8

Saturday 2 August [10pm - late]


£8 (before 12am) £12 (after)

He's probably not a household name these days or outside the disco universe, but Thomas Bullock can boast having worked the scene alongside the legendary Harvey in the Tonka Soundsystem during the '80s, masterminded Rub N Tug with Eric Duncan and even pioneering electroclash in A.R.E. Weapons. For the uninitiated, his laddish, always unpredictable style tends to mix elements of psychedelic, Balearic and disco house but with a rare touch of obscurity and character. A relatively rare visitor here since bedding down with the San Francisco clique of experimental house DJs, he was feasting on obscure treasures from record crates at a time when most of the current crop of disco revivalists were still on a diet of breast milk. It's the biggest coup yet for the tykes at Disco Bloodbath, who are bound to provide a crowd brimming with all the enthusiasm this particular guest deserves.

NB: on 23/08 be sure to catch Metro Area at Frabric.

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CLUB / DJ THE BUG + FLYING LOTUS (LIVE) + KODE9...

3rd Base

Saturday 2 August [10pm - late]

St Mathews Church, Brixton, SW2 T:020.7738.7875 Tube: Brixton
£10

The Bug, aka Kevin Martin, is in many senses an accidental exponent of the dubstep phenomenon. Having started out making Tapping The Conversation alongside DJ Vadim, he has exhibited enthusiasm for all things audibly extreme and intense by experimenting with harsh ragga, noise and techno. But his recent trajectory into the scene began with the more ambient, dub-flavoured Pressure, regarded by many as proto dubstep: Martin himself says it was a subsequent interview with Kode9 that proved to be his formal induction. In case you're wondering, Kode9 is boss of the revered Hyperdub label, which started with Burial's first 12" and still retains the services of dubstep's biggest crossover to date. Don't be surprised to see a stack of MCs at this one, including long-time Kode9 collaborator Spaceape. The flipside comes from Californian hip-hop curiosity Flying Lotus (known for his live-sets), who, like any Warp-signed artist, promises a dose of serious experimentalism.

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SUNDAY 3 AUGUST
Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue        Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

FESTIVAL PUBLISH AND BE DAMNED

Rochelle School

Sunday 3 August [12 - 6pm]

Arnold Circus, E2 T:020.7033.3539 Tube: Old St./Liverpool St.
FREE

It's hard to believe that Publish And Be Damned, the essential annual platform for self- publishers everywhere, began five years ago as a one-off networking event for east-end writers, artists and musicians. The focus of the fair remains on the innovative ways these producers are making and operating beyond the commercial mainstream: from the old- school 'zine approach of Savage Messiah (an irreverent comic book journey through local London politics), to the archival resources of the former Copenhagen Free University -- an artist-run "institution" based in Denmark. This year, however, the organisers have widened the brief to include a showcase of special projects contributing to "independent culture". LA shop/event site Ooga Booga will present American artists' publications, while the capital's arts radio station Resonance FM plan to produce a downloadable audio and literary anthology (compiled from material relating to the event) within 24 hours of the fair's close.

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MONDAY 4 AUGUST
Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue        Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

FILM EL BANO DEL PAPA

Monday 4 August

various cinemas across London
check press for times and ticket prices

When big events are planned for deprived areas (Olympics 2012, anyone?) a rush of entrepreneurial spirit can't be far behind. The possibility for a wee windfall when the big break comes inevitably means an abundance of half-baked plans to become an instant mogul. In this Uruguayan film, Pope John Paul's 1988 visit to a poor border town sparks optimistic frenzy among the shanty dwellers. As his neighbours temporarily bankrupt themselves getting in chorizo, candyfloss machines and mass-baking quiches for the expected hoards (an estimated 30,000 - 50,000), Beto hatches a unique and cunning plan: the Pope's Toilet. All those people are going to need to "spend a penny" after all those treats -- Beto will build a loo and his future will be secured. A mix of actors and local people, a shabby town, loyal and supportive relationships and a philosophical approach turns what could have been a tragedy into a great blend of humour and pathos.

NB: El bano del Papa is released in London 01/08. Other new films of note are Man On Wire (01/08), Jar City (12/08), Somers Town (22/08), Ben X (29/08) and Sakuran (29/08).

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TUESDAY 5 AUGUST
Fri | Sat | Sun | Mon | Tue        Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

FILM 8 1/2 + DR STRANGELOVE...

Somerset House

Tuesday 5 August [31/07 till 09/08]

Strand, WC2 T:020.7845.4600 Tube: Temple
£12.50 (per film) £15 (double bill)

This week, Somerset House opens up its fountain court for a series of open-air film events, ideal for film fans wanting to relive those al fresco scenes from Cinema Paradiso. And with the warm weather set to continue, you might even be able to persuade yourself you're in Italy. An eclectic mix of cinematic treats is on offer, as tickets remain for screenings of Brokeback Mountain, allowing you to see Heath Ledger on the big screen in a more nuanced and less terrifying guise than The Joker; O Brother Where Art Thou?; The Elephant Man/Wild At Heart; and Fellini's 8 1/2. Also getting an airing is Kubrick's Dr Strangelove. It's the silly season, but international crises don't stop -- which is why this hilarious dissection of Cold War politics, with Peter Sellers brilliantly playing a variety of roles, is as relevant, charming and alarming as ever. Nuclear bombs exploding to the sounds of Vera Lynn on a balmy summer's evening? Perfect.

NB: the Film4 Summer Screen season runs from 31/07 till 09/08. For more outdoor cinema viewing make sure you go to the Serpentine Gallery on 15/08 and 16/08.

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WEEK 2    07/08 to 13/08
Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

CLUB / DJ STEVIE KOTEY + TOBY TOBIAS + DANNY CLARK...

Visions Video Bar

Saturday 9 August [9pm - 6am]

588 Kingsland Rd., E8 T:020.7275.7520 Tube: Dalston
£7

It's been a good year for mirror-ball makers, with recent reports suggesting that by September, there will be more discoballs than tax payers in Dalston alone. This weekend sees Late Night Audio and Electric Minds take their turn on the disco carousel with an all-night session at the infamous Visions Night Club where they've assembled a line-up that includes sometime Chicken Lips member and full time Bear Funk entertainer Stevie Kotey, Rekids' Toby Tobias, Danny Clark from Late Night Audio and Dolan Bergin from Electric Minds. If you've spent anytime at the record bar in places like Phonica recently, it's a sure bet you've been lining their pockets already, with Electric Minds on a bit of a roll with some amazing 12"s from the likes of Chaz Jankel and Gatto Fritto all finding their way into smart DJs record boxes in recent months. Super fun, guaranteed.

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FILM / Q&A BALTASAR KORMAKUR: JAR CITY

Curzon Soho

Tuesday 12 August [6:30pm]

93-107 Shaftesbury Ave., W1 T:0871.703.3988 Tube: Leicester Sq./Piccadilly
general £12 | concessions £9

Not so much a thriller as a police drama -- a genre we tend to associate more with the small screen -- Jar City weaves a complex knot of seamy characters and savage undercurrents to tell the story (based on the bestselling novel by Icelandic crime writer Arnaldur Indridason) of a series of intertwined deaths in suburban Iceland. Linking the deaths of two young girls decades apart, a missing gangster, an unsolved rape and a bloody murder, the film follows a web of characters as they piece together the truth. Named for the forensics lab where organs and corpses are preserved for examination, Jar City is moodily shot and sardonically written, but almost more engaging than the story line itself are the details that reveal Icelandic colloquialisms and quirks -- a dry humour and some stomach-twisting local delicacies paint an intriguing picture of life on the island.

NB: catch director Baltasar Kormakur in for Q&A after the screening. Jar City is released in London on 12/09. Other new films of note are Man On Wire (01/08), El bano del Papa (01/08), Somers Town (22/08) and Sakuran (29/08).

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WEEK 3    14/08 to 20/08
Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

CLASSICAL MUSIC / TALK PROM 40: BOULEZ - JANACEK

Royal Albert Hall

Friday 15 August [film - 1pm / talk - 5:45pm / concert - 7:30pm]

Kensington Gore, SW7 T:020.7589.8212 Tube: South Kensington
£6 - £35

Pierre Boulez is perhaps as renowned today as a conductor of revelatory performances of other composers' work as the composer himself of works that have helped redefine music in the post-war period. In what promises to be a magnificent concert, he presents an all-Leos Janacek programme, with the popular Sinfonietta (instantly recognisable from its compelling masses of brass sounds), and the rarely performed Concertino (for piano and orchestra), in the first half; and the monumental Glagolitic Mass, restored to its original performing version, in the second (with Simon Preston as organist). Boulez has only recently turned his attention to Janacek and before the concert, at the Royal College Of Music, there is also a great opportunity to hear him talk about the composer with the Proms Director Roger Wright.

NB: the Prom season runs till 13/09. Other dates of note are Prom 20 + 21 (02/08) and Prom 64 (02/09).

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FILM TWO-LANE BLACKTOP + C'ETAIT UN RENDEZ-VOUS

Serpentine

Friday 15 August [8:30pm]

Kensington Gardens, W2 T:020 7298 1515 Tube: Knightsbridge/Lancaster Gate
general £10 (door) £8 (advance) | concessions £8 (door) £6 (advance)

"There's a lotta muscle here tonight." Two-Lane Blacktop, Monte Hellman's 1971 cult classic chase film starring the unlikely mix of folk-rocker James Taylor, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson and Warren Oates will screen alongside Claude Lelouch's single-take masterpiece and quintessential example of cinema verite. The former was among the pioneering cult films of the early 1970s to play on the American fascination with the open road, the latter a French classic that inadvertently formed the basis for virtually every sports car advert since its first appearance in 1976. Both films highlight the romance between car and driver and identify with the different types of mythology we identify with car culture. Two-Lane Blacktop is a gruff and bare-bones muscle car flick, whose romance lies in the bond between car and driver, and C'etait un rendez vous is a short film combining barren Paris streets, a mystery driver and a young love.

NB: both of these films screen on a 50 foot open-air film screen by the Serpentine Gallery. The following night catch Pulp Fiction along with C'etait un rendez vous. Both evenings are part of the Serpentine's Park Nights series of events. For more outdoor cinema viewing make sure you go to Somerset House from 31/08 till 09/08.

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TALK BLACKWATER: THE NEW MERCENARIES (WITH JEREMY SCAHILL...)

ICA

Wednesday 20 August [7pm]

The Mall, SW1 T:020.7930.3647 Tube: Charing Cross/Piccadilly Circus
general £10 | concessions £9

American investigative journalist and author of Blackwater: The Rise Of The World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, Jeremy Scahill makes a coveted appearance at the ICA to talk about the effect of the so-called "men in black" on the political and monetary price of warfare. A vocal critic of the private face of the military, Scahill will be interviewed by Stephen Armstrong, journalist and author of the new book War Plc: The Rise Of The New Corporate Mercenary, which discusses the largely unreported, darker underbelly of the actions of mercenaries in Iraq and beyond. The flip argument is that military freelancers aren't just cowboys looking for a cheap thrill, but actually welcome additions to an understaffed army. Glorified and overpaid soldiers? Blood-thirsty war profiteers? Or simply heroic men doing a job that most of us wouldn't dream of doing? You decide.

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WEEK 4    21/08 to 27/08
Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

CLUB / DJ SWAYZAK...

T Bar

Thursday 21 August [7pm - 1:30am]

56 Shoreditch High St., E1 T:020.7729.2973 Tube: Liverpool St. / Old St.
FREE

Digital City moves east for its first (legal) party after several years of multimedia hi-jinks around south London. It seems fitting that a night committed to the serious business of good techno music should choose the highly regarded T Bar to host such an event, given that the venue is more akin to the legendary clubs on offer in Berlin than the many dives that populate east London. Special guests take the form of UK producers Swayzak, who have over a decade's worth of releases behind them on revered labels such as Minus and !K7 and have just returned from a triumphant year-long tour of the US, including a standout performance at the Winter Music Conference as well smashing it at Glastonbury. Per their usual events, in addition to the music expect a selection of independent shorts, promos and animations.

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FILM SOMERS TOWN

Friday 22 August

various cinemas across London
check press for times and ticket prices

Winner of the Best New British feature at the Edinburgh Film Festival this year, in Somers Town Shane Meadows once again focuses on a mouthy kid trying to create a place for himself in life. Thomas Turgoose, the brilliant little hard-nut from This Is England, plays teenager Tomo, down from the Midlands to try his luck in London. Within a day he is mugged, homeless and stuck in Kings Cross. Hooking up with placid young Pole Marek (who lives in Somers Town with his dad, a labourer on St Pancras rail link), along with wide-boy neighbour Graham (Perry Benson), succeed in creating their own surrogate family. Shot in black and white, and despite its somewhat rose-tinted perspective(literally and, at the end, figuratively), it's an honest and very funny look at friendship, loyalty and life in the city.

NB: Somers Town is released in London on 22/08. Other new films of note are Man On Wire (01/08), El bano del Papa (01/08), Jar City (12/08), Ben X (29/08) and Sakuran (29/08).

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CLUB / DJ FREEFORM FIVE + LITTLE BOOTS + JONA...

Egg

Friday 22 August [9:30pm - 6am]

200 York Way, N7 T:020.7609.8364 Tube: King's Cross
£7 (before 12am) £10 (after)

Before deciding what kind of Londoner you are -- one that loves or loathes Notting Hill Carnival, for example -- you could do worse than to start the Bank Holiday fun at the smoker's paradise that is Egg. Alwayz Frydayz invite the popular Lasermagnetic crew down with some excellent support who you might know from previous incarnations. Anu Pillai was the creative hub of the criminally underrated Freeform Five but now dedicates his time to running Perspex Recordings and producing and playing everything from electro to nu disco. Little Boots is former front woman to northern art rockers Dead Disco but now trades in sultry electropop and amusing covers, and is now an in-demand DJ. Up on the terrace, the D-LATE peeps keep with the minimal sound and have a special guest in the form of young up-and-coming buck Jona from Get Physical.

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CONCERT / JAZZ POLAR BEAR

Roundhouse

Monday 25 August [7pm]

Chalk Farm Rd., NW1 T:0870.389.1846 Tube: Chalk Farm
£12.50

Despite a small but vibrant underground renaissance, jazz is not exactly the trendiest strand of music to be practising in 2008. More power, then, to London's Polar Bear, purveyors, according to Paul Morley, of "dream jazz", and whose blend of sax, bass, drums and electronics continually test the limits of the genre. Closer to Tortoise than the Modern Jazz Quartet, for all its atmosphere and adroitness, theirs is a music imbued with a punk sensibility, often underpinned by avant-funk and rock rhythms. Audience members have been known to pogo at Polar Bear shows. It's worth attending this intimate gig at the Roundhouse (currently transformed into a cabaret-like venue for their Colour Your Summer season) just to hear a live incarnation of "Tay", the hypnotic, bass-driven opener on the band's very fine self-titled album, just released on the Tin Angel label.

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WEEK 5    28/08 to 03/09
Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

CONCERT MATTHEW HERBERT BIG BAND

Roundhouse

Thursday 28 August [7pm]

Chalk Farm Rd., NW1 T:0870.389.1846 Tube: Chalk Farm
£22.50

In some of his earliest musical experimentations, Matthew Herbert was known for channelling his ideas through the use of crisp packets and petrol pumps. This musique concrete-influenced approach made his name, to an extent, frequently captivating and often reflecting his sense of humour. Yet, as his career developed, the methodology provided a counterpoint to the strong ethical and political threads that characterise his work. Notable, also, is the ambitious breadth of the projects he's taken on. This October he'll release the second Matthew Herbert Big Band album (following 2003's Goodbye Swingtime), entitled There's Me And There's You, which he'll perform live with the full ensemble at a specially-transformed Roundhouse. It's often the live setting in which Herbert best manages to explicitly link the music and the ideas behind it and it can be a pleasure to see this play out on stage.

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FILM SAKURAN

Friday 29 August

various cinemas across London
check press for times and ticket prices

Based on the manga comic bearing the same title, the film follows the rise of Kiyoha, a rebellious young girl who is sold to a brothel only to become the most sought-after courtesan of the "Pleasure Quarter". It may sound like a familiar tale, but then the success of this film doesn't rely on the originality of its narrative. Rather, what it lacks for in substance, it makes for with aesthetics. Japanese pop star Anna Tsuchiya plays Kiyoha with a lot of charm, swearing and pouting her way up the ranks and winning over the audience as a feminist of sorts. First time director Mika Ninagawa's photographic talent shines through, infusing the whole film with saturated colours and superbly composed images. You probably won't learn much about 17th century Japan by watching Sakuran but it's guaranteed to provide with two hours of pure visual pleasure.

NB: Sakuran is released in London on 01/08. Other new films of note are Man On Wire (01/08), El bano del Papa (01/08), Jar City (12/08) Somers Town (22/08) and Ben X (29/08).

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FESTIVAL / FILM LIAF 2008

Monday 1 September [01/09 till 07/09]

various venues in London
see website for times and ticket prices

It would come as no surprise if you believed that contemporary animation consists purely of Pixar-style computer graphics, manga spin-offs or South Park type satirical social comment -- as that is the sum of what's been available for the last decade. For the past five years though, the London International Animation Festival has been blowing that perception right out of the water. Sourcing amazing, rare, haunting, surprising and gorgeous animations from all over the world (200 films from 27 countries), LIAF proves that animation can also be dark, sad, shocking, abstract or brilliantly original. This year's festival has a special focus on animated documentaries, exploring alternative ways to illustrate factual film, and includes a roundtable discussion with Canadian animator Josh Raskin, creator of the brilliant Oscar-nominated animated interview I Met The Walrus, documenting Jerry Levitan's 1969 meeting with John Lennon.

NB: runs from 01/09 till 07/09 and takes place at Curzon Soho, Renoir, the The Horse Hospital and the Rio Cinema.

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CLASSICAL MUSIC / TALK PROM 64: BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA - WAGNER + MESSIAEN

Royal Albert Hall

Tuesday 2 September [7:30pm]

Kensington Gore, SW7 T:020.7589.8212 Tube: South Kensington
£10 - £54

Bringing together two of the highlights of this year's Proms, this concert offers Olivier Messiaen's magical masterpiece from the late 1940s, his Turangalila Symphony -- played by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, under Simon Rattle. Preceding the Messiaen -- whose title is a Sanskrit word meaning the "game of love", in a cosmic, rather than cynical, sense -- is that supreme musical testament to romantic love, the Prelude and Liebestod from Wagner's Tristan Und Isolde. With both works utterly magnificent, you could not anticipate a more exhilarating and musically overflowing evening. It is bound to sell out, so get a ticket while you can. The soloists in the Messiaen are the pianist/conductor and Messiaen protoge Pierre-Laurent Aimard and the great composer Tristan Murail on the ondes Martenot, who also gives a pre-concert talk at the Royal College Of Music.

NB: the Prom season runs till 13/09. Other dates of note are Prom 20 + 21 (02/08) and Prom 40 (15/08), and, for more Messian, check out Prom 70 (07/09).

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DANCE MATTHEW BOURNE: DORIAN GRAY

Sadler's Wells

Tuesday 2 September [02/09 till 14/09]

Rosebery Avenue, EC1 T:020.7863.8000 Tube: Angel
£10 - £49

When Will Self rewrote Dorian Gray, it provoked unfavourable reactions from older members of the gay community. How dare this young 'un rework an iconic queer story? Matthew Bourne's production is unlikely to fall foul of audiences, possibly because he's something of an "it boy" himself, but probably because he approaches every project with reverence. It's unashamedly theatrical but don't be fooled into expecting a soft centre -- this gothic spectacular is scathingly satirical. Wilde's vain, hedonistic young man who makes a pact with the devil receives a wry update; Bourne places Dorian among the vacuous celebutantes who inhabit the contemporary art world. New Adventures (formerly Adventures In Motion Pictures) pull out all the stops for this modern parable with a bittersweet centre -- picture Tim Burton with jazz hands and you're halfway there.

NB: runs from 02/09 till 14/09.

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CONCERT SANTOGOLD

KOKO

Wednesday 3 September [7pm]

1A Camden High St., NW1 T:0870.432.5527 Tube: Mornington Crescent/Camden Town
£12.50

Santi White's vocals range from deep, syrupy and soulful through to the sort of jagged punchiness that draws inevitable comparisons with M.I.A.. Like the Sri Lankan, her tendency towards off-beat riffage and girlish bravado has made her tracks welcome fodder for glitchy beat-grinders (Switch, Sinden, Diplo, Spank Rock). Ordinarily the Brooklyn gal gets her backing kicks from producer Johnny Rodeo, who has helped give her some distinction by pairing her with the kind of jangly guitars that would seem to sit more naturally with a geekish indie band. Certainly, she may not have as foul a mouth as the always entertaining Amanda Blank, the vocalist of choice for a few of the aforementioned producers, but she makes up for it with a little more variety in influences. The only thing that will have some people scratching their heads is quite how she came to be the support act for Coldplay on some of their US dates.

NB: this gig is close to selling out so buy your tickets now.

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WEEK 6    04/09 to 10/09
Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Wk 7Ong | Feat

THEATRE ROBERT LEPAGE: LIPSYNCH

Barbican Centre

Saturday 6 September [06/09 till 14/09]

Barbican Centre, EC2 T:020.7638.8891 Tube: Barbican
£20 - £60