Brought together by their shared love of music, ten years on Liam and Natalie are at breaking point. In their case opposites attract but don't necessarily work long-term. Making the difficult decision to separate, they must split their prized music library. But the sound track that defined their relationship keeps pulling them back together.
John Cameron Mitchell, director of the acclaimed films Hedwig and the Angry Inch and Shortbus takes us to an exotic and unusual world: suburban London in the late 70s. Under the spell of the Sex Pistols, every teenager in the country wants to be a punk, including our hopeless hero Enn. Hearing the local punk Queen Boadicea is throwing a party, Enn crashes the fun and discovers every horny boy's dream; gorgeous foreign exchange students. When he meets the enigmatic Zan, it's lust at first sight. But these girls have come a lot further than America. They are, in fact, aliens from another galaxy, sent to Earth to prepare for a mysterious rite of passage. When the dark secret behind the rite is revealed, our galaxy-crossed lover Enn must turn to Boadicea and her punk followers for help in order to save the alien he loves from certain death. The punks take on the aliens on the streets of London, and neither Enn nor Zan's universe will ever be the same again.
On 24th October, 2015, the eve of the first anniversary of Jack Bruce's passing, a star-studded line-up pay a moving tribute to the Scottish legend at Roudhouse London. The concert, musically directed by Nitin Sawhney, features Cream band-mate Ginger Baker, Phil Manzanera, Ian Anderson, Mark King, Vernon Reid, Joss Stone, Hugh Cornwell, Uli Jon Roth, Bernie Marsden and Clem Clempson, amongst many more, including Jack's own Big Blues Band who toured with him until the year of his death. This incredible line-up delights the audience with a stunning selection of Bruce's songs spanning 5 decades, from the pre-Cream days to his final album Silver Rails.
A fresh, disorienting, quirky, slapstick romp through the history of Madness, accompanied by their irrepressible, flying saxophonist, Lee Thompson. And it is probably mostly true.