WILL STONE appreciates an artist who can swerve from industrial noise to clubby trance pop without missing a step
Will Stone


‘There's outrage aplenty in this production but we never quite get to the dark night of the soul,’ writes WILL STONE

WILL STONE applauds a quartet of dance vignettes exploring the joys and sorrows of the human condition

WILL STONE overlooks the corn to find the beauty in the music of the Danish indie-pop oddities

WILL STONE savours an utterly unique voice in electronic music

Union leaders demand Labour deliver ‘deep and ambitious change’ as thousands attend the Tolpuddle Martyrs Festival in Dorset

WILL STONE is left wanting more by an immersive show that is within reach of greatness but doesn't quite grasp it

WILL STONE admires a revival of Pinter’s dark exploration of male chauvinism and sexuality

WILL STONE falls for the charms and back catalogue of a 73 year old

WILL STONE sees Glastonbury reaffirm its radical credentials

WILL STONE applauds a band that is never one to shy away from making a political statement

WILL STONE is transfixed by a brilliant adaptation of a best-selling Polish eco-thriller

WILL STONE revels in a brilliant, immersive revival of the 1950s musical

WILL STONE is both alarmed and overwhelmed by an epic night of neo-psychedelia

WILL STONE is filled with a sizeable dose of Christmas spirit

An astonishing Royal Shakespeare Company production of Miyazaki's classic animation reconnects WILL STONE with his inner child

WILL STONE is engulfed by the magnificence of the returning festival

Glasto’s all-embracing formula stands the test of time, writes WILL STONE, who had a whale of a time

Nitzer Ebb's sound, which captured the zeitgeist of ’80s British counterculture, is as relevant as a commentary on today’s strong-arming superpowers as it was then, finds WILL STONE

WILL STONE is mesmerised by a riveting retrospective that does justice to an eclectic and haunting 40-year history

Officers alleged to have drawn batons and thrown punches at peaceful protesters

WILL STONE sees a curiously downbeat production of a Broadway musical classic