Lee Ashworth, Louder Than War

Lee Ashworth

Louder Than War

United Kingdom

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Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Louder Than War

Past articles by Lee:

Xqui: Lleisiau – Album Review

Lee Ashworth discovers Xqui's Lleisiau emanating from the vanguard of a liberating, new anonymous experimentalism. → Read More

Doc' n Roll Festival Returns To Manchester

Featuring 6 exclusive screenings and a raft of special events, Manchester's Doc n Roll festival returns to Home, May 29th to June 2nd 2019. → Read More

Suede: Albert Hall, Manchester

Lee Ashworth is swept up in the glamorous trash of arch-outsiders Suede, who bring their hymns of edgeland alienation to Manchester. → Read More

Patrick Jonsson: Suddenly We Looked Like Giants

Lee Ashworth ventures out on a cinematic journey that seeks to explore parallels and interplay between human nature and the natural world. → Read More

Abul Mogard: And We Are Passing Through Silently

Lee Ashworth finds drone epics and a darkness that delights on Abul Mogard's new album of radical reworkings, And We Are Passing Through. → Read More

Peter Sandberg: Motion

Motion is a fitting title as Peter Sandberg’s tracks are juxtaposed to create a wordless narrative sweep. → Read More

The Favourite – Film Review

As The Favourite begins to develop it is clear that this is no chocolate box merry England; mercifully, this is not Sunday evening TV. → Read More

Aukai: Reminiscence

The music on Reminiscence by Aukai conjures expansive vistas in widescreen, with a musical lexicon that articulates the peaks of the Andes. → Read More

Stray Ghost: A Shade Under Thirty

A Shade Under Thirty is the new album by Brighton-based composer and multi-instrumentalist, Anthony Baden-Saggers, also known as Stray Ghost. → Read More

Will Gregory’s Moog Ensemble: Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester

Will Gregory’s Moog Ensemble went back to the future for a masterclass exploring the furthest limits of experimental analogue electronica. → Read More

Bohemian Rhapsody – film review

While some fans may baulk at the economics of storytelling at work, Bohemian Rhapsody is cohesive, consistent and entertaining from the start. → Read More

Villagers: The Wardrobe, Leeds

Villagers occupied the intimate, warmly lit stage of The Wardrobe on Sunday night. Lee Ashworth caught the set amidst a rapt Leeds audience. → Read More

First Man – Film Review

Can there be anything more to say about the moon landings? Lee Ashworth reviews First Man. → Read More

U2: Manchester Arena, Manchester

U2 bring their Experience & Innocence Tour to the UK with two consecutive nights at Manchester Arena. Lee Ashworth caught the opening night. → Read More

Gwenno: Yes, Manchester

A subtle psychedelia emanates from the stage as Gwenno creates a spell, deceptively slight yet drunk enough to lure you to the water's edge. → Read More

BlacKkKlansman – Film Review

BlacKkKlansman is the simplest of undercover stories once stripped back to its bare bones yet in Spike Lee’s hands it is incendiary. → Read More

The Fall: 458489 A Sides

Beggars Arkive re-issues 458489 A Sides, a supreme anti-primer for The Fall, showcasing their 45s from 1984 to 1989. → Read More

Whitney – Film Review

In Mcdonald’s compelling documentary, the ghost of Whitney E Houston stalks America before and after her death. → Read More

Group Listening: Clarinet & Piano Selected Works Vol.1

Group Listening is a selection of ambient works from Stephen Black and Paul Jones via PRAH recordings → Read More

SLUG: Soup Kitchen, Manchester

The taut funk driven sound of SLUG is definite: its music that arm wrestles your attention then grabs you in a headlock. → Read More