fri 20/06/2025

Kieron Tyler

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Bio
Kieron Tyler has contributed to Britain's MOJO magazine since 1999 and is the author of 'Smashing It Up: A Decade Of Chaos With The Damned', the critically-acclaimed and definitive biography of the first decade of the pioneering British punk rock band. His writing has also appeared in Billboard (America), The Guardian, i (the newspaper), The Independent, Les Inrockuptibles (France), Music Week, Q, Rumba (Finland) and Ugly Things (America).

Articles By Kieron Tyler

Music Reissues Weekly: Jon Savage's 1980-1982 - The Art Of Things To Come

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Music Reissues Weekly: Stranger In Town - A Del Shannon Compendium

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Music Reissues Weekly: Dave Brubeck Quartet - Debut In The Netherlands 1958

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Marina Allen, Cafe Oto Review - east London substitutes for 1970s Los Angeles

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Music Reissues Weekly: Modern Eon - Fiction Tales

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Album: Amber Arcades - Barefoot On Diamond Road

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Music Reissues Weekly: The Senders - All Killer No Filler

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Northern Winter Beat 2023 review - Panda Bear, Sonic Boom and Širom amongst the highlights in Denmark’s north

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Album: Robert Forster - The Candle and the Flame

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Music Reissues Weekly: Padang Moonrise - The Birth of the Modern Indonesian Recording Industry

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Music Reissues Weekly: Bob Stanley / Pete Wiggs Present Winter of Discontent

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Album: Ghost Woman - Anne, If

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Music Reissues Weekly: Rustic Hinge and the Provincial Swimmers

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Music Reissues Weekly: George Martin - A Painter In Sound

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Album: Juni Habel - Carvings

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Music Reissues Weekly: Guerrilla Girlsǃ - She-Punks & Beyond 1975-2016

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'We are bowled over!' Thank you for your messages... ...
Monteverdi Choir, English Baroque Soloists, Suzuki, St-Marti...

In the Saxony of 1725 – still in the grip of Europe’s “Little Ice Age” – Bach and his musicians would seldom have had to deal with the sort of...

4.48 Psychosis, Royal Court review – powerful but déjà vu

Sarah Kane is the most celebrated new writer of the 1990s. Her work is provocative and innovative. So it seems oddly unimaginative to mark the...

The Buccaneers, Apple TV+, Season 2 review - American advent...

Edith Wharton hadn’t finished her novel, The Buccaneers, when she died in 1937, but it was completed in 1993 by Marion Mainwaring. The...

Red Path review - the dead know everything

Here’s a film you might not feel like seeing. After all, Red Path tells of a 14-year-old in Tunisia who is forced to carry home the...

Album: Loyle Carner - Hopefully!

Loyle Carner’s Hopefully! is a luminous, deeply personal exploration of fatherhood, identity, and artistic reinvention, marking the south...

The Midnight Bell, Sadler's Wells review - a first repr...

Rarely has a revival given a firmer thumbs-up for the future of dance-theatre. Yet Matthew Bourne’s latest show, first aired at the tail-end of...

Album: HAIM - I Quit

Haim’s profile just grows and grows. Since their last album, youngest sibling Alana’s starring role in Paul Thomas Anderson’s whimsical Seventies...

Aldeburgh Festival, Weekend 1 review - dance to the music of...

This year’s Aldeburgh Festival – the 76th – takes as its motto a line from Shelley‘s Prometheus Unbound. The poet speaks of despair “...

Bonnie Raitt, Brighton Dome review - a top night with a char...

If you walked into a bar in the US, say in one of the southern states, and Bonnie Raitt and her band were playing, you’d have the best night of...