Features

The 50 best songs of 2024

Celebrate some of 2024’s most glorious musical moments with us

6 incredible K-dramas to watch in December 2024 on Disney+, Netflix and more

Including Disney+'s ‘Light Shop’, the second season of Netflix’s ‘Squid Game’ and more

Meet KISS OF LIFE, the free-spirited K-pop girl group about to take over

Heavily involved in their creative process and driven by their passion for music, the quartet have taken their own approach to the scene’s path to success – and, so far, it’s paying off in spades

These are the best gigs to see this month

From buzzy new superstars to bonafide legends

Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Anton Newcombe talks new material and getting “blamed for everything”

The ‘90s shoegaze maverick speaks to NME about new project with Dot Allison, overcoming health issues, the Oasis reunion, his time with "two-dimensional" Anthony Bourdain, and the truth when it comes to Brian Jonestown Massacre unrest

East 17’s Tony Mortimer: “East 17 and Take That were a bit like Blur and Oasis”

In 2016, which singer posted a picture of herself wearing an East 17 tour jacket? “Adele.” ALRIGHT! (CORRECT). Her social media snap was captioned with...

Pulp’s Mark Webber on his photo book and the band’s new songs: “It’s somewhere between mature and frothy pop music”

The guitarist tells us about new "visual guide" 'I'm With Pulp – Are You', hanging out with Robbie Williams at the classic Glastonbury 1995, the chances of a new album and staying "glam, but on a budget"

VIVIZ on K-pop idol life: “This job is about music and performances, but at the core, there are people”

After starting over as a trio, Eunha, SinB and Umji are now firmly in charge of their own futures. The K-pop idols tell NME about their new mini-album ‘Voyage,’ how challenges can be blessings in disguise and tease the return of GFRIEND

Nukuluk: the South London group delving into alienation and otherness through experimental hip-hop

The collective’s debut mixtape ‘Stillworld’ showcases their exhilarating fusion of electronica, punk and rap – and their surreal, supernatural lyricism
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