English Rock Band The Who
March 1966
Manchester Airport Hotel
Cover of The Observer
The primary lineup consisted of Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle and Keith Moon.
Mandatory credit: Colin Jones / Topfoto
Just days after tearing up Download Festival with the full Halestorm line-up, Lzzy Hale and Joe Hottinger strip everything back for a sold-out evening at Islington Assembly Hall. The result is not a quiet, polite acoustic set. Instead, Lzzy + Joe Unplugged feels like an intimate gathering where stories, songs and decades of shared history are placed front and centre.
Rising New Zealand quartet Borderline have unveiled details of their long-awaited debut album, Borderline, alongside the release of their vibrant new single That Girl and an accompanying music video inspired by classic Saturday morning mystery cartoons.
Stockport favourites Blossoms have unveiled details of their sixth studio album, Songs From The Wedding Cake, dropping on 2nd October. Alongside the album announcement, the band have shared the infectious new single Meet Me In Love and confirmed a major UK arena tour for late 2026 – their largest headline run to date.
Wolf Alice launched this year’s Eden Sessions in electrifying fashion, with a performance that moved seamlessly between intimate melodies and ferocious bursts of intense rock.
Where better to hold a birthday party than a brewery? Throw in the fact it’s Marshall Records’ tenth birthday, and the venue is the fabulous Blondies Brewery, and there’s top notch entertainment in the form of band new and established, and you’re in for a great evening of celebratory entertainment.
Members of Canadian death metal heavyweights Tomb Mold continue to explore a very different side of their musical personalities with Daydream Plus, who have unveiled their latest single, More Time Alone, taken from their forthcoming debut album Second Last Day Of Summer, due for release on 10th July.
Three days of dust, riffs and relentless energy all led to Download Festival XXIII’s final chapter. Sunday offered one last opportunity for Donington to empty the tank, bringing together rising stars, legendary names and one of the most anticipated headline performances in the festival’s history. From emotional singalongs and crushing metal to triumphant returns and a crowning headline set, Download’s closing day delivered unforgettable moments from start to finish.
After Friday’s celebrations had finally subsided, Saturday arrived with heavier riffs, glorious sunshine, bigger crowds and one of the most diverse days Download Festival XXIII had to offer. From early-morning punk rock and breakout British talent to black metal spectacle, metalcore mastery and one of rock’s most iconic names closing the night, Donington once again proved why no two Download days ever feel the same.