tue 11/02/2025

Thomas H Green

Thomas H. Green's picture
Bio
Thomas writes regularly for the Daily Telegraph and Mixmag. He has been a consistent presence in the UK dance music media since the mid-Nineties and has also written more broadly about music and the arts elsewhere. He has written one book, Rock Shrines, with another on the way. An ageing raver, he’s still occasionally to be found in nightclubs as dawn approaches.

Articles By Thomas H Green

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Help to give theartsdesk a future!

It all started on 09/09/09. That memorable date, September 9 2009, marked the debut of theartsdesk.com.

It followed some...

Gilliver, Liverman, Rangwanasha, LSO, Pappano, Barbican revi...

For all its passing British sea shanties and folksongs, Vaughan Williams’ A Sea Symphony does Walt Whitman’s determinedly global-oriented...

Bowling For Soup, Civic Hall, Wolverhampton review - nostalg...

Bowling For Soup are celebrating their iconic album, A Hangover You Don’t Deserve, on a fun-filled, energetic tour for its 20th...

Philip Marsden: Under a Metal Sky review - rock and awe

Working on materials was basic to human culture from the start: chipping at flint to make a hand-axe; fashioning bone or wood; drying hides....

Blu-ray: High and Low

Akira Kurosawa’s mastery of different genres is a given and one of High and Low’s strengths is a seamless blending of various...

The Years, Harold Pinter Theatre review - a bravura, joyous...

Annie Ernaux’s semi-autobiographical book Les Années charts a woman’s life across time and space, history and memory, through...

Nina Conti: Whose Face Is It Anyway?, Brighton Dome review -...

“I really am the repository for all your shit,” Nina Conti’s famous Monkey hand puppet tells her. Monkey may have a point.

The brilliance of...

Braimah Kanneh-Mason, Fernandes, Gent, 229 review - a beguil...

It was the sonically adventurous, shiveringly atmospheric cello piece by Latvian composer Preteris Vasks that proved to be the first showstopper...

Phaedra + Minotaur, Royal Ballet and Opera, Linbury Theatre...

Greek myths are all over theatre stages at the moment, their fierce, vengeful stories offering unnerving parallels with events in our modern world...