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Maria Somerville: Luster review – a vivid and vital entry in the shoegaze revival

The Irish artist’s folk-inflected sound is both unnerving and alluring on her luxuriant second album

Self Esteem: A Complicated Woman review – maximalist pop for an age of uncertainty

After her big breakthrough album and West End fame, Rebecca Lucy Taylor works through her worries in real time on her new LP – to fascinating and confusing effect

Self Esteem review – straight outta Gilead

A triumphant staging by Rebecca Lucy Taylor of her new album, A Complicated Woman, is part artistic statement, part power pop club night

Davido: 5ive review – flashes of Afropop excellence

The Nigerian superstar’s vocal prowess and smooth beats have their moments on his latest album, but at 17 tracks it could use an edit

Tunde Adebimpe: Thee Black Boltz review – a sparkling solo debut

The TV on the Radio frontman’s sharp pop instincts kick in on a multifaceted synth-punk-funk set born out of deep personal loss

Post Malone at Coachella review – chameleonic megastar wows in the desert

The 29-year-old singer travelled through his genre-shifting back catalogue in a charming and energetic 90-minute headliner set

Green Day at Coachella review – fun but muddled set pokes fun at American Idiots

The weekend’s legacy headliner offered some cathartic punk pop rebellion but the awkward setlist lacked coherence and thought

Bon Iver: Sable, Fable review – Justin Vernon’s most easy-going record yet

This companion album to last year’s Sable EP gives those sorrowful songs a soulful lift, with Vernon’s beautiful falsetto vocals to the fore

Valerie June: Owls, Omens and Oracles review – a soul-recharging exercise in radical positivity

The Tennessee singer-songwriter’s joyful new album pushes back against the bleakness of doomscrolling

Pulp: Spike Island review – Jarvis Cocker and co’s joyous second coming

The anthemic lead single from the band’s first album in 24 years casts a wary eye over their peak 90s fame – but also suggests that performing is irresistible

2hollis: Star review – sounds like the internet and bound for stardom

An underground phenomenon since his teenage years, Hollis Frazier-Herndon feels like a male Charli xcx about to take off

Ed Sheeran: Azizam review – a cross-cultural Persian experiment … which sounds incredibly English

After a couple of earthy, rootsy albums, Sheeran emphatically returns to pop with another of his indelible hooks, surrounded by Middle Eastern instrumentation

Black Country, New Road: Forever Howlong review – revamped alt-rockers take a newer, weirder road

After losing their frontman, the band’s third studio album shows how resilient and adaptable they are, with luscious melodies, fantastical lyrics and lots of recorders

Cyndi Lauper review – 80s pop eccentric hasn’t changed a bit

Her farewell tour is a pockmarked history of her roots and wide-ranging influences, full of her trademark elan and vigour

Usher review – glitzy Vegas-style spectacle is completely preposterous and preposterously entertaining

From rollerskating around the stage wearing a union jack suit to feeding cocktail cherries to women in the audience, Usher wears middle age incredibly well

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  • Aurora Orchestra/Collon/Power review – Italian immersion with introspective Berlioz and extrovert Mendelssohn
  • Olivia Rodrigo at Glastonbury review – full of bile and brilliance, this is easily the weekend’s best big set
  • Nile Rodgers and Chic at Glastonbury review – pop’s most reliable band bring the party to the Pyramid
  • Rod Stewart at Glastonbury review – lapping up the legends slot love like a lusty, leggy Muppet
  • Doechii at Glastonbury review – an education in rap from the greatest teacher in the game
  • Neil Young at Glastonbury review – ragged glory from a noisemaker who never treads the easy path
  • Pulp’s secret Glastonbury set review – still the magnificently misshapen oddballs of British pop
  • Charli xcx at Glastonbury review – a thrilling hostile takeover by a pop star at the peak of her powers
  • Skepta’s surprise Glastonbury set review – British rap’s MVP has matchless mic technique
  • Haim’s secret Glastonbury set review – sing-alongs and stomping songs from Worthy Farm’s favourite sisters
  • Kneecap at Glastonbury review – sunkissed good vibes are banished by rap trio’s feral, furious flows
  • The 1975 at Glastonbury review – amid the irony, ego and pints of Guinness, this is a world-class band
  • Alanis Morissette at Glastonbury review – spectacular sundown set by a unique feminist artist
  • Lewis Capaldi at Glastonbury review – a triumphant, hugely emotional return to the Pyramid stage
  • CMAT at Glastonbury review – a preposterously fun pop star who will surely be massive
  • Lorde at Glastonbury review – new album playthrough is bold but a little foolhardy
  • Joshua Redman: Words Fall Short review – improviser’s playful delight in music-making never ceases
  • BC Camplight: A Sober Conversation review – an eccentric rock opera confronting childhood abuse
  • Lorde: Virgin review – chaos, carnality and compulsions meet cataclysmic choruses
  • Bantock: The Seal Woman album review – Celtic folk opera that never quite gets its head above water
  • Just Biber album review – Podger rises brilliantly to these sonatas’ extreme challenges
  • Diana Ross review – glittering Motown royalty still sounds supreme
  • Lana Del Rey review – mid-century melodrama as mindblowing stadium spectacle
  • Forever Now review – timeless stars shine among grab bag of 80s nostalgia
  • Little Simz & Chineke! Orchestra review – rap-classical crossover is spectacularly realised
  • Iron Maiden review – 50th anniversary tour as near as uncompromising band get to greatest hits show
  • Penarth chamber music festival review – scaled-down Mahler’s Fourth Symphony emerges as if newly minted
  • Brandi Carlile review – country for the marginalised excels on the big stage
  • Dua Lipa review – dance-pop icon keeps the energy hotter than hell
  • The Merry Widow review – come for the big tunes, stay for the birthday cement mixer

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