Samuel Graydon reviews two new albums, by the folk troubadour Sam Lee and indie rock band Cornershop, both of which offer innovative and intelligent musical perspectives on modern England; the TLS’s arts editor Lucy Dallas presents this month’s ‘Audio/Visual’, a monthly round-up of listening and watching; Josephine Livingstone grapples with the 'omnivore paradox' in the arts sector: why broader tastes in art have not led to wider participation
Featured works
Old Wow by Sam Lee
England is a Garden by Cornershop
Audio: ‘Reply All’, the podcast
Visual: ‘Five Guys a Week’, Channel 4
Entitled: Discriminating tastes and the expansion of the arts by Jennifer C. Lena
Steal as Much as You Can: How to win the culture wars in an age of austerity by Nathalie Olah
Smashing It: Working class artists on life, art and making it happen, edited by Sabrina Mahfouz
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Super Furry Animals
Power Plays
Unjust Deserts
Time Past and Time Future
Illustrated Men
O Pioneers!
Between The Sheets
A Worm’s-eye View
Revivals
Cometh the Hour
Flights of Fantasy
In Conversation with Richard Sennett
All the World's a Stage
Splendid Isolation
Class Struggles
Energy Creation
Out Of Our Minds
Turning Leaves: Dame Penelope Lively and Josephine Lively
A Cure for Twixmas
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