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Aberdeen
23rd May, 2026

Arts
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Aberdeen? Cove, Actually!

By Daisy MacCallum  This year’s Student Show was a high-energy production putting a doric twist on the classic rom-com, Love Actually. This year, it shone the spotlight on Cove, and the story followed the preparations for an April nativity production at an imaginary care home in Cove, The Buttery Bungalow. The plot featured stories of friendship, following dreams and finding love. Throughout the performance, the characters geared up for the Aberdeen Football Club versus Cove...

The High Life – Review

By Becca Cooper  Opening night of The High Life saw a full house at His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen. Based on...

Out of the Box – Review

By Zinat Moslemzadeh From my seat in the middle of the Lemon Tree, I watched the half‑dark hall fill with...

What is food in a changing world? – Review

By Zinat Moslemzadeh At Aberdeen’s Music Hall, the room was already alive with quiet conversation as a group of women...

Fires and Fascism review

By Moiz Maqsood When I walked into “The Bike Shed” in lovely Inverness to watch Fires and Fascism, I wasn’t...

Northern Lights Beer Festival

My last journalistic venture into alcoholic festival reporting resulted in me consuming my body weight in whisky, 15 hours...

AD- Centre Stage presents: ‘For the Love of Vanya’

“Being alive is kissing a tree going 293 miles-per-hour through a windshield and then waking up to take your...

North City Signal

The term ‘Aberdeen’s creative industry’ has often felt as if it was an oxymoron in recent years. With less...

Heated Rivalry Review

The cultural revival of 2016 hasn't just brought us filtered photo dumps and a new appreciation for Zara Larsson...

Mothfire

Mothfire I like writing on paper. This was once paper, too. You’re wondering about the gaps, The fitful breath of it, these different...

Sex and the Necessity

By Amelia Boag McGlynn And just like that, hit HBO show ‘Sex and the City’ has experienced a booming resurgence...

How the Louvre lost £76 million in seven minutes

By Georgie Burns On the morning of October 19th, the art world watched in horror as four professional thieves, disguised...

Reactor: As Rome Burns’ new EP review

By Cole Rashid Michelon The up-and-coming indie/rock band, As Rome Burns, released a brilliant new EP on the 26th of...

Gallus: In conversation with Connor Burns

By Amelia Boag McGlynn The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is a staple of the comedy community, and an infamously hard nut...

Gilmore Girl Season

‘I… am an autumn’ This is the phrase that clung to me from Gilmore Girls. Thoughtfully, I reimagined this to...

Little Women: A Review

Louisa May Alcott’s novel Little Women was brought to life in the adaptation by Anne-Marie Casey of the same...

The Space in Between by Matthew Kilner: Review

By Seby D'Souza I had heard the name “Matthew Kilner” long before I had the pleasure of meeting the saxophonist...

Tales of the North East: A review of Fiona Soe Paing’s Sand, Silt, Flint

By Seby D'Souza One of many things I’ve come to love about the Aberdonian arts scene is the reverence for...

Birdsong: a Review

By Kirsten Koss and Emily Reid  A story of love and loss, intertwined with the harsh reality of the First...

Faces in the Sand

CW: Violence, Death. I remember waking up in the sand...

this way, a bed is waiting for you – a review

Corinne Hackett’s debut poetry collection was published in March earlier this year. With an honest yet comforting approach in its representation of growing up, here’s why this way, a bed is waiting for you is a brilliant read. 

The Cure: Songs Of A Lost World

Once they hit a certain shelf age, rock bands tend to wither. Not so with The Cure, and certainly not so with Robert Smith.

The Script Satellites World Tour

With hope and resilience as their message, The Script delivered a nearly two-hour long performance of their greatest hits,...

All roads lead to One Direction

Like many other girls in their twenties, the shocking news of Liam Payne’s death catapulted me back to my...

Mid-Autumn Festival at Cowdray Hall

University of Aberdeen’s Confucius Institute took Cowdray Hall for an afternoon of Chinese music featuring Yichun Feng, Lavinia Marin, Yuqiu Fang and the Edinburgh Chinese Community Orchestra.