Regina Spektor finds God, and MUNA channel a Year Six disco – the week’s best albums
Spektor makes a bid for Kate Bush's crown, while Giveon exudes old-school class and Soccer Mommy shows she's the voice of Generation Z
![God given: Regina Spektor's new album is haunted by the divine](/web/20220629045426im_/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/music/2022/06/24/TELEMMGLPICT000300584553_trans_NvBQzQNjv4Bqs6vuwLvzTDMD58pqVuCIYBD-pJQUiO0r3TxuD8Gp7X8.jpeg?imwidth=350)
Spektor makes a bid for Kate Bush's crown, while Giveon exudes old-school class and Soccer Mommy shows she's the voice of Generation Z
The Pyramid Stage headliner delivered a set stranger than almost anything the festival had seen before, uncompromising in its vision
Age was just a number as crowds revelled to Diana Ross and Billie Eilish alike, while Macca gave the most thrilling set in Glasto history
Over three golden hours that featured a duet with John Lennon, McCartney served up one absolutely storming classic after another
The Stones attacked their sixtieth anniversary tour with electrifying vigour, proving they still 'roll on' as the kings of rock and roll
With a new album out this week, Neneh Cherry – now 58 – talks family, business and Swedish lullabies
Brian May famously performed God Save the Queen on the roof of the Palace for the Golden Jubilee, 20 years ago
The controversial Hollywood star's guest appearance at the Albert Hall brought some much-needed focus
Def Leppard nail the winning formula, Sean Paul keeps his legacy alight, Jeshi decries austerity Britain, Just Mustard dazzle from Dublin
The inscrutable synth pioneer once insisted his job was simply to 'bum around'. As usual, he was being modest
Swedish icons' CGI spectacular at the Abba Arena in London will have today's pop superstars looking on with envy
His new album was released just days ago, but the Brixton Academy's 5,000-strong, hair-raisingly loud crowd already knew every word
The pioneering singer-songwriter's return to the Irish capital, at the 3Arena, proved an extravagantly exuberant affair
Given two decades of abject failure at Eurovision, it would have been considered a victory if the UK had managed to avoid scoring nul points
Although it was discontinued this week, at one point Apple’s music player was a true game changer for the industry
In his memoir Good Pop, Bad Pop, the former Pulp frontman digs through bin bags full of his old junk, and discovers hidden gold