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Oasis reunion and Taylor Swift vinyls fuel boom year for UK music industry

about 6 hours ago
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Nostalgia surrounding the Oasis reunion tour, alongside Taylor Swift fans’ clamour for vinyl, contributed to another boom year for the UK music industry, as physical formats continued their comeback.Music lovers listened to the equivalent of 210.3m albums by UK artists during 2025, according to the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) annual report, up 4.9% on 2024 and the 11th year of growth in a row.Female pop artists and touring middle-aged male rockers led the way in the charts, while sales were further bolstered by Britain’s enduring love affair with the British-American band Fleetwood Mac.

The BPI rates the success of the UK’s music industry by using a measure called “album equivalent sales”, to arrive at an estimate that seeks to compare streaming consumption with digital and physical sales,On that basis, the fastest-growing formats were all physical, continuing a trend that began last year when a 20-year decline finally reversed,Vinyl still makes up a relatively small proportion of total consumption: 7,6m albums compared with 189m “streaming equivalent albums”,But record sales grew by 13.

3%, the 18th consecutive year of growth and far ahead of the 5.5% increase registered by streaming.Fans of Taylor Swift, known as “Swifties”, helped propel her 2025 release The Life of a Showgirl to 147,000 vinyl units – the most sold by anyone since the Official Charts Company began compiling the charts in the 1990s.It is the fourth successive year in which Swift has been the top annual vinyl seller, after Midnights in 2022, 1989 (Taylor’s Version) in 2023 and The Tortured Poets Department in 2024.Despite a Christmas “retro renaissance” among younger so-called gen Z listeners, CD sales still declined by 7.

6% to 9.7m, indicating that the format’s resurgence may have been overplayed.But an expanding interest in cassette tapes led to almost 80% growth in the “other” category, albeit to a relatively paltry 330,000.Overall, physical album sales were up by 1.4% to 17.

6m.While Swifties piled into vinyl, sellout tours by Oasis and Coldplay helped catapult both acts back into the overall album charts, which are weighted towards digital streaming.The 2010 Oasis compilation Time Flies … 1994-2009 returned to No 1 after the tour’s launch, hit the top spot again in August and finished the year in fourth, with the 1995 album (What’s The Story) Morning Glory in seventh.Sabrina Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet was the second-biggest-selling album of the year behind The Life of a Showgirl, followed by Ed Sheeran’s +-=÷x (Tour Collection).Fleetwood Mac’s 50 Years – Don’t Stop, released in 2018, came in fifth.

Their fan-favourite album Rumours, released half a century earlier in 1977 and one of the bestselling albums of all time, was seventh in the vinyl charts.The BPI also hailed breakthroughs by newer acts such as Olivia Dean, Lola Young, Sleep Token, PinkPantheress and Skye Newman, as well as the 2025 Mercury prize winner, Sam Fender.Jo Twist, the chief executive of the BPI, called on the government to ensure that the industry was protected by upholding copyright law, amid mounting concern about the effect of AI on artists.Twist said the figures “should be a powerful reminder that British music is a global headline act, and one of the crown jewels of the UK’s creative industries.Ensuring its success should be high on the government’s agenda in 2026.

“We need the commitment of policymakers, the continued protection of the UK’s gold-standard copyright framework, and a business environment which supports direct licensing between music and tech companies in order for labels to continue to discover, nurture and promote the global stars of tomorrow.”
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Fashion brand LK Bennett on brink of collapse

The upmarket fashion brand LK Bennett appears to be heading for collapse for the second time in six years.On Tuesday the company filed an application with the high court to appoint an administrator to the business, which employs about 280 staff.The move suggests that the clothing chain, which was founded by Linda Bennett in 1990 and is now owned by China-based backers, appears to have failed in its widely publicised efforts to unearth a saviour.Should LK Bennett appoint administrators it will be the second time in recent years it has entered insolvency proceedings – despite its reported high-profile fans, who include the Duchess of Cambridge and the former prime minister Theresa May.In 2019 the business collapsed into administration after its owners failed to find a new financial backer

about 13 hours ago
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Jhoots Pharmacy chain could face insolvency after Lloyds Bank high court application

A struggling national pharmacy chain accused of owing its locums £670,000 in unpaid fees has been hit with an application to place the business into insolvency proceedings.Jhoots Chemist, which trades under the name of Jhoots Pharmacy, was named in a high court application to appoint an administrator, submitted on Monday by Lloyds Bank.The move comes after the company – which has run more than 100 outlets – was criticised in the autumn by MPs for not paying locum pharmacists who had worked at the company’s branches on a freelance basis. The chain is run from Walsall in the West Midlands by a businessman called Sarbjit Singh Jhooty.In an urgent parliamentary debate about the status of the group in October, MPs raised concerns about the behaviour of Jhoots pharmacies including over its failure to open branches, management of controlled drugs, and not paying staff, landlords and other suppliers

about 14 hours ago
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Five charts that explain the global economic outlook for 2026

The global economy proved to be more resilient in 2025 than had been feared, despite severe headwinds that ranged from Donald Trump’s trade war to geopolitical tensions and the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.Entering the new year, the hope is that the worst of the recent inflation shock has passed, as the world’s most powerful central banks lower interest rates. However, the pre-Covid age of rock-bottom borrowing costs is a distant memory, global growth is slowing and conditions remain fragile.Here are five key charts underpinning the economic outlook for 2026.After years of hype, the catalytic potential of artificial intelligence will feature heavily for the global economy in 2026

about 14 hours ago
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Octopus Energy to sell stake in software spin-off Kraken at $8.65bn valuation

Octopus Energy has agreed to sell a stake in its Kraken software arm, in a move that would value the division at $8.65bn (£6.4bn) and could open the way for a stock market flotation.The technology, which it already licenses to some rival suppliers, has been vital to the energy company’s success, making it easier to manage customer billing, smart meters, electric vehicle charging and home batteries to make using renewable power cheaper.Octopus said new investors, including the asset manager Fidelity International and the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board, had joined existing shareholders to acquire a $1bn stake in the business

about 17 hours ago
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Renewable energy project approvals hit record high in GB in 2025, data shows

A record number of renewable energy projects were given the go-ahead in Great Britain in 2025, after planning approvals almost doubled year on year, according to an analysis.The energy capacity of new battery, wind, and solar projects that received approval climbed to 45GW this year, 96% higher than in 2024, according to data from Cornwall Insight.The boom was driven by applications to build new battery storage, which almost doubled to 28.6GW this year from 14.9GW in 2024

about 19 hours ago
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Marks & Spencer launches ‘nutrient dense’ range for people on weight-loss jabs

Marks & Spencer is targeting weight-loss jab users with a new range of “nutrient dense” food that it claims will satisfy customers who are eating less.The retailer said the range, which launches on 5 January and includes salads, breads, yoghurt bowls and chicken dinners, was “perfectly portioned to contain high amounts of nutrients per calorie”.People across the UK who are trying to lose weight are increasingly turning to jabs such as Wegovy, Zepbound and Saxenda, which suppress users’ appetites.The trend poses new challenges for food retailers such as M&S, which are trying to maintain sales as some customers eat less.The head of food innovation at M&S, Annette Peters, said the new range was “great if customers are reducing their food intake, such as people using the GLP-1 medications

about 21 hours ago
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Drinks ideas to get your NYE party fuelled

1 day ago
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Georgina Hayden’s quick and easy recipe for pimento cheese and pickle loaded crisps | Quick and easy

2 days ago
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Ten things I love (and hate) about restaurants in winter

3 days ago
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‘Many over-hyped London restaurants left me cold’: Grace Dent’s best restaurants of 2025 | Grace Dent on restaurants

3 days ago
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Countdown to 2026 – a New Year’s Eve menu

4 days ago
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The joy of leftovers – what to cook in the calm after Christmas

5 days ago