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The 50 best albums of 2025: No 3 – Blood Orange: Essex Honey

1 day ago
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Dev Hynes’ deeply personal response to his mother’s death embodied the many unexpected shades of grief in pastoral hymnals and post-punk The 50 best albums of 2025 More on the best culture of 2025There’s a lot of grief across the best albums of this year.It’s unsurprising: 2025 has felt like a definitive and dismal break with government accountability, protections for marginalised people and holding back the encroachment of AI in creative and intellectual fields, to cherrypick just a few horrors.Anna von Hausswolff and Rosalía reached for transcendence from these earthly disappointments.Bad Bunny and KeiyaA countered colonial abuse and neglect with writhing resistance anthems.On a more personal scale, Lily Allen and Cate Le Bon grappled with disillusionment about mis-sold romantic ideals.

For Jerskin Fendrix, the Tubs, Jennifer Walton, Jim Legxacy and Blood Orange, grief was, straightforwardly, grief for lost loved ones.Each of those albums was as distinctive and profound as any personal experience of loss always is.Dev Hynes’ fifth album as Blood Orange felt uniquely keyed into the fragmented, distracted headspace that comes after someone passes, in his case, his mother.Essex Honey’s restive nature was summed up in its painful opening lines, which you could read as the dying’s acceptance of death starkly contrasting the living’s ability to meet them on those terms: “In your grace, I looked for some meaning,” Hynes sings on Look at You.“But I found none, and I still search for a truth.

”That search is wide-reaching,The Field refashions the Durutti Column’s Sing to Me as a racing hymnal made for the stereo of a Ford Escort,There are tough little Robert Rental-style post-punk gems in The Train (Kings Cross) and Countryside that bristle with frustration,Vivid Light is a plainly soulful duet with Zadie Smith; Life, featuring Tirzah’s unmistakable vocals, basks in languid, flute-dappled funk,Hynes’ focus even shifts within individual songs, often to discomfiting effect.

Without warning, a breakbeat will hurtle in and whip up silky strings; a shriek of flute may vault over drifting, collagist piano noodling, like a meteor singeing the washing line.Thinking Clean starts sounding as though it’s holding on to something, Hynes’ clipped entreaties accompanied by stilted piano; then it spins off into gorgeous disco, relinquishing all its tension – only for grunting cello to stagger in and mute the reverie.Other severe cello motifs repeat across the record, like unexpected jolts back to pain amid sunlit moments of reprieve.But when you let Essex Honey envelop you, it flows like the weather playing through a window.For all its stark contrasts, it’s gorgeously naturalistic, not just for the grounding wisps of found sound throughout – seagull cries, a sample of the 90s Black British sitcom Desmond’s, his mum discussing the Beatles the Christmas before she died – but thanks to Hynes’ elegance as an arranger.

Every song is cast in a wistful glow, and moves the way the mind does.Look at You starts with plush, elongated synth notes that evoke breathing; part way through, Hynes’ own breath seems to take over the motif, and motes of sax and percussion float by like dust across a lens.His own vocal melodies somehow sound incidental and immaculately turned at the same time.He doesn’t often sing alone.The album’s guest list is testament to a Rolodex built up over Hynes’ 20-plus years in music – including Caroline Polachek, Mustafa, Mabe Fratti, Lorde, Brendan Yates of Turnstile – but nor does he deploy his guests showily; more like patchwork pieces in the beautifully lived-in quilt of the record, there as support and to externalise hopeless emotions.

Polachek, who pops up the most, offers an angelic presence with her pristine falsetto.On Mind Loaded, Lorde’s girlish rasp as she exclaims “everything means nothing to me” suggests someone coming apart at the edges.Hynes’ deep voice echoes hers, like an underworld figure affirming her worst fears and tempting her to succumb to darkness: “And it all falls before you reach me.”Essex Honey brushes up against that sort of mindset: when the worst has happened, why does anything else matter? Hynes’ impressionistic lyrics keep looking back, holding on: he disappears to the countryside of his Essex youth, finds solace in the unique comfort of sibling relationships; “regressing back to times you know / Playing songs you forgot you owned” as he sings on Westerberg.He almost didn’t release the record, wondering what the point of it was.

Then he realised how privileged he was to be able to share his music with fans, and Essex Honey comes off as much a gift as a dispossession,The final song, I Can Go, concludes with a mirror image of the first line: “Now, what you know / Is nothing I can hold / I can go,” Mustafa sings,It feels like surrendering to the irretrievable, accepting that the lesson in loss is that there is no lesson,This startling and intuitive record captures the feeling of a life rearranged, and traces its awful new contours beautifully,
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‘Permanent winter’: a day in the life of a hospital dealing with flu and strikes

Thirteen ambulances are lined up at the rear of the emergency department (ED) of the Royal Stoke university hospital, Staffordshire, as Ann-Marie Morris, the hospital trust’s deputy medical director, walks towards the entrance, squinting in the low afternoon sun. Behind the closed door of each vehicle is a sick patient, some of whom have been waiting for four hours or more, backed up in the car park, just to get in the door.The reason they are stuck out here is that there are no beds in the ED – and there is not much corridor space, either. In the tight foyer, a cluster of ambulance staff and a senior nurse in hi-vis are huddled around a computer station. Behind them, a corridor stretches into the ward, where at least six or seven beds are lined up head to toe along one side, each occupied by a patient

1 day ago
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Some of England’s most-deprived councils to get funding boost in new deal

Some of England’s most-deprived councils will receive a funding boost under a new three-year local government deal which prioritises urban areas with high social needs at the expense of affluent places in the leafy south-east.Manchester, Birmingham, Luton, Bradford, Coventry, Derby and outer London boroughs such as Haringey and Enfield will receive big spending power increases under what ministers have described as a fairer system that will “restore pride and opportunity in left-behind places”.The housing and communities secretary, Steve Reed, said: “This is a chance to turn the page on a decade of cuts, and for local leaders to invest in getting back what has been lost – to bring back libraries, youth services, clean streets, and community hubs.”However, the settlement got a lukewarm welcome from some urban councils in the north and Midlands which said it was disappointing that “London’s suburbs” were the “biggest winners” from the review, “leaving many of the most deprived communities facing further cuts after a decade of austerity”.Leaders of county councils in English home counties and rural areas also criticised the settlement, describing it as unfair because it disproportionately benefited urban ones

1 day ago
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Rights group challenges trans-inclusive swimming policy at Hampstead Heath

Rules permitting trans women to share female changing facilities and swim in a women-only pond are discriminatory and unlawful, the high court has heard.The City of London Corporation is breaching equality legislation by allowing trans people to use the single-sex ponds on Hampstead Heath, according to a claim brought by the rights group Sex Matters. It is seeking permission to challenge the admission regulations.Daniel Stilitz KC, for the City of London, said Sex Matters had “steamed in”, bringing a premature legal action at a time when its officials were actively consulting pond users on its entry rules.Public bodies are redrafting their policies on single-sex spaces in response to the supreme court’s ruling in April that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex

1 day ago
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Will resident doctors lose support over latest strike? | Letters

“Striking resident doctors are digging in. History suggests this will go on and on” says the headline on Denis Campbell’s analysis piece (16 December). As a retired public health research and policy adviser and the parent of a doctor currently in core training, I agree that it is likely to go on and on – but not because doctors are stubborn. It will persist because the numbers do not add up and too much of the response has been political posturing rather than workforce planning.This year, around 30,000 doctors competed for just 10,000 specialty training posts, leaving thousands unable to progress

1 day ago
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When ‘How are you?’ becomes a painful question to answer | Letter

It’s not just Germans like Carolin Würfel (16 December) who face a challenge with the question “How are you?” When I was diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer, that question went from being a routine conversation-opener to something much trickier.The convention, in Britain at least, is to answer something like “Oh, not bad…” Frankly, things are very bad, so I’m stuck between the dishonesty of the ritual reply and the full truth, which is a lot to fling back at someone offering an innocent greeting. I’ve developed the more nuanced response “All right today”, which I use if I really am doing all right in the general context of things.Some days are genuinely rotten, in which case it remains a struggle to work out what to say, but the rest of the time I try to respond relative to my “new normal”. Some days I still have joyous events and upbeat feelings, in which case I’d stretch to a buoyant “Pretty good today”, but always I feel compelled to append the word “today” as a matter of honesty about the future

1 day ago
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Study finds 10% of over-70s in UK could have Alzheimer’s-like changes in brain

One in 10 people in the UK aged 70 and older could have Alzheimer’s-like changes in their brain, according to the clearest, real-world picture of how common the disease’s brain changes are in ordinary, older people.The detection of the proteins linked with the disease is not a diagnosis. But the findings indicate that more than 1 million over-70s would meet Nice’s clinical criteria for anti-amyloid therapy – a stark contrast to the 70,000 people the NHS has estimated could be eligible if funding were available.Experts, including those from Alzheimer’s Research UK, have said the findings from the first-ever population-based research into the disease have huge potential for early and accurate diagnosis.“High-quality studies like this are crucial to enhancing our understanding of how blood tests for Alzheimer’s could be used in clinical practice,” said David Thomas, the head of policy and public affairs at Alzheimer’s Research UK

1 day ago
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More UK interest rate cuts expected in 2026 after Bank of England lowers borrowing costs to near three-year low – business live

about 12 hours ago
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What the UK interest rate cut means for you, from mortgage deals to savings rates

about 13 hours ago
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AI boom has caused same CO2 emissions in 2025 as New York City, report claims

about 17 hours ago
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Third of UK citizens have used AI for emotional support, research reveals

about 19 hours ago
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Blowers: 300-1 shot becomes joint longest-priced winner in racing history

about 14 hours ago
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Gerald Donaldson obituary

about 15 hours ago