Sunday Brunch: The art of change | Monocle

Sunday Brunch

Sunday Brunch: The art of change

15

15

00:00 / 00:00

/

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

15 April 2018

60 minutes

We look at whether art can encourage social change, explore why we immortalise musicians and speak with LA-based forward-thinking musician E Ruscha V about his album ‘Who Are You’. Plus: Jane Robinson on the women’s march of 1913, some Japanese grilling and Kevin Craig with the weekend papers.

15 April 2018

Share episode

Download

Chapter 1

10 minutes

15

15

/

Chapter 1

‘The Art of Change’

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

We look at whether art really can encourage social change with the artistic director at The Barbican.

10 minutes

Share chapter 1

‘The Art of Change’

Chapter 2

10 minutes


Photo: Flickr

15

15

/

Chapter 2

A musician’s legacy

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

Monocle’s Amber Roberts explores why we immortalise performers such as Bowie and Abba.

10 minutes

Share chapter 2

A musician’s legacy

Chapter 3

9 minutes


Photo: Flickr

15

15

/

Chapter 3

Weekend read: Jane Robinson

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

The historian tells us all about a pilgrimage of suffragists that took place in 1913.

9 minutes

Share chapter 3

Weekend read: Jane Robinson

Chapter 4

8 minutes

15

15

/

Chapter 4

E Ruscha V

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

LA musician E Ruscha V’s recent album ‘Who Are You’ is a laidback and immersive listen, and its creator joins us to discuss why both visual art and audio influences helped create its sound.

8 minutes

Share chapter 4

E Ruscha V

Chapter 5

9 minutes

15

15

/

Chapter 5

Paper review: Kevin Craig

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

The CEO of communications company PLMR joins us in the studio to go through the weekend’s papers.

9 minutes

Share chapter 5

Paper review: Kevin Craig

Chapter 6

7 minutes


Photo: Flickr

15

15

/

Chapter 6

Japanese home grilling

Cover art for Sunday Brunch

Silla Bjerrum, consultant and cookbook author, on the art of japanese grilling featured in her book ‘Robata’.

7 minutes

Share chapter 6

Japanese home grilling

/

sign in to monocle

new to monocle?

Subscriptions start from $‌165.00.

Subscribe now

Loading...

/

15

15

Live
Monocle Radio

00:0001:00

  • The Big Interview213

    An icon of US alternative rock, Bob Mould was a member of influential Minneapolis band Hüsker Dü, which combined screaming guitars with sweet pop melodies in the 1980s and inspired later acts such as Nirvana. Mould’s subsequent band Sugar recorded three acclaimed albums in the mid-1990s. He has since built up a solo catalogue that has included several stylistic deviations but keeps circling back to the power-trio format. Mould’s latest solo album is ‘Here We Go Crazy’. He sits down with Andrew Mueller to play a couple of songs and talk about the legacy of Hüsker Dü, being outed as a gay man in the 1990s and Donald Trump’s WWE-style politics. 

  • The Big Interview213

    An icon of US alternative rock, Bob Mould was a member of influential Minneapolis band Hüsker Dü, which combined screaming guitars with sweet pop melodies in the 1980s and inspired later acts such as Nirvana. Mould’s subsequent band Sugar recorded three acclaimed albums in the mid-1990s. He has since built up a solo catalogue that has included several stylistic deviations but keeps circling back to the power-trio format. Mould’s latest solo album is ‘Here We Go Crazy’. He sits down with Andrew Mueller to play a couple of songs and talk about the legacy of Hüsker Dü, being outed as a gay man in the 1990s and Donald Trump’s WWE-style politics. 

  • The Big Interview213

    An icon of US alternative rock, Bob Mould was a member of influential Minneapolis band Hüsker Dü, which combined screaming guitars with sweet pop melodies in the 1980s and inspired later acts such as Nirvana. Mould’s subsequent band Sugar recorded three acclaimed albums in the mid-1990s. He has since built up a solo catalogue that has included several stylistic deviations but keeps circling back to the power-trio format. Mould’s latest solo album is ‘Here We Go Crazy’. He sits down with Andrew Mueller to play a couple of songs and talk about the legacy of Hüsker Dü, being outed as a gay man in the 1990s and Donald Trump’s WWE-style politics.