Category: Records


  • EDGE Goes 90s: Radiohead – Ok Computer

    What is there to say about this album that hasn’t already been said?  Often hailed as one of, if not the greatest album of all time, Ok Computer was the masterstroke that not only firmly propelled Radiohead into superstardom but into the halls of musical history, sitting alongside the greats as one of the finest bands…

  • EDGE Goes 90s: 3rd Rock from the Sun

    For some of you this show might be totally alien to you, for others, you’ll have gotten the pun I just made. A wonderful sitcom that first aired in America in 1996, 3rd Rock From The Sun focused on the day-to-day lives of the Soloman family, a group of extra-terrestrial explorers sent to covertly discover…

  • EDGE goes 90s: Friends

    A look back at the hit 90s sitcom Friends.

  • EDGE Goes 90s: Red Dwarf

    It had its own language, it was the home of one of the first ever Bromances in televisual history, and it was set in space – three reasons why, if you have never seen Red Dwarf, you are missing out in an epic way. Red Dwarf charts the rather odd friendship on board the eponymous…

  • EDGE goes 90s: Pulp – Different Class

    Different Class is a gorgeously grotesque record; musically sublime, lyrically gifted and uniquely Pulp

  • EDGE goes 90s: U2 – Achtung Baby

    Is the album that changed the path of U2 worth a listen or should it remain in the shadow of it’s massive hit single ‘One’?

  • EDGE goes 90s: Nirvana – Nevermind

    The second album from 90’s grunge group Nirvana.

  • Sounds that we loved from our very special decade

  • EDGE Goes 90s: Greenday – Insomniac

    The 90s was a great decade for American Idiots Green Day. The release of Dookie, so far their best selling album of all time, and Nimrod that houses smash hit singles ‘Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)’ and ‘Nice Guys Finish Last’, saw Green Day firmly cement their place on top of the punk-rock world.…

  • EDGE Goes 90s: Remember this…? Children’s TV

    Diggit, Pokemon, Are You Afraid of the Dark and Sabrina the Teenage Witch – just four reasons why 90’s children’s television reigned supreme

  • Skins – Third time’s the charm?

    The EDGE takes a look at the new series of Skins and whether the first two episodes warrant further viewing

  • REWIND: Ben Westbeech, ‘Welcome to the Best Years of Your Life’

    Bristol-born Ben Westbeech is truly a talented musician. His vocals are fautless, fresh, soothing – he sounds completely at ease. His music is an unusual fusion of jazz, hip-hop, funk and pop. Welcome to the Best Years of Your Life is a superb album; the problem is, no-one seems to have heard of the man.…

  • The Streets – Computers and Blues

    Computers and Blues evokes a sense of urgency, the idea that one must not just go through the motions, but push things forward

  • Lemuria – Pebble

    Lemuria – Pebble The third full-length album for Buffalo duo Lemuria was a hugely anticipated 2011 treat for all their fans. Their previous two albums received a lot of deserved praise and following a European tour the news that a third was on it’s way, a long time after the release of Get Better and the…