Ed Sheeran
-
The winners of every category at the 2024 Brits, updated as the ceremony progresses
-
Over lunch as he turns 50, the singer tells a host of wild celebrity tales, involving Ed Sheeran and Bear Grylls, and admits that, just sometimes, the criticism can sting
-
‘We’d get big, rugby-playing men coming up to us in tears and saying “I miss my dad” – or “I love my dad and I’ve never told him”’
-
Elizabeth Williams has been sketching since the 1980s – but with Trump, De Niro, Sheeran and Trump again, nothing quite compares to 2023
-
Now that LadBaby has passed on the charity baton, let’s return to the days when real talents held sway. Like, erm, Mr Blobby and Benny Hill, writes Barbara Ellen
-
3 out of 5 stars.
Ed Sheeran review – Autumn Variations’ weak national elegies laid bare in singer’s first Albert Hall show
3 out of 5 stars.In Britain’s most prestigious venue Sheeran’s broadstroke vision is vague and deliriously unspecific, with the night saved only by a generous late helping of the hits
-
Musician ‘vehemently opposed’ to seat-holders selling unwanted tickets at inflated prices
-
2 out of 5 stars.This supposed skewering of macho posturing turns everything into one big joke – and Ed Sheeran’s role is best forgotten
-
2 out of 5 stars.Plodding, genre-hopping songs all end up as unimaginative ballads, their dreary lyrics littered with gibberish – though Sheeran’s hooks remain strong on his second album this year
-
Jennifer Lopez surprised restaurant-goers in Capri over the weekend with a rousing rendition of I Will Survive, the latest example of a big star surprise-grabbing the mic
-
From a former prime minister to an entrepreneur and heaps of pop legends, we’ve charted the most terrible television appearances made by famous people who cannot act
-
For the sixth time in eight years, Sheeran has topped the PPL’s list of the UK’s most played artists, encompassing streaming, radio, broadcast and public places
-
From Beyoncé to BTS, the star power of popular music artists is helping to revive pandemic-hit countries
-
Artists are hitting No 1, then dropping out of the Top 100 the following week. Industry figures ponder whether the chart is still a barometer of taste – or just a marketing ploy
-
‘This is an art form – and we’re losing it’: is the music video dying?