Steve Reich echoes across a Peckham car park. A Clube da
Esquina legend plays King’s Cross. Peckham’s DIY headquarters reopens
with a day-to-night fundraiser. And Hackney Wick’s new theatre lets you in
before it’s finished.
A hand-checked shortlist of the week in London culture
· new every Thursday
Revised Friday, with a wider net than usual — six of this week’s
venues have never appeared in these pages before. The weekend belongs to the
south-east: Reich on a Peckham rooftop, SET’s reopening fundraiser down the
road, open studios across Brockley, and a £7 six-band all-dayer at the
community-owned Ivy House. Sunday belongs to Toninho Horta at Kings Place.
Midweek, Dalston and Hackney Wick take over: the
Butcher–Edwards–Sanders residency at OTO, scratch nights inside the
Yard’s unfinished new theatre, and Rocola opening on Mare Street. Art is
still on a deadline: Manders likely goes tomorrow, and two more shows close
Sunday.
Service notes, so you don’t plan around ghosts: Lambeth Country Show is
cancelled this year; GDIF has moved to late August; Arcola’s Diana
drag show is sold out all week (returns only). Free counters: Everyman’s
canal-side cinema runs nightly at Granary Square all summer — and if
Wimbledon calls, queue early for a £33 grounds pass, then hit the 3pm
resale kiosk for show-court returns at £15–20.
Bold Tendencies · Peckham rooftop · Sat 4 Jul, evening · from £20 via DICE
Reich has called the Colin Currie Group the best he’s ever
heard at playing his music. On Saturday they play it on the roof of a Peckham
multi-storey as part of Bold Tendencies’ Euphoria season:
interlocking percussion against a slow sunset over the skyline. Heavily
subsidised tickets make this absurd value; exact start time is on DICE, so
check when booking.
Royal Geographical Society · South Kensington · Tonight, 7.30pm · last few tickets
The most decorated living cinematographer — 1917,
Blade Runner 2049, No Country for Old Men — on light,
composition and a lifetime of image-making, on stage with the actor George
MacKay. He talks about craft the way other people talk about plot.
SET Social, Nigel Road · Peckham · Sat 4 Jul, 12pm–3am · Free till 6pm, £5–7 after
Peckham’s artist-run studio network reopens after a forced
closure with a day-to-night fundraiser: a market of ceramics, zines and
records, workshops and performances through the afternoon, DJs until 3am.
They’re £23,000 short of safeguarding the programme, so turning up
is materially useful. Make a south-east day of it: Brockley’s open
studios are twenty minutes away, and the Ivy House — London’s first
community-owned pub — runs a £7 six-band all-dayer from 5pm.
Kings Place, Hall One · King’s Cross · Sun 5 Jul, 8pm · £25–£40 · under-30s £10
Toninho Horta wrote some of the harmony that makes Brazilian
music feel bottomless: a core member of Clube da Esquina, the Minas Gerais
collective around Milton Nascimento whose 1972 double album remains a
landmark. A rare London date, structured as two full sets in Hall One’s
generous acoustic. Under-30s pay a tenner, which is a scandal in your
favour.
BFI Southbank · Waterloo · Season all July · Night Train: Tue 7 Jul
If you missed Thursday’s opening night, the Nobel
laureate’s season of his ten favourite train films runs all month —
and he’s back in person on Tuesday, hosting Kawalerowicz’s
Night Train, the jazz-scored Polish sleeper-car noir, with an
introduction from Prof Philip Horne. Same building, same week: a Marilyn
Monroe strand with daily introductions, and Wednesday’s UK premiere of
the 4K restoration of Bahram Beyzai’s Bashu, the Little Stranger
— an Iranian masterpiece that spent years under censorship.
143 Mare Street · Hackney · Opens Wed 8 Jul · Tue–Sat 4–11pm · book via SevenRooms or 020 4547 3100
The Crudo team’s new 24-seater is named after the Spanish for
jukebox, and programmed like one: an open kitchen with a rotating cast of guest
chefs, plus wine tastings and music nights. The launch residency is Dublin-born
Nico Reynolds cooking what he calls “New Caribbean”: Jamaican heritage
by way of South America. Ten bar seats, a handful of tables.
Manders makes clay-and-bronze figures that look abandoned
mid-thought, installed here above a Roman temple. Listings say Saturday is the
last day; the venue’s site was unreachable when we checked, so treat
Saturday as the deadline.
Jenna Bliss, Buck Ellison and Jasmine Gregory dissect the myths
of the post-2008 money world. Ellison’s forensic photographs of the
American elite are the draw. Sharp, cold, worth the walk down the Mall.
Carlton House Terrace · St James’s · Free, drop-in
The once-a-year open house where working researchers demo their
actual experiments — space fossils to music on the Moon. No booking.
Gone after Sunday.