Bowie: why a chameleon is still a style compass
Personas, covers, looks: we decode how David Bowie turned reinvention into a method pop still copies.
Personas, covers, looks: we decode how David Bowie turned reinvention into a method pop still copies.
On social platforms, a few-second clip can circle the globe. We break down what turns a plain audio into a remix machine.
Seven seconds, a loop, a gesture: we decode what turns an audio clip into a planetary reflex.
Slow a hit down, drown it in a little echo: the 'slowed + reverb' recipe fits the Grand Duchy's train-and-tram commutes perfectly. We break it down.
Between open-air stages and overflowing stories, Luxembourg's musical summer is lived as much on the grass as on the feeds. We break the phenomenon down.
The wireless-headphone party format blowing up online is landing at Luxembourg's nights and festivals.
The black disc isn't just a grandparents' thing anymore: decoding a revival that's landing in the Grand Duchy too.
Wristbands, tote bags and queues: decoding festival fever and its Grand Duchy edition.
From Portuguese to German, hits aren't all in English anymore: decoding a wave tailor-made for Luxembourg.
Why the same TikTok dance always ends up in Luxembourg schools, broken down in a few easy steps.
Dance battles leave the screen to reclaim the street, turning Luxembourg's squares into improvised dancefloors.
The countdown, the blurry teaser, the poster drop: festival summer now plays out as much in stories as it does backstage.
Between fickle weather and the tent that never goes up like in the video, here's the quiet art of surviving a festival weekend.
Arms up, screens lit, stories firing: the most talked-about stage phenomenon of the summer isn't on stage, it's in the pit.
One clip, thousands of videos: how a sound takes over and ends up soundtracking nights out — all the way to Luxembourg.
No more screaming at every kill: the new wave of streamers bets on calm, virtual candles and lofi.
Out early, home early: the young generation is reinventing after-work as an express night out, and cross-border Luxembourg loves it.
The intimate small-capacity gig is becoming the most coveted ticket, and Luxembourg is built to make it its playground.
Blurry pixels, MSN sounds and ugly wallpapers: why everyone is suddenly missing the old internet.