cover

 

 

Everyone has talent. What is rare is the courage to follow the talent

to the dark place where it leads.

That Throwing Muses continue to operate is in large part due to Kristin Hersh's Strange Angels, a group of supporters who contribute funds to enable the band to record and still be able to eat. For more information please check out Kristin's website here.

As well as dates in the USA and Europe, the band will be promoting Anthology with a series of gigs in the UK and Ireland in November.

1st November - De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea.
2nd November - Shepherd's Bush Empire, London.
3rd November - Univerity of East Anglia, Norwich
4th November - Picturedrome, Holmfirth
5th November - TBC
6th November - Academy 2, Manchester
7th November - Oran Mor, Glasgow
8th November - The Gate, Cardiff
9th November - TBC
10th November - Academy, Dublin

 

Buy Anthology here.

de la warr

Bexhill Museum describe the De La Warr Pavilion as “the most famous building in Bexhill” which is the equivalent of praising the best tree in my garden. I have two trees. No, the pavilion (properly pronounced Delaware) is much more than this, the first welded steel frame building in the country and one of the most confident works of modernist architecture in Britain. It was raised in 1935 as the result of an architectural competition initiated by the 9th Earl De La Warr, which attracted some 230 entrants. The architects chosen for the project, Erich Mendelsohn and Serge Chermayeff, were leading figures in the Modern Movement who favoured streamlined, industrially-influenced designs, eschewing traditional brick and stonework in favour of concrete and steel. It is now a contemporary arts centre.