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Black British music, Beef and bandaged terror: What’s to see, do or hear this week in Europe

News RoomBy News RoomApril 17, 2026
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Emerging from the post-Easter haze or buzzing with the season’s renewed energy, the European cultural landscape this week offers a potent antidote to any lingering inertia. From London to Basel and across our screens and speakers, a compelling mix of historical reflection, monstrous reinvention, and pure rhythmic release awaits. Whether your taste leans toward immersive art exhibitions, cinematic chills, tense television, or dancefloor-ready albums, the coming days are rich with invitations to feel, think, and escape. This curated selection promises something for every disposition, acting as a springboard for plans that range from the contemplative to the thrillingly cathartic.

For those seeking depth and dialogue with history, two major exhibitions offer powerful journeys. In London, the V&A East launches the landmark exhibition “The Music is Black: A British Story,” a vital chronicle of 125 years of Black British musical innovation. This is far more than a display of memorabilia; it’s a narrative of cultural force told through over 200 evocative objects. From Winifred Atwell’s piano to Stormzy’s politically charged Banksy-designed stab-proof vest, the exhibition frames music as a profound vehicle for resistance, joy, identity, and social change, underscoring how Black artists have fundamentally shaped the nation’s sonic and social fabric. Meanwhile, in Switzerland, the Kunstmuseum Basel turns its focus to a revolutionary force in painting with a major retrospective of Helen Frankenthaler. As a pioneer of the soak-stain technique, Frankenthaler’s vibrant, fluid abstractions redefined what paint could do. This exhibition, the largest of its kind in Europe, traces her six-decade career, placing her luminous canvases in conversation with the art historical traditions that inspired her, offering a fresh perspective on her enduring influence.

Cinema this week taps into a classic vein of horror with a modern, chilling twist. Director Lee Cronin, known for Evil Dead Rise, resurrects “The Mummy” for a new era, filling a notable gap in the recent monster-movie resurgence. This Blumhouse production moves away from desert tombs and instead weaves a domestic nightmare. The story follows a young girl who mysteriously reappears eight years after vanishing in the desert, her return initially met with joyous relief by her family. That relief curdles into dread as they realize the child who has come home is not their daughter, but something ancient and cursed wearing her face. Audiences can anticipate the studio’s signature style of tense jump-scares and heavy CGI, with the central horror anchored by the universally unsettling trope of the “wrong” child. (And for those holding a torch for the 1999 adventure, it must be noted: Brendan Fraser does not make a cameo.)

On the television front, one of 2023’s most critically acclaimed and electrically tense series returns, albeit with a completely new story and cast. Netflix’s “Beef” captivated audiences with its ferocious tale of a road rage incident that spiraled into all-consuming chaos for two strangers. Season two retains the core premise of a conflict that explosively escalates but shifts the battlefield to corporate and generational dynamics. This season pits a Gen Z couple, played by Cailee Spaeny and Charles Melton, against their older, wealthier bosses, portrayed by Carey Mulligan and Oscar Isaac. The promise is another masterclass in anxiety-inducing storytelling, using its sharp social commentary and dark humor to explore the tensions between ambition, class, and different stages of life, proving the show’s format is a versatile vessel for examining modern rage.

The musical highlight offers a glorious counterpoint to all this tension: a guaranteed injection of joy and groove. British pop sensation Jessie Ware releases her new album, “Superbloom,” following up what many considered a modern disco masterpiece, ‘That! Feels Good!’. Where that album was a post-pandemic burst of collective catharsis, Superbloom draws inspiration from the legendary hedonism and glamour of New York’s Studio 54. The result is a confident, retro-infused journey through funk, disco, and glam-pop, designed with one clear purpose: to compel movement. Ware has solidified her reign as a queen of sophisticated dancehall pop, and this album seems meticulously crafted to sound-track nights of pure, unadulterated release, inviting listeners straight onto the dance floor.

From the resonant historical echoes in museum halls to the primal fears stirred in dark cinemas, from the razor-sharp social conflicts on screen to the unifying pulse of a perfect disco beat, this week’s cultural offerings remind us of art’s diverse power. They can challenge our understanding of the past, make our hearts race with fear or anxiety, and ultimately, provide the collective release that restores us. Each recommendation serves as an open door—whether to reflect on the forces that shape our culture, to confront our darker curiosities, to dissect contemporary social fissures, or to simply lose oneself in rhythm. The choice, and the ensuing experience, is wonderfully yours to make.

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