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Church on stage at Pop Dungeon at the Clapham Grand, with huge glitterball

Charlotte Church’s Pop Dungeon review – a festive farewell to a glorious covers band

Clapham Grand, London With Prince, Julee Cruise, Black Sabbath and Jennifer Rush on the set list, the Welsh singer gave her pop anthems night a rowdy, emotional send-off

C harlotte Church struts on to the stage, wearing a baseball cap and a silver fringe-trimmed dress, and growls: “I wanna fuck you like an animal.” The crowd howls: “Yaass!” The feral Nine Inch Nails cover has become a staple opener for Church’s Pop Dungeon – an event that, for the past six years, has filled sticky-floored venues and festival tents around the UK.

Described as “a genre-fluid jukebox of anthems”, Pop Dungeon sees the Welsh legend front what is essentially the world’s greatest covers band. “Think a pool party with Prince and Kate Bush at the grill, Beyoncé and Kurt Cobain on the bar,” Church explained recently. “Except it’s also Christmas, and both Santa and Kevin McCallister are here to get down.” She also announced that this latest run of dates would be the event’s last.

Kicking off last night at south London’s cathedral of camp, the Clapham Grand, and ending on 21 December in her home town of Cardiff, this festive farewell tour gives Pop Dungeon a send-off fit for a historic ship. The poster promises pigs in blankets and balloon drops. Church and her band take to the stage for an hour and a half and sweat through a set that goes everywhere from Black Sabbath to N.E.R.D. to Justice Vs Simian.

Church at Pop Dungeon.

First and foremost, Pop Dungeon is a celebration of music. It’s a love letter to the power of a true banger, written by the Patron Saint of Good Time Girls – a woman Liam Gallagher once lauded as a fellow hellraiser with “a great voice” who “knows how to get hammered and freak people out”. The band and the backing singers each get their moment in the sun, shredding solos and taking it in turns to command centre stage, but Church is the beating heart of the performance, showcasing her curatorial skills and effortless range. She swings from an angelic rendition of the Home Alone soundtrack to a mashup of Jennifer Rush’s The Power of Love with Falling by Julee Cruise, before gliding up to the emotional high point of Purple Rain, like a blade over ice.

It’s a rowdy and emotional masterclass from a rare talent and a top-tier entertainer; Pavarotti, Miley Cyrus and Robbie Williams all rolled into one little rock star in sexy boots.

  • Pop and rock
  • Charlotte Church

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Since she set up shop down the road we’ve been in talks with Charlotte Church about the possibility that maybe… just maybe, she’d play for us at The Lost ARC . Well, the time is now! And given that this is to be the Late Night Pop Dungeon’s final tour, it’s now or NEVER!

Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon ‘s genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and – deep breath – this will be their final ever tour.

CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails – often appearing in the same mashed up medley. Fronted by Charlotte Church (yeah, that one!) backed by post-punk-disco-R’n’R’n’B band, this 9-piece are ready to deliver-deliver-deliver pop bangers and forgotten classics. 

“Pop Dungeon is not a dusty covers band who play songs note perfect to their meant-to-be, tidy ends; in their snippets and mixes they’ve more in common with 2manydjs than the Bootleg Beatles.” – LOUD AND QUIET

“…these sets where she belts out everything from Destiny’s Child to Rage Against the Machine, are fast becoming notorious.” – VICE

“After a life in the public eye and having spent years singing dutifully – for American presidents, for the Pope, for record companies milking her worth – Church has clearly decided it’s time to do whatever she likes.” – INDEPENDENT

“…in sparkly wigs, hot pants and headdresses they proceeded to unleash a fearsome 90-minute live mixtape of surefire party-starters by the likes of Prince, Missy Elliott and Black Sabbath.” – SCOTSMAN

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Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon Tour Dates

Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon

Since signing to Sony Classical at the age of 12, Cardiff-born Charlotte's versatility has made her a huge commercial success. Her breakthrough album more...

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Charlotte’s Late Night Pop Dungeon 16th December 2022

Time: 18:30 - 22:00, price: £25 +bf, bristol beacon + simple things festival presents charlotte’s late night pop dungeon plus support 14+ (under 16’s accompanied must be accompanied by an adult).

Charlotte  Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon’s genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and – deep breath – this will be their final ever tour. CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails – often appearing in the same mashed up medley. Fronted by  Charlotte Church (yeah, that one!) backed by post-punk-disco-R’n’R’n’B band, this 9-piece are ready to deliver-deliver-deliver pop bangers and forgotten classics.

“Pop Dungeon is not a dusty covers band who play songs note perfect to their meant-to-be, tidy ends; in their snippets and mixes they’ve more in common with 2manydjs than the Bootleg Beatles.” LOUD AND QUIET “…in sparkly wigs, hot pants and headdresses they proceeded to unleash a fearsome 90-minute live mixtape of surefire party-starters by the likes of Prince, Missy Elliott and Black Sabbath.” SCOTSMAN

“After a life in the public eye and having spent years singing dutifully – for American presidents, for the Pope, for record companies milking her worth – Church has clearly decided it’s time to do whatever she likes.” INDEPENDENT “…these sets where she belts out everything from Destiny’s Child to Rage Against the Machine, are fast becoming notorious.” VICE

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pop dungeon tour

Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon

December 21, 2022 @ 6:00 pm - 11:00 pm

DEPOT Presents: Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon – Final Tour

TICKETS ON SALE NOW: depotcardiff.seetickets.com

Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon’s genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and – deep breath – this will be their final ever tour. CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails – often appearing in the same mashed up medley. Fronted by Charlotte Church (yeah, that one!) backed by post-punk-disco-R’n’R’n’B band, this 9-piece are ready to deliver-deliver-deliver pop bangers and forgotten classics.

“After a life in the public eye and having spent years singing dutifully – for American presidents, for the Pope, for record companies milking her worth – Church has clearly decided it’s time to do whatever she likes.” INDEPENDENT

“…these sets where she belts out everything from Destiny’s Child to Rage Against the Machine, are fast becoming notorious.” VICE

pop dungeon tour

BINGO LINGO – THIS IS COUNTRY

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Renowned as the cities biggest Friday, BINGO LINGO is the night you need! Prepare yourself for a wild ride as we go FULL COUNTRY!

It’s the city’s biggest Friday night BINGO LINGO!

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What is BINGO LINGO?

Rum & reggae w/ david rodigan.

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Save the date for a night of tropical beats and Caribbean heat!

Sat 27th April our Rum & Reggae festival returns with an evening of tasty food, great rum and plenty of jammin’

We have another stacked lineup this year including Mr Reggae himself… @davidramjamrodigan

+ support from the UK’s #1 Bob Marley Tribute @themarleyexperience

MINI RAVERS

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GO CLUBBING… WITH YOUR KIDS!

Expect meet & greets with our characters, parachute, giant inflatable balloons and a whole load more!

Resident Mini Ravers DJ’s playing 90s, house, commercial, DnB, party & some kids sing-a-long classics.

FULL SCALE Festival Production

Free Glow-Sticks, Giant Balloons, UV Lights

Mini Ravers merchandise & tuck shop

Giant confetti cannons

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Australia’s most anticipated men are heating up the town Magic Men’s “FEEL THE MAGIC” showcases it’s most talented men in a heart-stopping live performance.

Featuring Will Parfitt, this one-of-a-kind stage show tears up the stage with hot hunks, smooth moves and lighting spectacle guaranteed to make it a night out to remember. Voted Australia’s BEST MALE DANCE GROUP, find out what makes these group of guys the talk of the town.

So, grab your girls and enjoy an epic GIRLS NIGHT OUT, and be treated like a queen and experience a night of fun, laughter and lots of eye-candy.

Presented by Forrest Jones Entertainment.

DOORS 630PM / SHOW 730PM

IMPORTANT REMINDERS: • Arrive early to avoid long lines. • The show is 18+. • Magic Men reserve the right to change the touring roster due to changing border conditions.

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Soundtrack Of My Life: Charlotte Church

Singer, activist, dungeon mistress

Charlotte Church

The first song I remember hearing

Black Box – ‘Ride on Time’

“When I was about three, I started going to a nursery. And apparently the first time my parents realised I was musical is when we’d come home with the radio on and I’d very quickly be able to sing every word to every song. My mum was like ‘that’s weird!’ I could just pick it up by ear.”

The first song I fell in love with

Shakespears Sister – ‘Stay’

“I had this song on a compilation album and it made such a big impact on me – I must have been about seven at the time. It was just so unusual: there’s a real darkness that comes in, and it all just sounds so exotic. I still fucking love this song now.”

The first album I bought

Peter Andre – ‘Natural’

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“I remember buying this album on CD. And I can also remember seeing him at the Smash Hits Poll Winners Party with his six-pack and black leather trousers. I had a singing exam the next day, so my auntie bought me a whistle to stop me from screaming and ruining my voice. But because all the other kids were screaming, obviously I had to scream too. And so I lost my voice for my second exam, but I think I still managed to pass it.”

The song that makes me want to dance

Bee Gees – ‘Stayin’ Alive’

“I could say anything by Kaytranada , but I’m going to pick ‘Stayin’ Alive’ because it’s such a fucking banger, it’s insane. No matter how many times I hear it – and in whatever context – when you actually tune in to what’s going on musically, it’s like ‘wow’. Like, the crunch and the space and the drums and the bassline, it’s all just so delicious. This song is just dripping in movement.”

The song that always goes off at my Pop Dungeon gigs

Robyn – ‘With Every Heartbeat’

“There’s actually two, and they go off in different ways. ‘With Every Heartbeat’ has everyone holding each other and crying their eyes out – every single time. And then ‘Killing In The Name’ by Rage Against The Machine goes off because it’s so political and moving: it’s really to the point and really anti-establishment. And then when we come in with ‘Independent Women Part I’ by Destiny’s Child , people are like ‘whaaaaaat?!'”

The song I wish I’d written

Nat King Cole – ‘Nature Boy’

“It’s one of the most magical songs I’ve ever heard. It was written by a hermit [eden ahbez] who lived in a cave in LA, and then he waited backstage after a Nat King Cole [gig] to sing it to him. So it’s already got this great mythic backstory, but then the song itself is just completely spell-like. That last line – ‘ The greatest thing you’ll ever learn/Is just to love and be loved in return’  – that’s it right? That’s life. Lush.”

The song I can’t get out of my head

Jazmine Sullivan – ‘Lost One’

“She’s just an incredible singer. Sometimes she’ll deliver a lyric almost like a teenage boy, but then she blows and does these incredibly fast runs and stuff. And lyrically, this song is really visceral and interesting and complex. I absolutely love it.”

The song I do at karaoke

Alannah Myles – ‘Black Velvet’

“When I do find myself at karaoke, this song is my go-to, because I know that I can slay it no matter how drunk I am. We actually used to do it at Pop Dungeon as a mash-up with ‘Strict Machine’ by Goldfrapp , which was fucking awesome. If I’m feeling a bit more experimental at karaoke, I’ll do ‘Bills, Bills, Bills’ by Destiny’s Child, which is really difficult for me to sing. Not only are Beyoncé ‘s vocal runs insane, but a lot of it is really fast rap-singing which I’m fucking terrible at. So if I’m trolleyed, it’s a nightmare.”

The song I want played at my funeral

Talking Heads – ‘Once In A Lifetime’

“Oh, it’s got to be ‘Once In A Lifetime’ without a shadow of a doubt. Much like ‘Nature Boy’, this song is a spell: it’s much deeper than it first appears and really interpretable. I actually think that it’s a fucking divine, sacred song.”

Charlotte Church’s final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour begins December 3 at The Clapham Grand in London. It then goes to Leeds, Manchester, Bristol and Cardiff

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Charlotte Church People s Assembly Manchester Academy Mike Hughes 31 1

Charlotte Church to take her Late Night Pop Dungeon on tour at last

Classical icon turned popstar turned "Grand High Executionatrix" Charlotte Church has announced a UK tour with her Late Night Pop Dungeon.

Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon is an act like no other. Performing the greatest of hits and the guiltiest of pleasures side by side, it's something that has to be seen to be believed - and there's never been a better time to do so.

The Late Night Pop Dungeon is hitting the road for their first proper tour. Beginning in Leeds in April, the tour takes in Belfast, Dublin, Manchester, Glasgow, and Brighton, before ending in Birmingham in May.

The collective have teased the dates with a video featuring an unseen patient undergoing treatment for addiction to the group's performances alongside footage from their past live shows. You can watch the video above.

Church and her Pop Dungeon recently headlined our new music festival, The Five Day Forecast , with an extra-special evening of pure fun at London's The Lexington. Check out highlights!

  • 1 - Leeds, Brudenell Social Club
  • 7 - Belfast, Limelight
  • 8 - Dublin, Green Room
  • 13 - Manchester, Gorilla
  • 14 - Glasgow, Oran Mor
  • 28 - Brighton, Concorde
  • 12 - Birmingham, Institute
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How the unpredictable career of Charlotte Church has led to political activism and covers band the Pop Dungeon

More than hits

Words by Stuart Stubbs Photos by Gem Harris

Charlotte Church laughs when I remind her that she published her first autobiography at the age of 14. A preposterous thought with a title to match. Or maybe not. By the time My Life (So Far) was released in 2001, Church was already three albums into an unprecedented crossover career that had started with her singing Andrew Lloyd Webber’s ‘Pie Jesu’ down the phone to Richard and Judy on This Morning . It would become the opening song on her 1998 debut album of arias, sacred songs and traditional pieces – the ultimate parent stocking-filler of the day, ‘Voice of an Angel’.

As the album continued to sell into its multi-millions – regimentally followed by Christmas-ready records in 1999 and 2000 – Church toured the world like an opera star should, performing for Heads of States and dignitaries, including the Queen, the Pope and a couple of US Presidents: first Clinton, and then George W. Bush, who asked Church what State Wales was in when she told him where she was from.

In 1999 she first appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show . In 2001, immediately after Bush’s inauguration, she sat one of her GCSEs in the White House. It seems that My Life (So Far) was in fact a read. And then, two years later and at the age of 16, Charlotte Church retired from classical singing to embark on an increasingly lawless career of doing whatever she likes. And what she likes right now is dressing up with 8 or 9 friends and performing virtuoso versions of tightly rehearsed chart hits in a covers band called Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon. So I don’t first meet Charlotte in a palace or presidential home as once I might have; I meet her in Digbeth, Birmingham, on a wet Friday night at the O2 Institute, where the Pop Dungeon is about to make the weeks of 400 people in a room that resembles a good student union.

By the back door I enter through with Charlotte’s tour manager, Gethin, there are three autograph hunters that I wasn’t expecting. They say that they’ve been waiting since 10am (it’s now 7pm) and convince Gethin to take their books inside for Charlotte to sign. “It’s always the same demographic,” she says of the 50-year-old men, although it is out of the ordinary for them to come to a show these days.

Charlotte is feeling terrible with a bug that’s hit her that day. She’s also pregnant with her third child. Her boyfriend, Johnny, who plays guitar in the Pop Dungeon as Curtis Fridge, keeps her company as the rest of the band (“a bunch of complete hedders,” says Church, who also have ridiculous stage names) drift in and out of the extremely unglamorous green room before taking their per diems to the pub. They return as photographer Gem is shooting Charlotte, who looks great but clearly feels unwell and doesn’t speak much. She insists that the show won’t be a bust, though. “Music heals, and all that.”

The nine members of the Pop Dungeon walk onstage in a camp parade of who can look the most fabulous/ridiculous/magical. There is no clear winner. Backing singer ‘Shirley Daddy’ is inexplicitly dressed as Kermit the Frog, with ‘Purple Pussy’ to her left in leopard print and red tights, and, to her right, ‘Glitoris’ looking like a cosmic ’70s mum in robes and green-lens glasses. On the end of their line is ‘Camel Joe’ – a Viking with no shirt but a silver waistcoat. Drummer ‘Bongo Fury’ almost looks underdressed as a lost member of Dexy’s; keyboardist ‘Buddy Analogue’ takes the Nathan Barley fluro bomber jacket and moustache route; the bottom half of ‘Curtis Fridge’ is Beetlejuice while the top half is of a glam-rock flamenco dancer. Which leaves the big-bearded ‘Galacto Love Spoon’ (definitely my favourite name) – the Pop Dungeon’s bass wizard, in terms of how well he plays and the fact that, in a gold cape and with glitter in his grey chops, he looks actually like a wizard who could be in Wizard. There’s Charlotte too, in fishnets, gold sequin hot pants, gold tasselled top and a vintage army jacket she bought when she was 18.

And then they start to play, and if the unbridled, growing appeal of Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon isn’t realised by the first couple of bars of Prince’s ‘Get Off’, it is by the segue into ‘Get Ur Freak On’, which slides into Black Sabbath’s ‘War Pigs’, what with this being Birmingham, and all. Those three numbers, over within 3 minutes, let you know a few things about what will follow for the next quick hour. 1.) The band are incredible, 2.) That includes Church’s voice, even though she’s spent most of her life smoking, 3.) The song choices are varied far beyond what you’d probably expect, 4.) Whilst this would be the greatest wedding band of all time, the Pop Dungeon is not a dusty covers band who play songs note perfect to their meant-to-be, tidy ends; in their snippets and mixes they’ve more in common with 2manydjs than the Bootleg Beatles.

“It really pisses me off when people say that it’s like karaoke,” Church tells me. “It’s not Karaoke at all! It’s a really carefully crafted set to bring maximum joy.”

It certainly works. Proudly kitsch and with no big secret beyond the unpretentious glee of seeing these songs performed so well, the band are having the most fun of all, with Church a generous host. In turn she introduces Purple Pussy for a star turn on Amerie’s ‘One Thing’, welcomes Shirley Daddy to perform ‘Paper Planes’, which she adds her own daft verse to, and pulls Glitoris into the spotlight to scream ‘Killing In The Name’ mixed with ‘Independent Women’. Curtis Fridge and Galacto Love Spoon get theirs on the “You don’t remember…” section of ‘Paranoid Android’ and, the most surprising track of the night, Nirvana’s ‘Aneurysm’. There’s also a moment when Church goes full opera and performs the theme to E.T. , which is accompanied by a silhouette paper puppet of a bike sailing crossing a full moon. She rolls her eyes at us for cheering so hard. “Yay, the ’80s,” she mocks – a reminder that Charlotte Church likes to take the piss.

They end on an R. Kelly medley of ‘Bump N’ Grind’, ‘Ignition (Remix)’ and ‘I Believe I Can Fly’, although Charlotte later tells me: “I’m starting to question the morality of that medley. It’s a shame, because they’re such tunes, but to me he’s a bit of an evil human being. I’ve been trying to ignore it, but our drummer Dave [she means Bongo Fury] came in and said, ‘You know what, you need to look at this R. Kelly shit – it’s really not cool; we should stop doing it.”

Pockets of the room chant: “Charlotte, Charlotte, Charlotte fucking Church,” as they have done on and off all night. Then we all have to go back out into the Birmingham rain.

The following Monday I meet Charlotte in Dinas Powys, the village she’s lived in for the last six years, a few miles outside of Cardiff. We order pots of tea and sit in the window of a small, traditional café. She feeling much better and as far as the what-you-see-is-what-you-get notion of Charlotte Church goes, it’s true. She’s instantly familiar; from the way she might refer to you as “my love” to how she describes her genuine loved ones as “lush”. Due to her pregnancy she’s kicked smoking (she thinks for life) and is off the booze, but she still revels in bad language, and it’s quite a gift how naturally she can slip “fuck” into a sentence without you noticing it. She’s frank and funny and, after 20 years of public scrutiny and increasing abuse, she has no intention of holding her tongue when it comes to the issues that matter most to her – chief among them the threat of Tory rule and the danger of a Conservative landslide in the upcoming General Election. But first: the happier subject of Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon.

She says that Friday night was a pretty good show, “but at others the crowd have been mental from the get-go. Mainly up North.”

I mention how diverse the crowd was in Birmingham. On the barrier was a solid line of slightly disconcerting 50-year-old men, one filming the entire performance on his phone, but behind them a mix of all sorts danced and got pissed together. From the lone, bearded young dude behind me to the group of mums in flats in front, it felt almost alien to be at a show so inclusive.

“The people I see at Pop Dungeon gigs are the people who really need it,” she says. “That’s how it feels to me – people who are like, ‘oh God, please, this life is just so fucking harrowing,’” she laughs. “And there is something of a balm to it; there is something soothing and re-energising. That’s not how we meant it to be, it’s just developed like that. I mean, I don’t do it all the time because I need to be in the moment and feel it, but sometimes I do little spiels throughout, like whispering ‘fuck the Tories’ or some stuff about communal heartache.” (In Birmingham she introduced Beyoncé’s ‘Sorry’ by slowly saying: “This song is for anyone who’s had their heart opened up and literally shat in.”.)

“Sometimes there is a bit of self-love too,” she says. “Before ‘I Believe I Can Fly’ I’ve said before that life is tough and really hard and sometimes you’ve got to look at yourself in the mirror and say, ‘well done, you’re doing really well.’ I say this because it’s what I do.

“You’ll have broken people there; you’ll have people who are off their tits on drugs there; you’ll have drunk people there; you’ll have aggressive people starting fights – we’ve had a few fights in the audience while we’ve played. I’m thinking for the festivals we’ll add a slow dance section to calm everyone down.” She’s also planning a ‘diva-off’ section, where she’ll play herself.

It’s a festival that we have to directly thank for the Pop Dungeon. And not some mobile phone provider’s corporate day event that thinks a craft beer tent will disguise the fact that you can also win a Volvo at the VIP bar. Charlotte Church devised her shameless pop party specifically for ATP in April 2016, at the behest of that year’s curator, comedian Stewart Lee.

Lee and Church had become friends some time before, and so when he got the ATP job he asked her if she’d like to perform. Anything, he said. Church hasn’t released any music since her 2014 alt. rock EP ‘Four’, though, so that was out. “And then we thought about how chin-strokey ATP was going to be, with Stewart Lee and his free jazz, so we were like, let’s do something that is really kitsch and so full of joy that it’s going to be impossible not to love. You need that release at a festival like ATP, which is very intellectual, and that’s exactly what we were.

“We were after The Fall – everyone had had a shit time at The Fall – and we couldn’t believe it. The reaction was completely mad – not what we were expecting. And then we just kept getting booked again and again. And every time we did it, it was better. We thought it was going to be a weird one-off for Stewart Lee at ATP. I thought people would be mad at us. We did ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart’ – a beautiful, deconstructed version of it – but it’s almost a hymn, that song, so we thought people would hate it. We did Neutral Milk Hotel as well, so cult bands and songs that people really hold dear.”

The reaction was overwhelmingly positive, with the Pop Dungeon heralded as the hit of the weekend. Charlotte and her band celebrated by getting shit-faced.

The praise for the show keeps coming, and its reputation is why I travelled to Birmingham to see if it really could be as much fun as people had told me. Part of the reason that it is, is down to the band’s choice of songs. Cover bands at your local black box venue – it doesn’t sound good. And the term “pop hits”, for me, at least, equates to the cheese clubs that I can’t stand – ‘Living On A Prayer’, ‘I Am The One And Only’, Culture Club, Steps. The Pop Dungeon rescues pop music from a preconception of complete and utter naffness with songs by En Vogue, Prince, Destiny’s Child and the half-forgotten Blue Boy. And they’ll also throw in Can, Funkadelic and Nine Inch Nails. That it’s presented so proudly, and executed so well, you can’t imagine that anyone would be down on it.

“We had one guy who Tweeted at us saying we need to check our fucking straight, white privileges, saying that we were culturally appropriating things, because it was an all-white band,” says Charlotte. “So I started a conversation with the guy to ask if he could pinpoint some of his issues, because he had some form of a point, I get that: yes, the band is all white, it could definitely be more diverse. I mean, I didn’t design it like that, but then again, if we’re looking at a society where equality means not treating people the same, it means helping some people more than others, then he’s got a point.

“He said his piece, and I said I’d think on it. To feel like that about the show, though, you do have to be searching for problems. Yes, there is a ember of a point there, and I’m sorry for that, but you’ve missed the point.”

People have never had a problem telling Charlotte Church what they think of her. “Whether it’s because of my weight, or I’m a shit singer, or I’m ugly, or Cheryl Cole is better than me.”

It’s disputed whether it was at the hand of The Sun newspaper or an anonymous website, but in 2002 a disgusting and predatory clock appeared online counting down the days to Charlotte’s 16 th birthday and the moment she would be “legal”. Around the same time, the Daily Star ran a photograph of the then-15-year-old Church in a tight top under the headline ‘She’s A Big Girl Now’. The only thing more unbelievable than the story and its use of lines like “looking chest swell” is that on the same page the paper branded the Brass Eye paedophile special as “sick”.

After that, Church spent a few years being chased around by paparazzi to encourage swathes of the population to judge her for having a good time like every other teenager on the planet, and certainly no more than you’d expect from a highly successful child star millionaire. Cue thousands of cheap headlines about ‘Fallen/Hell’s Angel, Charlotte’.

As Charlotte’s fame has lessened, though – with music releases on the back-burner and with her becoming a mother who is no longer the partner of a Welsh rugby star (she has an 8-year-old son and a 9-year-old daughter with Gavin Henson) – the rise of social media and her newfound passion for political activism has exposed her to more abuse than ever before.

Trolls love to harass Charlotte, just as they love to harass any opinionated person in the public eye, especially women. I find her approach to the whole depressing thing commendable and rare. Like the guy who to told her to “check your fucking straight, white privileges”, she responds to them all. In part it’s to defend herself, but it’s also to engage with people; and not simply to shout them down and prove herself categorically right. It can eat up her day, but she says it gets to a point where she simply can’t ignore it.

Still, I argue, there must be times when you want to dismiss a comment as that of a moron who you’re never going to be able to reason with.

“No,” she says, “because then if you felt like that, you end up being on the other side – ‘this person is a moron, they don’t know what they’re talking about.’ Everybody is worth trying to talk to. It’s worth trying to make them understand.

“And I think lots of it isn’t real,” she says. “I’m not saying that everyone loves me, like I’m Sally Fields, but I think that there are so many online presences that aren’t real profiles, which are controlled to sway public opinion. Especially all of the political stuff, and all of the horrific misogynistic stuff, it doesn’t feel real to me. And when it’s all directed at you, you start to see patterns, then. Like, all the profiles that are calling me ‘a feminazi whore cunt who should get raped by immigrants’ etc., a lot of them have a profile picture of a really pretty young girl who’s a Conservative Activist or a Republican, and I just don’t believe it – none of it makes sense, and it’s not well constructed enough.”

She says she loves having deep conversations with taxi drivers and talking to people with opposing views to her to better inform her viewpoint and take away her prejudice.

“If somebody is saying: ‘I can’t stand Jeremy Corbyn; he doesn’t have a clue what he’s doing; he’s a bumbling fool’, instead of saying: ‘I disagree with you on that and here are the reasons why,’ it’s more like: ‘Why do you think that? How have you come to that conclusion? What do you read? How is Theresa May better? Are you left or right, then?’ It just better allows you to argue your point. And you are then constantly, slightly remoulding what you think, which is how things should be. It should never be a case of, ‘right, I’ve spent all this time honing my perfect set of beliefs and it’s been the same for 10 years.’ That’s not progressive. Life is fluid.”

Charlotte detractors would probably read that and dismiss it as naïve and ideological. I’m sure she wouldn’t care if they did, but sat talking to her you can’t miss how impassioned she is by it all. What’s ironic, then, is that the same people who bemoan ‘Charlotte Church the champagne socialist’ for appearing on Question Time and speaking at anti-austerity marches are the same people who bemoan the younger generation for not being politicised and not giving a shit. That used to be Charlotte Church, until as recently as the last General Election, when she voted for the very first time in 2015. The catalyst for her, she says, was when she spoke at The Leveson Inquiry as one of the victims of the News International phone hacking scandal. (The Murdoch-owned organisation was ordered to pay Church £600,000 in damages.)

“It’s because I was appalled at the corruption and injustice,” she says. “I just couldn’t believe it. And once it’s laid out in front of you like that it becomes impossible to ignore, and then I had to get involved as a moral obligation. As Dumbledore says in the last Harry Potter book, ‘there’s what’s right and there’s what’s easy.’”

I point out that that’s the third reference Charlotte has made to Harry Potter today. (Earlier when she talked about the dark arts of Cambridge Analytica, the digital data company that supported Trump’s presidency campaign and the Brexit ‘Leave’ campaign, she says: “You start to see these Internet data forces behind right wing ideology… It’s like they’re all Death Eaters and the Order of the Phoenix is totally fucked!”)

She laughs. “Well, I’m quite a simple person,” she says, “or maybe it’s about simple philosophies as everything is getting more and more complex with the amount of information – it’s about rationalizing it for yourself. But it does seem very simple at the moment – either you care for other people and the wellbeing of other humans, and that’s regardless of the fact that they are stupid or a different religion to you, or had a bad education, or have 15,000 kids. Either you care for other people and you want to see the general betterment for everybody, or you see that as unrealistic and ideological, and so therefore you go, what life is forcing me to do is survival of the fittest and I have to concentrate on looking after my own family because that’s the only way we’re going to survive. I understand that point of view – that comes from a place of deep love for your family and a fear and a want to keep them safe, but in order to achieve that you have to do it at the exclusion of others, because there’s only so much space and so many resources etc. So whilst I don’t think that’s abjectly wrong and makes you a dreadful human being for thinking like that, I just don’t think that that’s the right way to go.

“Conservatism is about shrinking the state, and it’s important to go back and remember who the Tories are – they’re not the party of the workers. I’m not saying that Labour are or that Jeremy Corbyn is the guy, but these people [the Conservative Party] aren’t who they claim to be.”

Like most of the country, Charlotte expects a Tory victory on June 8 th ; she just hopes that it’s not a landslide, for fear of Britain becoming a one-party state, and the very real threat of the NHS being the first institution on the bonfire.

Having come from a community that typically doesn’t vote, this morning she’s been trying in vain to write a script for a video to encourage people to register and do so.

“The NHS is the best thing about this country,” she says. “It’s the only thing fucking keeping me here.

“It’s very unlikely that Labour’s going to win, but I really hope it’s not a Tory landslide, I really do, because I think it would be the end of our society that’s been built by our families and by our money for years. Because the wealthy have been avoiding paying their fair share for many, many years. So this whole society – the NHS, our institutions, our schools, everything – it’s been built by our families, our parents and their parents’ before them, by everything that they’ve paid in and by working in these institutions. They are ours . They belong to us. This isn’t a ‘we’re lucky to have them’ situation, which is what people will have us believe.

“And although I know I’m going to get a fucking shitload of crap [for this video], and eventually I might be on the losing side, it doesn’t matter, because for me it’s what’s right.”

Immediately after the Pop Dungeon had left the stage on Friday night, Charlotte was back in the green room, out of costume, shattered and still ill. Impressively, she’d made it through the show, but that image of her couldn’t have contested more the perceived impression of Charlotte Church the perma-pisshead, fuelled by Cheeky Vimto (Blue WKD mixed with port). Just moments before, as the O2 Institute emptied, I heard two girls weighing up whether to wait a little longer to see if Charlotte might come back out to meet some fans. “Oh c’mon, this is Charlotte Church,” they reasoned, “she’s probably already getting pissed at the bar.” When I ask Charlotte if she’s ever felt a pressure to live up to the persona that has stuck with her since her late teens, she lets out a loud laugh of disbelief. “Oh no,” she says. “I’ve never felt any pressure. I did that all by myself very easily. But everything about me is sort of like that – it’s proper what you see is what you get.”

I ask if that means that there are no misconceptions about her.

“How much my wealth was exaggerated really pissed me off,” she says, referring to the recurring estimate of her being worth £25 million. “At my height I was worth £7 million, and now I’m worth far less than that because I’ve spent loads, I’ve given loads to my family – I bought everybody a fucking house – I’ve lent loads of people money, I’ve given loads to charity and I’ve paid my fair share in taxes. So whilst I’m really comfortable and will be for the rest of my life if I don’t earn any more and I’m reasonable, I’m not worth what the average Tory politician is worth.

“Some people see Pop Dungeon as a fall from grace,” she says. “Doing ‘Tissues & Issues’ and ‘Back To Scratch’ [her two pop albums in 2005 and 2010] I was trying to carve out my own thing. After ‘Tissues & Issues’ the record company [Sony] was being fucking awful, so I tried to find a different way of doing it, with private investment and not being under the thumb of a label. That didn’t go quite as well as I planned and ‘Back To Scratch’ didn’t do very well. So the EPs [‘One’, ‘Two’, ‘Three’ and ‘Four’, released between 2012 and 2014] were starting from scratch again, recorded in my garage and released through my own label. So I’ve tried to carve my own path.

“I don’t know if I ever could recreate my early success because what I did was really commercial and was fluky and I was a commodity. It was a real time and place thing. It was immediate and mad and completely out of leftfield. So that’s completely unsustainable anyway.”

I suggest that rather than seeing Pop Dungeon as a fall from grace, it’s more likely that people are thinking why the fuck is Charlotte Church playing down the road tonight to 500-odd people? Surely she doesn’t need to do that.

“And I don’t,” she says. “If I wanted to go and present on an ITV daytime programme, or be a judge on X Factor for a million pounds, I could. But that’s not what I want to do – that’s not what I’m searching for. Success for me isn’t about earning the most money and being the most famous I can possibly be. I’ve had that and it’s quite empty. It doesn’t make you feel good, especially when so much of it is somebody else’s vision, and a lot of the time that somebody else is a finance person and their vision is cash.

“I was offered X Factor and I went for the meeting out of curiosity, to see if I could sabotage it somehow, and it turns out that I absolutely couldn’t, and there’s no control there at all.”

Instead, Charlotte has spent recent years interviewing Pussy Riot at Glastonbury; as a member of Hacked Off, campaigning against the intrusion of the press and their unethical methods of reporting; speaking on Newsnight and Question Time in support of Jeremy Corbyn; protesting with Greenpeace against Shell’s drilling for petroleum in the Arctic; and staging a modern dance production of ‘The Little Mermaid’ in 2016 (called ‘The Last Mermaid’), complete with an experimental electronic score, 3D projections and a gender-fluid whale.

The Pop Dungeon is essentially an accident that’s too good to stop now, although Charlotte is aware that it has a lifespan. “I don’t know how long that is,” she says, “but I definitely know that it’s this really sparkly, beautiful little thing, and it needs to be treated with care and really nourished, and then it needs to be done.”

She can do without the fame but not the singing, which she “fucking loves.”

It’s pretty niche, being Charlotte Church, I say.

“ Really fucking niche. I haven’t been an artist all the way through. I’ve done really shit things. My path has been really odd. It’s great – I’m having a lovely time.”

Charlotte Church

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Charlotte Church excites fans with 'one more show' in epic Eurovision announcement

The Welsh songstress is joining several other pop powerhouses for a special concert

  • 18:18, 13 APR 2023

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Eurovision fans have yet another reason to be excited because another stellar act has been confirmed for the Euro Village stage on EuroEve (the night before Eurovision on Friday, May 12) - and it's none other than Welsh songstress Charlotte Church.

The 'Crazy Chick' singer announced the news on Instagram and Twitter on Thursday, April 14 as she teased fans with the question: "One more show?".

Sharing a picture of herself in an embellished jumpsuit on-stage during one of her Late Night Pop Dungeon shows, Charlotte wrote: "One more show?! Join me and my Late Night Pop Dungeon at the Eurovision Village on EuroEve Friday 12th May. We are so excited!"

Read more: Rita Ora to perform at Eurovision Song Contest semi-final

Fans flooded the former child operatic star's comments with messages of glee and excitement.

"Omg. I so wish I could be at this," wrote one, while another said: "No wonder you're excited. You'll be amazing and a perfect warm up before Eurovision."

A third simply added: "WOW!!! Xx" For more information about the Eurovision Song Contest go here , and for more showbiz and television stories, sign up to our newsletter here .

Charlotte isn't the only singer set to grace the Euro Village stage in Liverpool the night before the big Eurovision final. In a statement on the international singing competition's official website, organisers said: "As the excitement levels reach fever pitch ahead of the big day, Tik Tok's Eurovision Legends will take over the stage before making way for an epic, all-female party to get everyone in the mood for Saturday.

"EuroEve will feature live performances from Sophie Ellis Bextor alongside other pop powerhouses, and for this very special occasion, the legendary Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon will be performing their very last show. This promises to be huge."

This news comes just weeks after Mae Muller was confirmed as the UK's entry with her track 'I Wrote a Song' . Mae hopes to follow in the successful footsteps of Sam Ryder, the UK's entrant last year, who placed second in the competition.

Also performing during the event, Rita Ora has been confirmed for an interval-time show and is set to take to the stage alongside well-known acts like Rebecca Ferguson and Ukraine's Alyosha and Mariya Yaremchuk.

Whilst typically whichever country wins Eurovision is given the opportunity to host the following year's contest, the UK is hosting it this year on behalf of 2022 winners Ukraine amid the Russia-Ukraine war.

Eurovision concerts will take place at the M&S Bank Arena Liverpool, with semi-finals running on Tuesday, May 9 and Thursday, May 11, ahead of the final on Saturday, May 13.

  • Rylan Clark tells fan they're 'jumping' as he addresses Strictly It Takes Two quitting rumour
  • The One Show's Alex Jones says she was a 'wreck' before husband Charlie as she shares sweet insight into marriage
  • First look at Tom Hardy's new Netflix film Havoc that was shot in Wales
  • Bonnie Tyler apologises and explains why she mimed her biggest hit
  • This Morning's Josie Gibson left 'crying' by Welsh guest Wynne Evans
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Imagine Dragons announce huge North American tour to promote forthcoming sixth album Loom

Imagine Dragons will kick off their Loom tour on July 30

Imagine Dragons, 2024

Imagine Dragons have announced that they will release their sixth album, Loom , on June 28, and unveiled details of an extensive US arena tour in support of the record.

The Las Vegas pop-rock band are apparently about to enter "a fearlessly bold era" with their new nine-track album, which they're previewing with current single Eyes Closed . While the world waits to see exactly what this means, the trio are further whetting appetites with the announcement of their first tour dates in support of the album. 

Imagine Dragons will play: Jul 30: Camden Freedom Mortgage Pavilion, NJ Aug 02: Wantagh Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater, NY Aug 04: Holmdel PNC Bank Arts Center, NJ Aug 06: Mansfield Xfinity Center, MA Aug 08: Toronto Budweiser Stage, Canada Aug 12: Clarkston Pine Knob Music Theatre, MI Aug 14: Burgettstown The Pavilion at Star Lake, PA Aug 16: St. Louis Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre, MO Aug18: Tinley Park Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre, IL Aug 20: Noblesville Ruoff Music Center, IN Aug 22: Bristow Jiffy Lube Live, VA Aug 23: Columbia Merriweather Post Pavilion, MD Aug 26: Virginia Beach Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater, VA Aug 28: Charlotte mPNC Music Pavilion, NC Aug 30: West Palm Beach iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre, FL Sep 01: Tampa MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre, FL Sep 04: Dallas Dos Equis Pavilion, TX Sep 06: Houston The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion presented by Huntsman, TX Sep 08: Ridgedale Thunder Ridge Nature’s Arena, MO Sep 28: Seattle The Gorge Amphitheatre, WA Sep 29: Ridgefield RV Inn Style Resorts Amphitheater, WA Oct 02: Wheatland Toyota Amphitheatre, CA Oct 05: Chula Vista North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre, CA Oct 06: Phoenix Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre, AZ Oct 09: Albuquerque Isleta Amphitheater, NM Oct 11: Salt Lake City Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre, UT Oct 17: Denver Red Rocks Amphitheatre, CO Oct 20: Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheatre, CA Oct 22: Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl, CA Tickets will be available starting with a Citi presale beginning on April 23. The general onsale begins on April 26 at 10AM local time here .

Watch the video for Eyes Closed below:

Imagine Dragons - Eyes Closed (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Frontman Dan Reynolds says of the new track, “After taking some time off the road and spending time catching up with family and loved ones, I finally have felt the desire to go back to the sonic places that originally brought me the most joy, but with a new outlook and mentality. The world looks much different after being a band for more than a decade. But some things will always remain the same. It’s finding that right balance of nostalgia and freshness that brings me the most joy in the studio. We had a lot of fun making this one and hope you enjoy it too.”

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Paul Brannigan

A music writer since 1993, formerly Editor of Kerrang! and Planet Rock magazine (RIP), Paul Brannigan is a Contributing Editor to Louder. Having previously written books on Lemmy, Dave Grohl (the Sunday Times best-seller This Is A Call) and Metallica ( Birth School Metallica Death , co-authored with Ian Winwood), his Eddie Van Halen biography ( Eruption in the UK, Unchained in the US) emerged in 2021. He has written for Rolling Stone, Mojo and Q, hung out with Fugazi at Dischord House, flown on Ozzy Osbourne's private jet, played Angus Young's Gibson SG, and interviewed everyone from Aerosmith and Beastie Boys to Young Gods and ZZ Top. Born in the North of Ireland, Brannigan lives in North London and supports The Arsenal.

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Halle Bailey Shares Experience With ‘Severe’ Postpartum Depression: ‘You’re Trying to Come Up for Air’

The actress welcomed her first child with DDG in January.

Halle Bailey is opening up about her struggles with postpartum depression.

Last week, Bailey, who welcomed her first child with boyfriend with DDG in January, took to social media to shed light on the mental struggles she's faced since giving birth to her son Halo.

"I have severe, severe postpartum [depression], and I don't know if any new moms can relate, but it's to the point where it's really bad, and it's hard for me to be separated from my baby for more than 30 minutes at a time before I start to kind of freak out," she explained.

#HalleBailey opens up about her battle with postpartum depression and being triggered by social media. pic.twitter.com/hspZTxZtG3 — theJasmineBRAND (@thejasminebrand) April 16, 2024

Bailey continued by sharing that, since having her baby, she feels like a different person while looking at herself in the mirror. She added that prior to being a mother she "didn't realize how serious of a thing" postpartum is.

"Before I had a child and I would hear people talk about postpartum, it would kind of just go in one ear and out the other. I didn't realize how serious of a thing it actually was," she shared. "Now going through it, it almost feels like you're swimming in this ocean that's like the biggest waves you've ever felt and you're trying not to drown. And you're trying to come up for air."

The 24-year-old Little Mermaid star maintained that it "has nothing to do with my baby," as she's simply working on getting herself right post-pregnancy.

"I guess today I was just triggered — especially [since] social media is just not a good thing to be on when you have postpartum — but I was just really triggered today, especially by seeing some of the things that have been said about me and my family, and the one that I love and the ones that I love," she said.

Watch Bailey's full video about her experience with postpartum above.

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COMMENTS

  1. Charlotte Church announces final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour

    Speaking about the upcoming tour, Church said: "After 6 ecstatic years of unparalleled debauchery, the Late Night Pop Dungeon is hanging up its feathers, sequins, P.V.C and velour.

  2. Charlotte Church's Pop Dungeon review

    Kicking off last night at south London's cathedral of camp, the Clapham Grand, and ending on 21 December in her home town of Cardiff, this festive farewell tour gives Pop Dungeon a send-off fit ...

  3. Charlotte Church announces final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour including

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon, the 18 armed genre-fluid project is calling it a day and has announced a final UK tour. The group will bid a fond farewell to audiences with a series of five shows, including London's The Clapham Grand on December 3 2022.

  4. Charlotte Church: from pop dungeon mistress to wellbeing goddess

    As her genre-mashing, high-energy theatrical cover band, Late Night Pop Dungeon, embarks on its final tour this December, Charlotte Church is moving her focus towards wellbeing. The singer, campaigner - and now owner of a wellness retreat - has led a career of unexpected turns, often in the spotlight of an unforgiving media.

  5. Charlotte Church's Pop Dungeon review

    Charlotte Church's Pop Dungeon review - a festive farewell to a glorious covers band 2022-12-05 - Emma Garland ... this festive farewell tour gives Pop Dungeon a send-off fit for a historic ship. The poster promises pigs in blankets and balloon drops. Church and her band take to the stage for an hour and a half and sweat through a set that ...

  6. 10.12.2022

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon 's genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and - deep breath - this will be their final ever tour. CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails - often appearing in the same mashed up medley.

  7. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon

    Here are the most recent UK tour dates we had listed for Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon. Were you there? Dec 21 2022. Cardiff, The Depot. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon ... Fans who like Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon also like. Binary Finary 1 UK Tour Date Booty Luv 1 UK Tour Date Honeyz 1 UK Tour Date Kele Le ...

  8. Charlotte's Late Night Pop Dungeon

    14+ (under 16's accompanied must be accompanied by an adult) Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon's genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and - deep breath - this will be their final ever tour. CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails ...

  9. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon's genre-fluid set has become the stuff of festival legend, and - deep breath - this will be their final ever tour. CCLNPD levels up a sparkly jukebox of anthems spanning from En Vogue to Bowie and Kate Bush to Nine Inch Nails - often appearing in the same mashed up medley. Fronted by Charlotte Church (yeah, that one!) backed by post-punk-disco-R'n ...

  10. Soundtrack Of My Life: Charlotte Church

    Charlotte Church's final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour begins December 3 at The Clapham Grand in London. It then goes to Leeds, Manchester, Bristol and Cardiff. Singer, activist and dungeon ...

  11. Charlotte Church to take her Late Night Pop Dungeon on tour at last

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon is an act like no other. Performing the greatest of hits and the guiltiest of pleasures side by side, it's something that has to be seen to be believed - and there's never been a better time to do so. The Late Night Pop Dungeon is hitting the road for their first proper tour.

  12. Charlotte Church announces 'Late night pop dungeon' tour

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon is a word of mouth phenomenon; a welcome aural salve to the mind-bending post-everything realities of the 21st century. Taking cues from fifty years of music history, the singer has created a mesmerizing, pitch-perfect live mixtape that's floored festivals and gig venues across the country since its ...

  13. Charlotte Church announces final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour

    Charlotte Church has announced her final Late Night Pop Dungeon tour today (November 3). The act, which features Church along with nine others, has proven a cult hit across festivals from Glastonbury to The Mighty Hoopla for the last six years. Described as "a genre-fluid jukebox of anthems spanning fromContinue Reading

  14. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon Concert History

    The last Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon concert was on December 09, 2022 at New Century in Manchester, England, United Kingdom. The bands that performed were: Charlotte Church / Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon. ‹ ›

  15. How the unpredictable career of Charlotte Church has led to political

    Immediately after the Pop Dungeon had left the stage on Friday night, Charlotte was back in the green room, out of costume, shattered and still ill. Impressively, she'd made it through the show, but that image of her couldn't have contested more the perceived impression of Charlotte Church the perma-pisshead, fuelled by Cheeky Vimto (Blue ...

  16. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon Tickets and Dates

    We will send you email alerts every time one of your favourite artists goes on tour. Import Now Countries. Iconscout Store Belgium BE. Canada CA. Iconscout Store Danmark DK. España ES. Iconscout Store France FR. ... Past Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon Events. Fri 16 Dec 2022 Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon SWX, Bristol Fri ...

  17. Charlotte Church excites fans with 'one more show' in epic Eurovision

    18:18, 13 APR 2023. Charlotte Church performing on her Latenight Pop Dungeon tour (Image: Elliot Cooper) Eurovision fans have yet another reason to be excited because another stellar act has been ...

  18. Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon Concert Setlists

    Most played songs. 1 Thing ( 1 ) Closer ( 1 ) Ex-Factor ( 1 ) Gett Off ( 1 ) I Like the Way You Work ( 1 ) More Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon statistics. Last updated: 2 Apr 2024, 08:46 Etc/UTC.

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  20. The Pop Dungeon

    The Pop Dungeon. 693 likes. Online Funko POP! Exclusive Store! Rare/Retired/Vaulted/Grail Funko POP! and everything in between!

  21. Charlotte Church Tour Statistics: Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop

    You've been to a Charlotte Church concert? Add the concert and whatever song you remember! View the statistics of songs played live by Charlotte Church. Have a look which song was played how often on the tour Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon!

  22. Charlotte Churchs Late Night Pop Dungeon Tour Dates & Tickets

    No Charlotte Churchs Late Night Pop Dungeon tour dates, events or tickets listed at the current time. If you'd like to be kept informed, please "Join The Waitlist" to set a tour alert or register for our FREE weekly tour newsletter. Charlotte Churchs Late Night Pop Dungeon History and Biography.

  23. Charlotte Church explains how she became a 'huge' trans ally

    Charlotte Church's Late Night Pop Dungeon shows have been a highlight of UK Pride events. (Getty Images) But even Church admits she had her perceptions challenged in recent years when debate over queer and trans lives became increasingly toxic in the UK, as individuals and groups sought to divide the TQ+ from the LGB and stoke hatred towards trans people.

  24. Imagine Dragons announce huge North American tour to promote ...

    The Las Vegas pop-rock band are apparently about to enter "a fearlessly bold era" with their new nine-track album, which they're previewing with current single Eyes Closed.While the world waits to see exactly what this means, the trio are further whetting appetites with the announcement of their first tour dates in support of the album.

  25. Halle Bailey Opens Up About 'Severe' Postpartum Depression ...

    Latest in Pop Culture On the press tour for her new film 'Challengers,' the actress shared her honest opinion about those who overly concern themselves with who she kisses on-screen. POP CULTURE