The image of a band waltzing on the spot seems to accompany every Tindersticks album. Perhaps itโ€™s the curse of a band fortunate to work out a distinctive and effective sound at their inception. Whatever, Waiting For The Moon is the usual impeccably crafted artefact, though itโ€™s questionable whether anyone who owns their first two albums needs it in their lives. The aspirations to soul that marked out 2001โ€™s Can Our Loveโ€ฆ have melted away?this yearโ€™s attempt to bend the formula is โ€œ4:48 Psychosisโ€, a bristly narrative in the vein of Cale-driven Velvets, and the albumโ€™s high point. Elsewhere, itโ€™s very much string-drenched business as usual:sometimes lovely, sometimes perilously close to self-parody.