Album

The Day The Earth Stood Still – Varese Sarabande

Bernard Herrmann. To any soundtrack devotee the name's sacred. From Psycho to Taxi Driver, his music made good movies great and great movies greater. Here he even caused a rubbish film to linger in the collective memory. Flying saucers and robots were '50s cinema staples, spawned by a real public fear of science (in the aftermath of the atomic bomb). Robert Wise's 1951 sci-fi message movie (war is bad) would today look more hilarious than it does were it not for Herrmann's tonal and symmetrical score. Conducted by Joel McNeely, here it's been recorded in digital sound for the first time.

Northern State – Dying In Stereo

Debut album from NYC rap trio

Tracey Thorn – Ben Watt

Pre-Everything But The Girl solo debuts

Reed All About It

Lou's Velvets and solo works hand-picked for posterity with direct input from interested parties

System 7

Psychedelic electronica from ex-Gong guitarist who worked with The Orb before founding System 7

The Postal Service – Give Up

Loungy electronic sophisti-pop

The Matthew Herbert Big Band – Goodbye Swingtime

Brit glitch techno bod tries jazz to disappointingly muted effect

Mia Doi Todd – The Golden State

Understated debut from Californian singer-songwriter

Yann Tiersen rose to the front rank of film composers with the irresistible Amelie, but he's keen to stress that he'd recorded for years prior to that. He's collaborated with The Divine Comedy's Neil Hannon, among others, and sells out the Royal Festival Hall in his own right. Goodbye Lenin!, directed by Wolfgang Becker, won awards at Berlin this spring, and Tiersen's score is a chest-swelling thing of beauty and a million violins. Actually, 17 violins—I've just checked. Yann himself plays piano, melodica and violin—so that makes 18. Claire Pichet is guest vocalist.

Magnificent Seventh

In most cultures, seven is a magic number. Not in rock'n'roll, where to sustain any degree of originality beyond album three or four is about as rare as a sober Shane MacGowan.
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