Reviews

Dave Alvin – Ashgrove

Like his contemporary Rodney Crowell, head Blaster Alvin seems to have reached a reflective career intersection. His first all-new LP in six years revisits youthful memories of the titular LA club where he became spellbound by Big Joe Turner and T-Bone Walker. As a result, it's his bluesiest, toughest record since '91's Blue Boulevard.

Blues Explosion – Damage

Expansive seventh LP from NYC blues-punk trailblazers

Clayhill – Small Circle

Folk-rock that nods to both the present and the past

Harold And Kumar Get The Munchies

Two stoned, second-gen overachievers on a mission

Broth Of The Gods

Alexandre Rockwell's graceful '92 satire about a wannabe new-wave film-maker

Ramones – Raw

Compilation of live concert footage, TV clips and Marky Ramone's on-the-road video footage from 1979-2002 misses the Ramones' prime. Marky's films are mundane trivia with little character insight. MTV news clips tell the story of Dee Dee's drug addiction and departure only in passing, but alongside their tearful Rock'n'Roll Hall Of Fame induction, the impressive live footage shows why they outlasted their peers.

Wild River

Every film buff knows Elia Kazan's On The Waterfront and East Of Eden, but his two greatest films are terribly overlooked. In the case of America, America (1963), it's probably because he didn't cast a star. In the case of Wild River (1960), it's almost inexplicable. Montgomery Clift is a government official trying to persuade an old woman she must leave her home before it's flooded. Complex, tender, rich and true, this is a masterpiece, lost and found.

The Isley Brothers – Taken To The Next Phase (Reconstructions)

Hip hop pays tribute to masters of the slow jam

The Doobie Brothers – Greatest Hits

Listening to the music Again

Esther Phillips – The Kudu Years 1971-1977

Doomed R&B singer's last great recordings
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