Reviews

The Glamour Chase

Savage Hollywood satire from 1950 retains its bleak, sardonic edge

Great Western

Fourth LP from purveyors of Hispanic-Americana

Dan Bern

Two EPs from modern-day Bob Dylan

Geist – Songs For Your Neighbour

Subtle, simmering 'new acoustic' debutThese gentle, vaguely retro acoustic stylings from British songwriting duo Hudson and McDevitt exude real charm, evoking melancholy memories, tempered optimism and warm pints in cold country pubs. Reference points include a less tortured Turin Brakes or less populist David Gray, though ticking clocks, babies' cries and the mesmerising "For You" will have you digging out your crusty copy of Floyd's Wish You Were Here. Bursts of energetic violin from Chris Goddard give it an extra edge. Pastoral peaks.

Devendra Banhart – Oh Me Oh My

Excellent, if creepy, lo-fi folk

Shearwater – Everybody Makes Mistakes

Hailing from the same US stable as The Mendoza Line, the Austin, Texas quartet Shearwater embrace a drowsier strain of melancholy on their second LP—all shuffling shades of piano, picked guitar and stings. Producer Brian (Daniel Johnston) Beattie filters just enough light to ward off any impending claustrophobia, while the contrast between ardent ornithology student Jonathan Meiburg's falsetto and Okkervil River moonlighter Will Robinson Sheff's upbeat crackle adds a subtle duality.

Martin Newell – The Off White Album

1995 outing from The Independent's resident poet, with extra material

The Fall – Listening In:Lost Singles Tracks 1990-92

Overdue collectors' B-sides bonanza

The Moon – Without Earth

Entire studio output of psychedelic orch-pop band on CD for first time

Irréversible

DIRECTED BY Gaspar Noé STARRING Vincent Cassel, Monica Bellucci, Albert Dupontel Opened January 31, Cert 18, 95 mins You probably heard about this shock-rocking rape-and-revenge drama from the stir it caused on the festival circuit. And for once, controversy and PC posturing are not being orchestrated into a publicity stunt. Irréversible is as visceral, graphic and wrenchingly full-on as advance word suggests.
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