Reviews

The Locust – Plague Soundscapes

Space-punk brilliance

Momus – Forbidden Software Timemachine

Two-CD, twenty-seven track, best-of from his seven Creation albums, 1987-93

Digging Their Own Hole

Greatest hits of the big beat pioneers, weighed down by famous friends

Belleville Rendez-Vous

Darkly bizarre Gallic cartoon is sophisticated delight

Bulletproof Monk

Comic book adaptation with Woo favourite Chow Yun-Fat as a kind of near-immortal arse-kicking Dalai Lama who's spent the last 60 years battling baddies for possession of the Scroll of the Ultimate. And now it's time to pass the baton to a younger chap. You could see it as a martial arts Raiders Of The Lost Ark, or a Crouching Tiger for nitwits. Or you could not see it at all. The choice is yours.

Animal Farm

Rumour has it that the CIA funded Halas and Batchelor's 1954 cartoon adaptation of George Orwell's political barnyard allegory. But even though it's dated and stilted, it remains not only darkly savage anti-Stalinist satire but also a quite stunning piece of animation. Surely long overdue for a Babe-style remake?

Short Cuts

(Other new music DVDs)

White Hassle – The Death Of Song

Catch-all NYC trio's long-overdue follow-up to 1997 debut National Chain

Secret Machines – September OOO

NY's latest show daring diversity

Matmos – The Civil War

Imagine Stephen Foster—or at least Van Dyke Parks—armed with a laptop and you're close to understanding the extraordinary charm of Californian duo Matmos' fifth album. Like 1999's The West, The Civil War negotiates a fragile entente between Americana and electronica, but does so on a bigger, constantly astonishing scale. Fireworks explode, battlefield drummers march across John Fahey's porch, Dr John is reconstructed out of glitches, an entire track is made from samples of a rabbit pelt, and "The Stars And Stripes Forever" is reduced to a postmodern shambles.
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