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Jimi Tenor – Higher Planes

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After years composing cosmic space rock using drum machines, synthesizers and Vocoders, Jimi Tenor has decided to go back to his roots and make a seriously funky jazz album with real instrumentation and live recordings. It's an ambitious move that could easily have backfired on him, but the fusion ...

After years composing cosmic space rock using drum machines, synthesizers and Vocoders, Jimi Tenor has decided to go back to his roots and make a seriously funky jazz album with real instrumentation and live recordings.

It’s an ambitious move that could easily have backfired on him, but the fusion of ’60s free jazz, ’70s psych and ’80s soul has resulted in his most satisfying and fully-realised album to date. Tracks like “Trumpcard” and “Nuclear Fusion” emphasise Sun Ra’s influence, while “Stargazing” and “Spending Time” expose Tenor’s romantic side.

Gary Numan – Hybrid

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Hardcore Numanoids have kept Tory electro O.G. Gaz in business for two derided decades and, amazingly, as the times come round to him again, they were right. It's a shame the industrial metal end of his fan base dominates this remix of his career, instead of hip hop, which his early music gave vital...

Hardcore Numanoids have kept Tory electro O.G. Gaz in business for two derided decades and, amazingly, as the times come round to him again, they were right. It’s a shame the industrial metal end of his fan base dominates this remix of his career, instead of hip hop, which his early music gave vital clues to. But the serrated guitars the likes of Sulphur slap onto an artist whose doomy leanings were always going to make goth friends can’t obscure Numan’s voice, unexpectedly helpless and lovely throughout, or his sweet synths. Flood’s masterly orchestral remodelling of “Cars”, meanwhile, traps the original in a still more fearful sound world.

Psychedelicacies

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The idea of fabricating a new psychedelia has long been an ambition of many electronic artists. Too often, though, the likes of Death In Vegas and The Chemical Brothers have stumbled in their attempts: thwarted by limited talent; anxious to import worn rock'n'roll iconography rather than capitalise ...

The idea of fabricating a new psychedelia has long been an ambition of many electronic artists. Too often, though, the likes of Death In Vegas and The Chemical Brothers have stumbled in their attempts: thwarted by limited talent; anxious to import worn rock’n’roll iconography rather than capitalise on the oceanic possibilities of the music that inspired them.

Up In Flames is a little different. In 2001, Dan Snaith was discovered in Toronto, studying maths and making engrossing, humane electronica in the vein of his friend Kieran (Four Tet) Hebden. Two years on, Snaith has relocated to London, played a lot of hip hop records in the middle of his live sets and completed an astonishing second album. Up In Flames takes the most levitating alt.rock of the last decade or so as its springboard, meriting comparison with My Bloody Valentine, Spiritualized, Stereolab and (though he’d never heard them) the early work of Mercury Rev.

Instead of creating digital facsimiles, however, Snaith grasps the opportunities these richly imaginative bands offer and comes up with a genuinely awe-inspiring mix of live, sampled and processed Technicolor sound. “Every Time She Turns Round It’s Her Birthday” mimics the relentless crescendos of Spiritualized’s “Angel Sigh” but goes further, punctuating the horn voluntaries with euphoric multi-tracked gasps and a great wall of motorik breakbeats. After five-and-a-half minutes, a saxophone solo reminiscent of Pharoah Sanders blows in to up the cosmic ante even further. In comparison, the likes of The Chemical Brothers’ “Private Psychedelic Reel” shrivel into insignificance.

It’s one of those albums where the audacity is often as breathtaking as the ideas. In a rare moment of understatement, “Crayons” ostensibly updates The Jesus & Mary Chain’s “Never Understand” by replacing feedback with a toy xylophone. Elsewhere, though, Snaith triumphs by going overboard whenever possible. The result is both adventurous and accessible, a record in love with the obliterating power of sound.

Dayna Kurtz – Postcards From Downtown

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One-time support for acts ranging from BB King to Kelly Joe Phelps, veteran of endless busted record deals, and inhabitant of Paterson, NJ, the broken steel town that inspired Ginsberg, Kurtz is an uncompromising force on this aptly-titled record. Her voice sometimes belts out so strongly it bruises...

One-time support for acts ranging from BB King to Kelly Joe Phelps, veteran of endless busted record deals, and inhabitant of Paterson, NJ, the broken steel town that inspired Ginsberg, Kurtz is an uncompromising force on this aptly-titled record. Her voice sometimes belts out so strongly it bruises the songs, but can also be bluesily intimate over torch song strings or grating industrial guitars, as she tells stories of chastened hopes, on the road and in Paterson’s dead end.

Mark Selby – Dirt

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Mark Selby has penned tunes for artists more commercial than he (Dixie Chicks, Wynonna Judd, etc), but his own work tends more towards gritty roots rock...

Mark Selby has penned tunes for artists more commercial than he (Dixie Chicks, Wynonna Judd, etc), but his own work tends more towards gritty roots rock

Tayo – Soul Of Man And Phantom Beats

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Soul Of Man And Phantom Beats 21ST CENTURY BREAKS...

Soul Of Man And Phantom Beats

21ST CENTURY BREAKS

Shipping News – Three-Four

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Yet another band to emerge from the fertile Louisville, Kentucky scene, Shipping News take their name from Annie Proulx's masterful book. It's hard to believe that the origins of Shipping News lie in hardcore. Since their earliest incarnation, they've undergone a radical makeover. Three-Four is full...

Yet another band to emerge from the fertile Louisville, Kentucky scene, Shipping News take their name from Annie Proulx’s masterful book. It’s hard to believe that the origins of Shipping News lie in hardcore. Since their earliest incarnation, they’ve undergone a radical makeover. Three-Four is full of hypnotic lo-fi atmospherics, dark and sludgy electronica and post-folk strumming?three distinct musical moods reflecting the fact that the album was originally three EPs, recorded individually by the three band members. Oddly absorbing and surprisingly cohesive.

Joan Armatrading – Lovers Speak

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The first new album from Joan Armatrading since 1995's What's Inside is an admirably unpretentious collection. She may have left behind the bedsitter image long ago, yet her songs continue to deal in the currency of romantic love, only now from the dignified perspective of a mature woman who has no ...

The first new album from Joan Armatrading since 1995’s What’s Inside is an admirably unpretentious collection. She may have left behind the bedsitter image long ago, yet her songs continue to deal in the currency of romantic love, only now from the dignified perspective of a mature woman who has no illusions but still has her dreams. Armatrading may be strictly Radio 2 these days, yet in her time she was a role model every bit as groundbreaking as Ms Dynamite today. For that, she commands not only our love and affection but our total respect.

Paul McCartney – Back In The US: Live 2002

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If 2000's mega-successful compilation of No 1 singles served to remind the last three generations just what was so Fab about the Fab Four, Sir Paul's 2002 tour reiterated the message quite viscerally. Generously raining immaculately rendered Beatles faves on salivating audiences, Macca provided the...

If 2000’s mega-successful compilation of No 1 singles served to remind the last three generations just what was so Fab about the Fab Four, Sir Paul’s 2002 tour reiterated the message quite viscerally.

Generously raining immaculately rendered Beatles faves on salivating audiences, Macca provided the post-9/11 balm the well-intentioned “Freedom”couldn’t deliver. Even when performing tear-jerking acoustic versions of “Blackbird”, “Mother Nature’s Son” etc, and honouring his Wings and solo legacies, McCartney sounds full of piss and vinegar, and these days his Little Richard impressions are more convincing than those of the wayward Mr Penniman himself.

Procol Harum – The Well’s On Fire

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While it can't be said that Procol Harum are still the melodic force they were in the '60s and early '70s, this, their 12th album in 36 years, is never less than honest, dignified and graceful?music of indisputable integrity made with soul and technical assurance. There's no sign here of any uncommi...

While it can’t be said that Procol Harum are still the melodic force they were in the ’60s and early ’70s, this, their 12th album in 36 years, is never less than honest, dignified and graceful?music of indisputable integrity made with soul and technical assurance. There’s no sign here of any uncommitted running through the changes. This is still a real group in genuinely active condition, which in itself is remarkable. Probably mainly for the band’s many long-term devotees, nonetheless.

The Stratford 4 – Love & Distortion

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Stratford 4 singer/guitarist Chris Streng played in the short-lived Wave with future BRMC members Robert Turner and Peter Hayes before forming the Stratford 4. Like Streng's former bandmates, the 4 are fascinated by the widescreen worlds one can conjure with an electric guitar. Accordingly, their se...

Stratford 4 singer/guitarist Chris Streng played in the short-lived Wave with future BRMC members Robert Turner and Peter Hayes before forming the Stratford 4. Like Streng’s former bandmates, the 4 are fascinated by the widescreen worlds one can conjure with an electric guitar. Accordingly, their second album draws heavily on such masters of six-string cinematics as The Church, The Jesus & Mary Chain and Spacemen 3, the latter getting namechecked in nine-minute fuzz-drone epic “Telephone”.

Wayne Shorter – Alegria

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Alegria, Wayne Shorter's first studio album for eight years, follows last year's poll-winning Footsteps Live! and, despite the fact that the leader is now 70, shows no sign of slowing down or thinning out. With a basic unit of Danilo Perez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade augmented by larger arrange...

Alegria, Wayne Shorter’s first studio album for eight years, follows last year’s poll-winning Footsteps Live! and, despite the fact that the leader is now 70, shows no sign of slowing down or thinning out. With a basic unit of Danilo Perez, John Patitucci, and Brian Blade augmented by larger arrangements and occasionally a switch to Brad Mehldau on piano and Terri Lyne Carrington on drums, this is a fine album, subtle and poetic with plenty of Shorter’s hip flights of abstract fantasy.

The Angels Of Light – Everything Is Good Here

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Former Swans mainman Michael Gira financed this recording solely through sales of a live CD, and the lack of corporate involvement is plain to hear. Meticulously crafted yet vibrant and visceral, it's like a claustrophobic noir soundtrack crossed with a jauntily macabre musical. It's urban and triba...

Former Swans mainman Michael Gira financed this recording solely through sales of a live CD, and the lack of corporate involvement is plain to hear. Meticulously crafted yet vibrant and visceral, it’s like a claustrophobic noir soundtrack crossed with a jauntily macabre musical. It’s urban and tribal, soulful, sacred and funny, recalling The Bad Seeds and The Residents. A magnificent, hugely welcome return.

Entrance – The Kingdom Of Heaven Must Be Taken By Storm

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Twenty-one-year-old singer/guitarist Guy Blakeslee is Entrance, and his debut would have been labelled acid-folk and lauded as an 'outsider art'cult item if it were released on a private press label 30 years ago. Blakeslee wails in loopy, unfettered fashion over idiosyncratic acoustic guitar and see...

Twenty-one-year-old singer/guitarist Guy Blakeslee is Entrance, and his debut would have been labelled acid-folk and lauded as an ‘outsider art’cult item if it were released on a private press label 30 years ago. Blakeslee wails in loopy, unfettered fashion over idiosyncratic acoustic guitar and seems not unfamiliar with Marc Bolan. Entrance also delight in deconstructing Skip James and Bob Dylan, invoking echoes of early-Zep acoustic excursions along the way.

Mark Bacino – The Million Dollar Milkshake

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New York power popper Mark Bacino is just as adept as his peers at assimilating The Beatles, Badfinger et al, but studiously avoids the inherent pitfalls of the style, maintaining just the right blend of melodic sweetness and rock toughness...

New York power popper Mark Bacino is just as adept as his peers at assimilating The Beatles, Badfinger et al, but studiously avoids the inherent pitfalls of the style, maintaining just the right blend of melodic sweetness and rock toughness

Martina Sorbara – The Cure For Bad Deeds

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The second album from 22-year-old Sorbara marks the emergence of a major new songwriting talent. Citing Tom Waits as her greatest inspiration, her songs are full of sleazy sex ("pushed into darkness by a relentless pelvis") and fleshy regrets ("I ought to wipe the slate clean with new sheets and sho...

The second album from 22-year-old Sorbara marks the emergence of a major new songwriting talent. Citing Tom Waits as her greatest inspiration, her songs are full of sleazy sex (“pushed into darkness by a relentless pelvis”) and fleshy regrets (“I ought to wipe the slate clean with new sheets and shower”), the soiled sentiments deliciously offset by her angelic voice. Switching between piano and guitar, she strays into Norah Jones territory on the jazzy “Eggs Over Easy”, while Natalie Merchant fans will lap up songs such as “Bonnie & Clyde”. The Cure… grows on you with every play.

Molotov Cocktail

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Imagine if the Cheeky Girls were as good as retro-kitsch archivists will probably one day pretend they are. 200 km/h In The Wrong Lane is that sort of record. The two lead singles off this fantastic piece of pop product?"Not Gonna Get Us" and "All The Things She Said"?are produced by Trevor Horn. Su...

Imagine if the Cheeky Girls were as good as retro-kitsch archivists will probably one day pretend they are. 200 km/h In The Wrong Lane is that sort of record. The two lead singles off this fantastic piece of pop product?”Not Gonna Get Us” and “All The Things She Said”?are produced by Trevor Horn. Suffice to say they represent the latter’s finest work since Grace Jones'”Slave To The Rhythm” in 1985. Despairing, frantic and caressing are the twin vocals of latest tabloid shock sensations Lena Katina and Julia Volkova; one soft, the other strident. The whole thing is, quite literally, Dollar meets Propaganda. The stroke of genius comes with the girls’ brilliant, unexpected reworking of The Smiths’ “How Soon Is Now?”, magnifying the original’s despair into a floodlit arena of uncertainty.

Nobukazu Takemura – 10th

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Renowned for his live use of computers, live instruments and videos, Nobukazu Takemura provides a gentle but subtle introduction to the sometimes onerous world of avant-techno. Most intriguing here is his use of "speech-synth", a technology created to enable handicapped people to communicate, simila...

Renowned for his live use of computers, live instruments and videos, Nobukazu Takemura provides a gentle but subtle introduction to the sometimes onerous world of avant-techno. Most intriguing here is his use of “speech-synth”, a technology created to enable handicapped people to communicate, similar to that used by Stephen Hawking. It raises and debunks the question of whether this constitutes a human voice or whether a machine can sing. Illustrator Nakaban’s cover art is reminiscent of Paul Klee, the spirit of whose cheerful, bright yet inestimable abstract art is recaptured in these detailed electronic miniatures.

The Joe Jackson Band – Volume 4

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Between 1978 and 1980 the original four members of the Joe Jackson band recorded three albums ranking among the finest of the new wave era. Subsequently, Jackson dabbled in everything from swing to classical, never quite recapturing the fire of those early records. For the 25th anniversary of Look ...

Between 1978 and 1980 the original four members of the Joe Jackson band recorded three albums ranking among the finest of the new wave era. Subsequently, Jackson dabbled in everything from swing to classical, never quite recapturing the fire of those early records.

For the 25th anniversary of Look Sharp!’s recording, Jackson looked up his three old cohorts and worked up a batch of new songs in the old guitar-bass-drums format. A tour and this record are the result, and it’s a pleasure to see musical journeyman Jackson back on his old patch once again.

Calla – Televise

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While fellow New Yorkers Interpol wrestle similar sonic demons with grace and profundity, Calla's third album favours artifice over aptitude, every dark, meandering art-rock dirge bulging with superfluous effects and studiously ambiguous lyrics. Only "Pete The Killer" impresses, largely because its ...

While fellow New Yorkers Interpol wrestle similar sonic demons with grace and profundity, Calla’s third album favours artifice over aptitude, every dark, meandering art-rock dirge bulging with superfluous effects and studiously ambiguous lyrics. Only “Pete The Killer” impresses, largely because its bittersweet, Sundays-style guitars see the trio temporarily eschew their glum self-importance for the sweet chime of pomp-free art-pop.

Ultimately, Calla lack the melodic muscle and conviction sufficient to suggest they’re anything more than the emperor’s new worry beads.