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David

Julie Driscoll – Brian Auger & The Trinity

From Yardbirds' fan-club secretary to "the face of '68"...

Fripp & Eno – The Equatorial Stars

Listless reunion for avant-garde eggheads

Blues Explosion – Damage

Expansive seventh LP from NYC blues-punk trailblazers

Tortoise

Post-rock visionaries in their prime

Check Your ED

Six volumes of highlights from the Sunday night US television show that was the MTV of its day

The Chronicles Of Riddick (Pitch Black 2)

Lumpen sequel to sci-fi actioner

Trash And Burn

The legendary New York glam-punk posse return in triumph

Justin Rutledge And The Junction Forty – No Neveralone

Like Damien Jurado or David Ackles, Toronto's Rutledge is a master of gothic understatement. This wintry debut—shrouded in slow-tempo melancholy—is slyly addictive. Against spare backdrops of folk-country guitars, mandolin, piano and the odd banjo, Rutledge sounds weathered beyond his twentysomething years. An array of talent is on hand, not least of which is the reclusive Mary Margaret O'Hara (woefully underused on just one track, "A Letter To Heather"). Otherwise, Rutledge judges the balance perfectly.

Killer Elite

Val Kilmer excels in David Mamet's hardboiled political thriller

Downtown Uproar

Legendary 'bootleg' recording of the Velvets on home turf, taped just before Lou Reed went home to mama and then became the godfather of gory glam
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