Reviews

The Last Victory

Documenting the passions aroused by a famous race

The Hired Hand

Classic 'revisionist' western from '71, Peter Fonda's directorial debut is bookended by two acts of fumbling, clumsy yet brutally violent gunplay, but is otherwise concerned with the delicately evolving relationships between two wandering cowboys (Fonda and Warren Oates) and Fonda's once abandoned wife (Verna Bloom). The photography from Vilmos Zsigmond (McCabe & Mrs Miller) is worth the price of the DVD in itself.

Nevada Smith

Henry Hathaway's Nevada Smith takes one of the characters from Harold Robbins' Hollywood potboiler The Carpetbaggers (filmed by Edward Dmytryk two years earlier, with Alan Ladd in the role) and wraps an entire movie round him. Steve McQueen stars as the young Smith, a half-breed cowboy hellbent on tracking down his parents' killers. Beautifully shot by Lucien Ballard, McQueen is as quietly hypnotic as ever.

Jimmy Martin – King Of Bluegrass

Now 77, Jimmy Martin has been a bluegrass legend since he became lead singer and guitarist in Bill Monroe's band in 1949 and helped pioneer that "High Lonesome Sound" (see This Month In Americana, p98). His story is told through archive and contemporary footage, and Martin proves to be a highly engaging raconteur, although you might wish for a little more music and fewer talking heads.

JJ Cale – To Tulsa And Back

First new album since '96's Guitar Man

Gomez – Split The Difference

Tchad Blake-produced fourth album from British blues-rockers

Monk Soul Brother

Sixth release from Clarksboro, New Jersey's holy roller

Spirits Rising

Despite drug battles and internal strife, Jeff Tweedy's band sound newly liberated

Various Artists – Ave Marina

German label celebrates 10 years in thrall to early-'80s Scottish jangle-pop

The Day After Tomorrow

Good end-of-the-world hokum
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement