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Brooks – Red Tape

Dark, ambitious second album from fast-rising Derby producer

Storm And Static

Timely reassessment of Portland, Oregon quartet's pre-Post To Wire output

Comets On Fire – Blue Cathedral

Saucer-eyed Santa Cruz psych-noise

BJ Cole – Trouble In Paradise

UK pedal-steel veteran gorges on electro-exotica

The Clearing

All-star cast fails to save plodding kidnap 'drama'

Gaul To Arms

France's answer to Mean Streets, Trainspotting and Do The Right Thing all rolled into one...

Various Artists – Philadelphia Roots 2

Another tasteful Soul Jazz series rolls on

Radio 4 – Stealing Of A Nation

Long Island punk-funk revivalists'third LP

Tom Dowd – The Language Of Music

The late Tom Dowd's influence on music is legendary. As an engineer, he invented the eight-track recorder. As Atlantic Records' in-house producer, he worked with Dizzy Gillespie and Ornette Coleman before helping Aretha Franklin, Dusty Springfield, The Allman Brothers and Ray Charles. His life is traced here through interviews with Dowd himself, Charles, Franklin, Ahmet Ertegun and Eric Clapton, and through fine archive footage and recordings, Inspiring.

Django

RELEASED A YEAR after Sergio Leone created the genre with A Fistful Of Dollars (1965), Django, directed by Leone's onetime assistant Sergio Corbucci, was the movie that saw the spaghetti western explode; a fact borne out by the countless unauthorised sequels it spawned across Europe and beyond (as far as Jamaica, where Perry Henzell's 1973 Rude Boy classic The Harder They Come paid heavy homage). Blue-eyed Franco Nero plays the eponymous mystery gunslinger, wandering in from the filthy wilderness, dragging a coffin behind him, toward a Hellish-looking bordertown.
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