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Reviews

Heavy Mental

Enjoy the guilty pleasure of witnessing a hugely successful rock band tear itself apart

The MC5

Not the definitive doc currently in legal limbo, but an atmospherically filmed record of the Detroit punk pioneers' Levi's-sponsored comeback at London's 100 Club last year. Of the stand-ins for late brothers Rob Tyner and Fred "Sonic"Smith, Lemmy stars, but the celebratory thunder of the surviving trio moves most.

Secret Window

Highly entertaining Stephen King adaptation, stylishly directed by David Koepp, with a mesmerising Johnny Depp as a best-selling mystery writer in the throes of a messy divorce who's accused of plagiarism—and threatened with unpleasant retribution—by sinister hillbilly John Turturro. Cue havoc on all fronts, and bodies piling up very quickly indeed. Splendid.

The Residents

THE RESIDENTS' COMMERCIAL ALBUM ON DVD

Edgar Broughton Band

Previously unreleased 1969 prequel, plus Edgar and co's last two albums on Harvest

Michael Chapman – Dangerous When Sober: A Potted History 1966-1980

Live recordings and demos from the East Riding's favourite ragtime rocker

The Creation – Psychedelic Rose

Cult '60s mods unearth lost '80s set

Ray LaMontagne – Trouble

Immaculate debut from late developing troubadour

Top Of The Britpops

UK indie mixed with bombast to dramatic effect by Montreal-based visionaries

The Sadies – Favourite Colours

With both 2002's Stories Often Told and the previous year's Tremendous Efforts, Toronto's Sadies established themselves as feverish pluralists, twisting honky tonk, psychedelia, surf and punk into new forms. More meditative, this fifth LP hones the Southern harmonies and guitar-pickin' crosstalk of the brothers Good (Dallas and Travis) while augmenting the band with the likes of Robyn Hitchcock. "As Much As Such" and "A Good Flying Day" sound like reluctant outtakes from The Byrds' Younger Than Yesterday.
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