Nouvelle Vague

Post-punk classics reworked as wine bar subversion

Bebel Gilberto

Fragrant second album from the new Girl From Ipanema

Ron Sexsmith – Retriever

Seventh outing from Toronto troub, with Ed Harcourt on piano

Dave Davies – Bug

First solo album in 20 years from UFO-spotting ex-Kink

The Lilys

Naggingly arresting indie intricacy

Archie Bronson Outfit – Fur

Debut from London-based trio offers a refreshingly catholic take on alt.country/garage blues

Fully Developed

Celebratory indie-folk spirituals from the Canadian Belle & Sebastian

The Long Firm – Universal

The Beeb are hoping for a kind of Our Friends In The North success with this 1963-79-spanning Soho crime drama. Its author, Jake Arnott, has written sleevenotes for this 44-song double album, which moves from buoyant '60s hits from James Brown and Dusty to '70s landmarks by T. Rex and The Jam. R Dean Taylor's "There's A Ghost In My House" is exhilarating, Rod Stewart's "Reason To Believe" is moving, and Bowie's "London Boys" is seedily weird.

Songs For Mario’a Café – Sanctuary

While many of St Etienne's 'concepts' have left me cold, this one resonates, perhaps because I've just read the enchanting coffee-table tome Classic Cafes by Adrian Maddox and Phil Nicholls. Bob Stanley's sleevenotes similarly eulogise the faded majesty and allure of "caffs"—"'It's for lorry drivers,' said my mum." As these temples to a bygone age disappear, they exude the melancholy of half-recalled Donovan songs. In homage to these hallowed halls of grease are kitsch gems from The Kinks, Chairmen Of The Board, The Moments and The Sapphires.

The Company – Sony

What's not to love about a score that fills nearly half its running time with diverse versions of Rodgers and Hart's "My Funny Valentine"? Elvis Costello, Chet Baker (sublime), The Kronos Quartet and pianist Marvin Laird all saunter down its plush chandeliered corridors, its tree-lined boulevards, its narcoleptic nooks and crannies. No less a figure than Van Dyke Parks fills up the residual squares and piazzas, and there's even a waft of Julee Cruise (and a shiver of Saint-Saens and Bach) to gratify those desiring even loftier highs.
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement