Reviews

Marilyn Manson – Lestwe Forget: The Best Of

Roundup of gothic huckster's hits

Wolf Eyes – Burned Mind

Vicious power-electronics from cult US act

I Love TV Ads – Virgin

Forty-six of the songs used, over the last couple of years, to sell us shit. A work of undeniable postmodern genius in itself, then. But does it function? In the case of KFC's selections, yes. So soulfully orgasmic are Laura Greene's "Moonlight, Music And You", The Chi-Lites' "What Do I Wish For?" and Jackie Wilson's "Who Who Song" that you'd gladly eat the food to be near them.

Jean Grae – This Week

Second album from the bright, underrated rapper

Holly Golightly – Slowly But Surely

Jack White and Billy Childish muse heads ever further into the past

Tom Jones And Jools Holland

Old goats of British R&B lock horns

The Toolbox Murders

Texas Chainsaw creator directs poor horror remake

Flame-Grilled

True Romance director rediscovers his savage best with superior blockbuster

Bleeding Art

DIRECTED BY Shane Meadows STARRING Paddy Considine, Gary Stretch, Toby Kebbell Opened October 1, Cert 18, 86 mins Now that the '90s trend for chucking Lottery cash at tax-break B-movies is over, we're left with a stripped-down who's who of great British directors. Jonathan Glazer's in it. Guy Ritchie isn't. Matthew Vaughn and Paul Greengrass are new entries. All great, but perhaps none are as worthy of your attention as Shane Meadows.

Ray Davies

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