Reviews

Heather Nova

A decade ago, Heather Nova burst forth as a kind of female Jeff Buckley. She's never quite fulfilled the promise but is a hugely popular live act. Her understated backing band are superb, but it's her soaring vocals that grab the attention at this show dating from September 2003, which concentrates mainly on material from her most recent album, Storm, and suggests she's toned down some of her earlier jagged edges.

EinstüRzende Neubauten – Kalte Sterne: Early Recordings

Germany's industrial music pioneers at their most uncompromising, from 1980-1982

Daryl Hall & John Oates

The '80s albums which made them the most successful duo in US chart history

The Heavy Blinkers – The Night And I Are Still So Young

Halifax, Nova Scotia's answer to The Beach Boys

Shystie – Diamond In The Dirt

Enjoyable debut by 'female Dizzee'

Hayden – Elk-Lake Serenade

Three years ago, Skyscraper National Park heralded the arrival of Hayden Desser as heir to the mumbling miserablism of Smog's Bill Callahan. Like the latter, Toronto-born Hayden's nagging melodies and deadpan delivery occupy their own peculiar kingdom. His fourth LP finds him applying sonic bluster to the usual sad-slow creep. "Hollywood Ending", for example, is a raucous tale of being caught up in a blockbuster outside his front door.

Susanna And The Magical Orchestra – List Of Lights And Buoys

Norwegian newcomers'magical debut

Dodgeball

Superior slapstick sizzler with lashings of violence

The Hard Word

Aussie heist thriller about crooked Guy Pearce's relationships with his two partner-in-crime brothers and his wayward wife, Rachel Griffiths. The team scheme to rip off the bookies, but Pearce and Griffiths are in top gear and make roadkill of any flaws in the plot. Bitter, tough and funny.

The Human Stain

Given short shrift by most cinema critics, Robert Benton's flawed adaptation of Philip Roth's novel is wonderfully acted by two stars who've been praised for far inferior performances. Anthony Hopkins is the professor sacked for alleged political incorrectness; Nicole Kidman the damaged younger woman with whom he enjoys "not my first love, not my great love, but my last love." Both risky and tender.
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