Reviews

Slow Dazzle

Treasure-trove of dirge and lullaby over three CDs and one DVD

Altered States Of America

By 1967, rock'n'roll's voracious appetite for new sounds had drawn it unexpectedly close to another countercultural phenomenon: the classical avant-garde. John Cale, a former student of LaMonte Young, was introducing minimalist drone to The Velvet Underground. Paul McCartney was becoming diverted by the musique concrète and collagist techniques that would eventually result in "Revolution 9".

Pop Artless

Typically unadorned, quirky new album from cult hero

Ron Sexsmith – Retriever

Seventh outing from Toronto troub, with Ed Harcourt on piano

Phil Manzanera – 6PM

Master guitarist with all-star guests

The Hours Of The Day

Oddball Spanish psycho-tedium

Joy Of Madness

Iranian teen's promising debut

To Kill A King

Slow-moving account of the events leading up to the execution of King Charles I (Rupert Everett) and its aftermath, focusing on the stormy friendship of rebel leaders Oliver Cromwell (Tim Roth) and General Thomas Fairfax (Dougray Scott). Despite lavish period detail, a good supporting cast and an excellent performance from Everett, the leaden and historically dubious script renders this duller than the driest of documentaries.

American Splendor

Paul Giamatti, a character actor who's embodied a host of losers and creeps, always merited a lead role, and was surely born to play Harvey Pekar, the grumpy but ultimately likeable (not lovable) hospital clerk who finds a means of expression through his comic books/graphic novels. Inspired by friend Robert Crumb (and this is a superior film to the 1994 documentary Crumb), our obsessive-compulsive antihero depicts and ponders the mundane and everyday through his work, and the world and his wife relate.

Primal Dream

The original grunge-pop heroes' '88 tour footage plus essential documentaries
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