Reviews

Fantômas – Delìrium Còrdia

Third album from Mike Patton's unpredictable and bloody-minded avant-metal project

Rob Smith – Up On The Downs

Solo venture from one half of acclaimed production duo

Isobel Campbell – Amorino

Debut solo album from former Belle And Sebastian belle

The Spinners – The Chrome Collection

Box set treatment for runners-up to Temptations, Four Tops and O'Jays in soul giants league

Duke Ellington – New Orleans Suite

Late flourish from eminent jazz composer

Alien—The Director’s Cut

DIRECTED BY Ridley Scott STARRING Sigourney Weaver, John Hurt, Ian Holm, Yaphet Kotto, Hatry Dean Stanton Opened October 31, Cert 15, 115 mins Scott's franchise-launching 1979 future-shocker is one of those rare, pure, primal films that works as both highbrow modern myth and trouser-soiling midnight movie.

American Cousins

The Sopranos do Glasgow

Love—The Forever Changes Concert

Back in January, Arthur Lee sold out two nights at the Royal Festival Hall. They were magical shows, Lee performing '67's classic Forever Changes in its entirety, complete with horns and strings. Some complained on the night about the sound balance, but there's no problem with the quality here. Lee's in celebratory mood, as he and his backing band LA psychedelicists Baby Lemonade storm through classics like "Bummer In The Summer" in a blur of brass and strings. Superlative stuff.

Let It Ride

You would have thought that Richard Dreyfuss might have analysed his own contribution to the wretched Krippendorf's Tribe. Yet here he is again, hamming wildly from start to fin, as a perennial loser enjoying one startlingly successful day at the races. David Johansen and the adorable Jennifer Tilly provide brief but inspired moments of comic brilliance, but it's dear, dear Dickie's show. More's the pity.

Chicks On Speed – 99 Cents

Arty German electro-rock scenesters deliver third LP
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