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Random Harvest

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Only a perverse spoilsport could claim that Neil Young was not a giant among the North American singer-songwriters who emerged in the '60s. For this reviewer, he dwarfs all of them. Young is greater even than his hero Bob Dylan because he is more Heart than Head, more Body than Brain. There's something intuitive and primitively intense about Young's best music that Dylan rarely matches. More Dionysus than Apollo, Young puts music first, words second. And what music it is. In the 35 years that separate "Down By The River", the first song on this collection, from "Harvest Moon", its last, Young created a sonic language that was at once raw and graceful, angry and tremulous, powerful even when it was clunky. The key to Young's greatness may be the permanent tension between his high, feminine tenor and the gritty machismo of his guitar playing. A lumberjack choirboy, Young juggles ethereal sensitivity with visceral energy in a manner that no one else has ever achieved. What better way to start a best-of than with three tracks from Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, the '69 LP where Neil threw down his Stones-meet-Dylan gauntlet. Like the late-'60s/ early-'70s Stones, Young's purloined backing band Crazy Horse?disdained by Crosby, Stills and Nash among others?were never flashy, were always real. Next to the first CSN LP, Everybody...'s burning, churning "Cinnamon Girl" is pure punk rock. Even within the pompous confines of CSN&Y, Young was capable of something as livid and frills-free as "Ohio", the 1970 response to Nixon's "tin soldiers" gunning down four protesting students. That "instant protest song" is included here with the more histrionic, Crosby-esque "Southern Man". Inevitably a 16-track Greatest Hits aimed at the UK Yuletide market is going to lean heavily on his harvesting acoustic side. Big surprise that there isn't a single track from the mordant "Doom Trilogy" of the mid-'70s (Time Fades Away, On The Beach, Tonight's The Night). So here are "Helpless", "Heart Of Gold", "Old Man", "Only Love Can Break Your Heart", "After The Gold Rush", "Comes A Time" and "Harvest Moon". Neil Young for grandparents! To redress the mellow bias, Greatest Hits chucks in "Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)", "Rockin' In The Free World" and the mighty "Like A Hurricane", that most incandescent of Neil epics. But why "Hurricane" should be here and not, say, "Cortez The Killer" seems a matter of arbitrary judgement. Does all this make for a fitting introduction to the man's bulging oeuvre? Of course not: for any true fan, the 'best' of Neil Young is going to be the least obvious Neil Young. But almost any Neil is better than no Neil at all. In the greater scheme, Greatest Hits can only be a good thing.

Only a perverse spoilsport could claim that Neil Young was not a giant among the North American singer-songwriters who emerged in the ’60s. For this reviewer, he dwarfs all of them. Young is greater even than his hero Bob Dylan because he is more Heart than Head, more Body than Brain. There’s something intuitive and primitively intense about Young’s best music that Dylan rarely matches. More Dionysus than Apollo, Young puts music first, words second.

And what music it is. In the 35 years that separate “Down By The River”, the first song on this collection, from “Harvest Moon”, its last, Young created a sonic language that was at once raw and graceful, angry and tremulous, powerful even when it was clunky. The key to Young’s greatness may be the permanent tension between his high, feminine tenor and the gritty machismo of his guitar playing. A lumberjack choirboy, Young juggles ethereal sensitivity with visceral energy in a manner that no one else has ever achieved.

What better way to start a best-of than with three tracks from Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere, the ’69 LP where Neil threw down his Stones-meet-Dylan gauntlet. Like the late-’60s/ early-’70s Stones, Young’s purloined backing band Crazy Horse?disdained by Crosby, Stills and Nash among others?were never flashy, were always real. Next to the first CSN LP, Everybody…’s burning, churning “Cinnamon Girl” is pure punk rock. Even within the pompous confines of CSN&Y, Young was capable of something as livid and frills-free as “Ohio”, the 1970 response to Nixon’s “tin soldiers” gunning down four protesting students. That “instant protest song” is included here with the more histrionic, Crosby-esque “Southern Man”.

Inevitably a 16-track Greatest Hits aimed at the UK Yuletide market is going to lean heavily on his harvesting acoustic side. Big surprise that there isn’t a single track from the mordant “Doom Trilogy” of the mid-’70s (Time Fades Away, On The Beach, Tonight’s The Night). So here are “Helpless”, “Heart Of Gold”, “Old Man”, “Only Love Can Break Your Heart”, “After The Gold Rush”, “Comes A Time” and “Harvest Moon”. Neil Young for grandparents!

To redress the mellow bias, Greatest Hits chucks in “Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)”, “Rockin’ In The Free World” and the mighty “Like A Hurricane”, that most incandescent of Neil epics. But why “Hurricane” should be here and not, say, “Cortez The Killer” seems a matter of arbitrary judgement.

Does all this make for a fitting introduction to the man’s bulging oeuvre? Of course not: for any true fan, the ‘best’ of Neil Young is going to be the least obvious Neil Young. But almost any Neil is better than no Neil at all. In the greater scheme, Greatest Hits can only be a good thing.

Damien Rice – B-Sides

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When Dubliner Rice emerged in 2002, he seemed like another troubadour cast in the confessional mould of David Gray. But debut O, a platinum seller, revealed an idiosyncratic talent whose sexually explicit lyrics and visceral delivery marked him out from the acoustic herd. B-Sides features live recordings, unplugged versions and demos that show Rice at his stripped-down best, recalling Lou Reed's savagery on "Woman Like A Man" and Tim Buckley on "Moody Mooday". Roll on his second album proper next year.

When Dubliner Rice emerged in 2002, he seemed like another troubadour cast in the confessional mould of David Gray. But debut O, a platinum seller, revealed an idiosyncratic talent whose sexually explicit lyrics and visceral delivery marked him out from the acoustic herd. B-Sides features live recordings, unplugged versions and demos that show Rice at his stripped-down best, recalling Lou Reed’s savagery on “Woman Like A Man” and Tim Buckley on “Moody Mooday”. Roll on his second album proper next year.

Kevin Ayers – Didn’t Feel Lonely Till I Thought Of You: The Island Records Years

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Kevin Ayers' post-Harvest output was one long essay in disengagement. Rupert Hines' clinical production on Dr Dream (1974) reduced the warmth, wit and weirdness into permafrost: the sleevenotes quote Ayers' (entirely accurate) misgivings about the album at the time of release. The legendary Rainbow Concert of June 1974 was supposed to be a showcase for the star and guests. The guests (Eno, John Cale, Robert Wyatt) all went on to bigger things, while their host sounds like an onlooker at his own party. Elton John guests on '75's "Sweet Deceiver", presumably in an attempt to boost sales. Like that was gonna work.

Kevin Ayers’ post-Harvest output was one long essay in disengagement. Rupert Hines’ clinical production on Dr Dream (1974) reduced the warmth, wit and weirdness into permafrost: the sleevenotes quote Ayers’ (entirely accurate) misgivings about the album at the time of release. The legendary Rainbow Concert of June 1974 was supposed to be a showcase for the star and guests. The guests (Eno, John Cale, Robert Wyatt) all went on to bigger things, while their host sounds like an onlooker at his own party. Elton John guests on ’75’s “Sweet Deceiver”, presumably in an attempt to boost sales. Like that was gonna work.

Depeche Mode – Remixes 81-04

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From suburban advocates of bouncy electro-pop to stadium-straddling masters of excess; Depeche Mode's trajectory has been remarkable. Certainly more remarkable than their songs which, for the most part, have been nowhere near as thrilling as many would have you believe. Alas, this triple CD of remixes is as uneven as the band's own work, with the odd clever reworking (Kruder & Dorfmeister's magnificent "Useless", Dave Clarke's subtle "Dream On") undermined by the kind of dated, bloated workouts that ensured dance music is nowadays confined to the margins. PAUL MARDLES

From suburban advocates of bouncy electro-pop to stadium-straddling masters of excess; Depeche Mode’s trajectory has been remarkable. Certainly more remarkable than their songs which, for the most part, have been nowhere near as thrilling as many would have you believe. Alas, this triple CD of remixes is as uneven as the band’s own work, with the odd clever reworking (Kruder & Dorfmeister’s magnificent “Useless”, Dave Clarke’s subtle “Dream On”) undermined by the kind of dated, bloated workouts that ensured dance music is nowadays confined to the margins.

PAUL MARDLES

Britney Spears – My Prerogative: Greatest Hits

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From the epic masochism of "...One More Time" to the decadence of "Toxic", The Britney Spears Story has shaped up as a teensploitation fairy tale scripted by Aaron Spelling, Judy Garland and Madonna Ciccone. The soundtrack works best when charged with turbo-choruses and forged in the crucible of Scandinavian ultra-pop? even the contrived spectacle of "Me Against The Music" wasn't enough to salvage the leaden Princefunk chosen to signify maturity. But if squibby Bobby Brown covers are what adulthood has to offer, Britney may be in need of a script doctor if she wants a second act.

From the epic masochism of “…One More Time” to the decadence of “Toxic”, The Britney Spears Story has shaped up as a teensploitation fairy tale scripted by Aaron Spelling, Judy Garland and Madonna Ciccone. The soundtrack works best when charged with turbo-choruses and forged in the crucible of Scandinavian ultra-pop? even the contrived spectacle of “Me Against The Music” wasn’t enough to salvage the leaden Princefunk chosen to signify maturity. But if squibby Bobby Brown covers are what adulthood has to offer, Britney may be in need of a script doctor if she wants a second act.

Primal Scheme

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Not the definitive 'greatest hits' that will one day reveal the Willards as maybe the most underrated American rock band, but still a fine introduction to Robert Fisher and co. Formed as a loose collective around Fisher and co-writer Paul Austin in Boston in 1996, early tracks like "Bring It Down" show an experimental urge they'd soon abandon. But Fisher's confessional lyrics ?his early life was bruised by alcoholism, drugs and self-loathing?were in place from day one. "Bring The Monster Inside" (in demo form here) was a violent catalyst for his pain. But, in general, they essay a relieved despair, a stately acceptance, describing characters ceasing to struggle as emotional quicksand pulls them under, trapped by loneliness, drink or death. Mostly acoustic instruments cohere into majestic folk-noir narratives, made convincing by Fisher's poetically precise sense of place. "Rainbirds"' midday drinkers skulking deep in a Californian bar's shadows, dreading the sun, is one extreme. "I Miss You Best" is another, snow drifting through a window as a sleepless, abandoned Fisher still feels "the shape of your body like a bruise against my side". These snapshots of Americans stripped to their souls, cut adrift from the gaudy media surface, are allied to strong, swelling tunes and Fisher's rich croon. They are unknown anthems, an alt.country answer to Sinatra's "Only The Lonely". The injustice of the Willards' burial in the underground is then proven by a sequence of powerful rock songs, like "Love Doesn't"'s superior AOR and the glam-cosmic tumult of "Sticky". If there's a criticism of the band, it's their increasing reluctance to let this side loose, a devotion to more meditative moods which can leave them one-paced. But this record's dark lullabies, unanswered prayers, drinking songs and small-hours laments still sound like a lasting legacy.

Not the definitive ‘greatest hits’ that will one day reveal the Willards as maybe the most underrated American rock band, but still a fine introduction to Robert Fisher and co.

Formed as a loose collective around Fisher and co-writer Paul Austin in Boston in 1996, early tracks like “Bring It Down” show an experimental urge they’d soon abandon. But Fisher’s confessional lyrics ?his early life was bruised by alcoholism, drugs and self-loathing?were in place from day one.

“Bring The Monster Inside” (in demo form here) was a violent catalyst for his pain. But, in general, they essay a relieved despair, a stately acceptance, describing characters ceasing to struggle as emotional quicksand pulls them under, trapped by loneliness, drink or death. Mostly acoustic instruments cohere into majestic folk-noir narratives, made convincing by Fisher’s poetically precise sense of place. “Rainbirds”‘ midday drinkers skulking deep in a Californian bar’s shadows, dreading the sun, is one extreme. “I Miss You Best” is another, snow drifting through a window as a sleepless, abandoned Fisher still feels “the shape of your body like a bruise against my side”.

These snapshots of Americans stripped to their souls, cut adrift from the gaudy media surface, are allied to strong, swelling tunes and Fisher’s rich croon. They are unknown anthems, an alt.country answer to Sinatra’s “Only The Lonely”. The injustice of the Willards’ burial in the underground is then proven by a sequence of powerful rock songs, like “Love Doesn’t”‘s superior AOR and the glam-cosmic tumult of “Sticky”. If there’s a criticism of the band, it’s their increasing reluctance to let this side loose, a devotion to more meditative moods which can leave them one-paced. But this record’s dark lullabies, unanswered prayers, drinking songs and small-hours laments still sound like a lasting legacy.

John Howard – Technicolour Biography

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The recent reissue of Howard's Kid In A Big World, a 1974 work of genius, awoke a new generation to the joys of this ornate songwriter. Pitched by modernists as a missing link between the Eltons, Bowies and Suedes of this world, Kid... wasn't all Howard had in his locker, as this epic piano and vocal disc shows. All his songs tell a libertine's tale?life, art college, sexuality all inform his compositions. "Take Up Your Partners" and "Oh Dad (Look What You've Done)" are positively hunky dory, while "Hall Of Mirrors" and "Lonely Woman" are ultra cabaret, classically designed for any era. Way beyond fashion yet uncommonly chic.

The recent reissue of Howard’s Kid In A Big World, a 1974 work of genius, awoke a new generation to the joys of this ornate songwriter. Pitched by modernists as a missing link between the Eltons, Bowies and Suedes of this world, Kid… wasn’t all Howard had in his locker, as this epic piano and vocal disc shows. All his songs tell a libertine’s tale?life, art college, sexuality all inform his compositions. “Take Up Your Partners” and “Oh Dad (Look What You’ve Done)” are positively hunky dory, while “Hall Of Mirrors” and “Lonely Woman” are ultra cabaret, classically designed for any era. Way beyond fashion yet uncommonly chic.

Chris Farlowe – Handbags And Gladrags

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The '60s British club scene had an abundance of full-throated singers, Chris Farlowe among the most accomplished, endorsed by Otis Redding and, supposedly, rejecting first stab at recording "Yesterday". He wisely didn't spurn Andrew Oldham and Mick Jagger's advances and, handed Stones songs on a plate, his craggy voice meshed brilliantly with a contemporary pop veneer, propelling "Out Of Time" up the charts. Nothing else matched it. As Immediate crumbled, "Handbags And Gladrags" gave Farlowe a final minor hit. Rival Rod Stewart coveted the song but had the last laugh? Chris' career stalled, Rod's escalated. MICK HOUGHTON

The ’60s British club scene had an abundance of full-throated singers, Chris Farlowe among the most accomplished, endorsed by Otis Redding and, supposedly, rejecting first stab at recording “Yesterday”. He wisely didn’t spurn Andrew Oldham and Mick Jagger’s advances and, handed Stones songs on a plate, his craggy voice meshed brilliantly with a contemporary pop veneer, propelling “Out Of Time” up the charts. Nothing else matched it. As Immediate crumbled, “Handbags And Gladrags” gave Farlowe a final minor hit. Rival Rod Stewart coveted the song but had the last laugh? Chris’ career stalled, Rod’s escalated.

MICK HOUGHTON

Mission Of Burma – A Gun To The Head

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Of all second-generation US punk bands, perhaps none has been as consistently relevant as Mission Of Burma. During their brief career (1980-83) the Boston band recorded just one studio album, but their taut, skronky songwriting, sabre-toothed intensity and art-rock dynamics? which reveals them to be a combined Gang Of Four, Sex Pistols and Sonic Youth?is still pretty hard to beat. For newcomers, this 16-track compilation is a better place to start than Onoffon?their (entirely creditable) brand new album released earlier this year?since it provides both a valuable history lesson and an exhilarating blast of punk hoodoo. SHARON O'CONNELL

Of all second-generation US punk bands, perhaps none has been as consistently relevant as Mission Of Burma. During their brief career (1980-83) the Boston band recorded just one studio album, but their taut, skronky songwriting, sabre-toothed intensity and art-rock dynamics? which reveals them to be a combined Gang Of Four, Sex Pistols and Sonic Youth?is still pretty hard to beat. For newcomers, this 16-track compilation is a better place to start than Onoffon?their (entirely creditable) brand new album released earlier this year?since it provides both a valuable history lesson and an exhilarating blast of punk hoodoo.

SHARON O’CONNELL

Stan Getz – Live In London Vol 1 & Vol 2

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One can't underestimate the importance of journalist Les Tomkins, who lugged his reel-to-reel recorder down to Ronnie Scott's original Soho haunt to both interview visiting US jazz legends and then tape their club performance. These March/April 1964 dates document the UK club debut of tenor sax supremo Getz who, on a bossa nova kick, had recently instigated the last worldwide musical phenomenon before Beatlemania. Here, supported by pianist Stan Tracey, "Manha De Carnaval" (Vol 1) and "Desafinado" (Vol 2) are Getz's solitary concession to his bossa bankroll prior to forging the vibrant straight-ahead sets highlighted by "Night Rider".

One can’t underestimate the importance of journalist Les Tomkins, who lugged his reel-to-reel recorder down to Ronnie Scott’s original Soho haunt to both interview visiting US jazz legends and then tape their club performance. These March/April 1964 dates document the UK club debut of tenor sax supremo Getz who, on a bossa nova kick, had recently instigated the last worldwide musical phenomenon before Beatlemania. Here, supported by pianist Stan Tracey, “Manha De Carnaval” (Vol 1) and “Desafinado” (Vol 2) are Getz’s solitary concession to his bossa bankroll prior to forging the vibrant straight-ahead sets highlighted by “Night Rider”.

Flower Of Youth

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John lennon's infamous "Lost Weekend", spanning autumn 1973 into 1975, is one of rock's most intriguing legends. Separated from Mrs L, John raises hell with Harry Nilsson, Keith Moon and Ringo. Their Brandy Alexander-swilling exploits may have made the headlines but, creatively, it fired Lennon up. He recorded two albums, produced another for Nilsson and collaborated with Ringo, Elton John and Mick Jagger besides. A veritable workaholic binge compared to his output during the years either side, it gives the lie to the notion that Lennon had lost anything. Walls And Bridges (released 1974) alone is one of Lennon's most compelling records, fuelled by the bottle but with penetrating songs like "Steel And Glass" and "Bless You". Nilsson's Pussy Cats (also 1974) is equally fascinating. Initially, Lennon gave full rein to Phil Spector on his "Oldies But Mouldies"project, but the winter '73 sessions proved disastrous. Every party animal in LA turned up to bang a tambourine or shake a maraca in the wall of sound. Meticulous as ever, once Spector was eventually ready for him each day, Lennon was a drunken, wasted wreck. Having realised only nine tracks in two months, the great producer absconded with the tapes. Lennon retrieved them six months later, but they were virtually unusable? especially his spent, rasping vocals. Reassembling the Walls And Bridges band, Lennon substituted new recordings and vocals on the Spector tracks?over just four days. In a settlement with Chuck Berry's publishers for plagiarism over "Come Together", Lennon had agreed to record three songs they owned, including a version of the offending "You Can't Catch Me". They were also allowed to put out a pre-release mail-order version of Rock'N"Roll (aka Roots), albeit hastily withdrawn. The official release, bizarrely, discarded two of the best cuts?"Angel Baby" and the dazzling cacophony of "Be My Baby". This latest version also omits the Ronettes cover, but does include "Angel Baby"plus "To Know Her Is To Love Her" and "Since My Baby Left Me" (already on the posthumous Menlove Avenue). A pointless reprise of "Just Because", name-checking the ex-Beatles, hardly makes amends for the missing "Be My Baby", but the remastering beefs up and sharpens the sound, thankfully leaving Lennon's vocals untouched. Rock'N'Roll is a ramshackle triumph over disaster: rough and ready, loose but tight. Lennon remains rock's greatest singer, even though the irrefutable proof of this lies in Beatles' recordings?the raw power of "Twist & Shout" or the sheer relish he brings to Larry Williams' "Bad Boy". Those are the performances of a young man with something to prove, whereas Rock'N'Roll is Lennon belting out old numbers from his youth and simply having a ball. As he says on the sleeve: "You Should Have Been There."If only. MICK HOUGHTON

John lennon’s infamous “Lost Weekend”, spanning autumn 1973 into 1975, is one of rock’s most intriguing legends. Separated from Mrs L, John raises hell with Harry Nilsson, Keith Moon and Ringo. Their Brandy Alexander-swilling exploits may have made the headlines but, creatively, it fired Lennon up. He recorded two albums, produced another for Nilsson and collaborated with Ringo, Elton John and Mick Jagger besides. A veritable workaholic binge compared to his output during the years either side, it gives the lie to the notion that Lennon had lost anything. Walls And Bridges (released 1974) alone is one of Lennon’s most compelling records, fuelled by the bottle but with penetrating songs like “Steel And Glass” and “Bless You”. Nilsson’s Pussy Cats (also 1974) is equally fascinating.

Initially, Lennon gave full rein to Phil Spector on his “Oldies But Mouldies”project, but the winter ’73 sessions proved disastrous. Every party animal in LA turned up to bang a tambourine or shake a maraca in the wall of sound. Meticulous as ever, once Spector was eventually ready for him each day, Lennon was a drunken, wasted wreck. Having realised only nine tracks in two months, the great producer absconded with the tapes. Lennon retrieved them six months later, but they were virtually unusable? especially his spent, rasping vocals. Reassembling the Walls And Bridges band, Lennon substituted new recordings and vocals on the Spector tracks?over just four days.

In a settlement with Chuck Berry’s publishers for plagiarism over “Come Together”, Lennon had agreed to record three songs they owned, including a version of the offending “You Can’t Catch Me”. They were also allowed to put out a pre-release mail-order version of Rock’N”Roll (aka Roots), albeit hastily withdrawn. The official release, bizarrely, discarded two of the best cuts?”Angel Baby” and the dazzling cacophony of “Be My Baby”.

This latest version also omits the Ronettes cover, but does include “Angel Baby”plus “To Know Her Is To Love Her” and “Since My Baby Left Me” (already on the posthumous Menlove Avenue). A pointless reprise of “Just Because”, name-checking the ex-Beatles, hardly makes amends for the missing “Be My Baby”, but the remastering beefs up and sharpens the sound, thankfully leaving Lennon’s vocals untouched. Rock’N’Roll is a ramshackle triumph over disaster: rough and ready, loose but tight. Lennon remains rock’s greatest singer, even though the irrefutable proof of this lies in Beatles’ recordings?the raw power of “Twist & Shout” or the sheer relish he brings to Larry Williams’ “Bad Boy”. Those are the performances of a young man with something to prove, whereas Rock’N’Roll is Lennon belting out old numbers from his youth and simply having a ball. As he says on the sleeve: “You Should Have Been There.”If only.

MICK HOUGHTON

Marilyn Manson – Lestwe Forget: The Best Of

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About as transgressive as a Scooby Doo villain?if not quite as scary? Manson's attempts to present himself as a serious artist have always been laughable, and his political insights have similar cultural resonance to his fifth-form paintings. His singles, though, are frequently tremendous, revealing Manson to be an endearing glam-pop oaf. The daft versions of '80s synth-pop?"Personal Jesus", "Sweet Dreams", "Tainted Love"?are all here. But it's his own fantasias that show his truly subversive side: selling fabulous Gary Glitter stomps to a studiously alienated, pop-hating congregation.

About as transgressive as a Scooby Doo villain?if not quite as scary? Manson’s attempts to present himself as a serious artist have always been laughable, and his political insights have similar cultural resonance to his fifth-form paintings. His singles, though, are frequently tremendous, revealing Manson to be an endearing glam-pop oaf. The daft versions of ’80s synth-pop?”Personal Jesus”, “Sweet Dreams”, “Tainted Love”?are all here. But it’s his own fantasias that show his truly subversive side: selling fabulous Gary Glitter stomps to a studiously alienated, pop-hating congregation.

Burning Spear – Sounds From The Burning Spear

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Burning Spear's presence in Vanity Fair two years ago may have taken many of its readers by surprise, but not those who've followed his four-decade career. Winston Rodney, as Bob Marley knew him, has devoted his oeuvre to Rastafarianism, the fervent nature of his songs denying him mass appeal. A shame, because his beatific timbre and leisurely roots rhythms could incite a heathen to invoke the name of Jah. "Door Peeper", especially, wouldn't sound out of place on his zenith, Marcus Garvey. Praise indeed. PAUL MARDLES

Burning Spear’s presence in Vanity Fair two years ago may have taken many of its readers by surprise, but not those who’ve followed his four-decade career. Winston Rodney, as Bob Marley knew him, has devoted his oeuvre to Rastafarianism, the fervent nature of his songs denying him mass appeal. A shame, because his beatific timbre and leisurely roots rhythms could incite a heathen to invoke the name of Jah. “Door Peeper”, especially, wouldn’t sound out of place on his zenith, Marcus Garvey. Praise indeed.

PAUL MARDLES

The Cramps – How To Make A Monster

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For almost 30 years now, The Cramps have been recasting schlocky garage and backcombed rockabilly in a post-punk context. This two-disc set combines early demos with rehearsal tapes and two live shows of late-'70s vintage in which the audience show their displeasure: "It's a shame!" cries one heckler. A caveat on the sleeve reads "Cramps Fiends Only", and those already inducted into their weird world will find themselves admirably well served here.

For almost 30 years now, The Cramps have been recasting schlocky garage and backcombed rockabilly in a post-punk context. This two-disc set combines early demos with rehearsal tapes and two live shows of late-’70s vintage in which the audience show their displeasure: “It’s a shame!” cries one heckler. A caveat on the sleeve reads “Cramps Fiends Only”, and those already inducted into their weird world will find themselves admirably well served here.

Bruce Langhorne – The Hired Hand

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Fear not if you missed the film in question: the austere soundtrack music that Langhorne produced for his friend Peter Fonda is mesmerising enough to stand alone. In fact, it's spookily beautiful?the sound of the sometime Dylan sideman working through various haunting themes on a multitude of instruments: a 1920 Martin acoustic, a five-string banjo, a soprano recorder, an upright piano and an Appalachian dulcimer played with a steel bar. Fans of slow, Fahey-esque alt. Americana should apply within.

Fear not if you missed the film in question: the austere soundtrack music that Langhorne produced for his friend Peter Fonda is mesmerising enough to stand alone. In fact, it’s spookily beautiful?the sound of the sometime Dylan sideman working through various haunting themes on a multitude of instruments: a 1920 Martin acoustic, a five-string banjo, a soprano recorder, an upright piano and an Appalachian dulcimer played with a steel bar. Fans of slow, Fahey-esque alt. Americana should apply within.

Gabor Szabo – Bacchanal

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Having served his apprenticeship with Chico Hamilton, Ron Carter, and Charles Lloyd, Szabo gained wider prominence with 1966's Jazz Raga. The '60s found him producing more commercially oriented material with Jim Keltner and Hal Gordon. Szabo's method?state opening theme, extemporise making full use of drones and false fingerings?is well suited to these cover versions ("Dear Prudence", "Some Velvet Morning"). Although occasionally straying into blandness, this is mostly lounge-psych of the highest order.

Having served his apprenticeship with Chico Hamilton, Ron Carter, and Charles Lloyd, Szabo gained wider prominence with 1966’s Jazz Raga. The ’60s found him producing more commercially oriented material with Jim Keltner and Hal Gordon. Szabo’s method?state opening theme, extemporise making full use of drones and false fingerings?is well suited to these cover versions (“Dear Prudence”, “Some Velvet Morning”). Although occasionally straying into blandness, this is mostly lounge-psych of the highest order.

Sandie Shaw – Nothing Comes Easy

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Morrissey, the man who rescued Sandie's career when he coerced her into recording "Hand In Glove", once described her as "the most prolific figure in the entire history of British popular music". Absurd, sure, but from '64-'69 Sandie had as many UK No 1s as Dusty and Cilla combined (three). This enthralling box set chronicles every A and B from her barefoot heyday to her '80s revival via hits, memorable misses (eg 1966's galloping Joe Meek pastiche "Run"), '70s disco dabblings and Heaven 17's whimsical B.E.F. offshoot. Prefix "the" with "one of" and Morrissey may still have a case. SIMON GODDARD

Morrissey, the man who rescued Sandie’s career when he coerced her into recording “Hand In Glove”, once described her as “the most prolific figure in the entire history of British popular music”. Absurd, sure, but from ’64-’69 Sandie had as many UK No 1s as Dusty and Cilla combined (three). This enthralling box set chronicles every A and B from her barefoot heyday to her ’80s revival via hits, memorable misses (eg 1966’s galloping Joe Meek pastiche “Run”), ’70s disco dabblings and Heaven 17’s whimsical B.E.F. offshoot. Prefix “the” with “one of” and Morrissey may still have a case.

SIMON GODDARD

Serial Thriller

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Spanning 35 years of a career that really merits the adjective 'extraordinary', this is more than just another hits box. Among the 57 tracks are 13 previously unreleased, other rarities, and a DVD of a 1992 Bucharest concert. Those are the facts. The rest: well, you couldn't make it up, could you? A Star Is Born meets Hollywood Babylon; Shirley Temple meets Fatty Arbuckle; with world domination, a credibility collapse to match Blair's, and, somewhere in there, The Wiz. Jackson's stock has plummeted of late. Aware that the King Of Pop pitch is tired and inaccurate, Sony present this archive with a grasping for artistic kudos, a valid cry that he makes (made?) some incredibly vital music. Nelson George's essay urges upon us Michael's authenticity as soul man and pioneer. "Just as he learnt from Stevie Wonder, Jackie Wilson and James Brown, so he's educated R Kelly, Usher, Justin Timberlake and countless others, with Thriller as the textbook." George's sincerity is evident, but overlooks that since his solo heyday?Bad was as great as Thriller, and Off The Wall was no slouch?Jackson's quality control has been wayward. He turned down the songs that made Timberlake a star, and his ballads (from the boy who made "Got To Be There") have been execrably overblown. His funk retains flair: "Blood On The Dancefloor"was underrated, and the '90s outtakes are juicy. But he can't reach past the parodied persona now, and neither can we. Still, there's a dazzling array of near-genius here. When he's on it, the breaths, hiccups and falsetto "wee-hee"s not only start something (a terpsichorean bonfire) but see it through. While there's much left off ("Ain't No Sunshine", "Earth Song"), and one wonders why the stodgy collaborations with McCartney and Jagger merited inclusion, Jackson's heights are euphoric, Esperanto poetry. "Billie Jean", "Don't Stop", "The Way You Make Me Feel", "The Man In The Mirror"and maybe 10 more could not sound any better, from whipcrack to whoop, from walking bass to Quincy Jones'filigreed kitchen-sink production. Among the collector's items here are loose, lean demos (a rootsy "Shake Your Body", a sketchy "P.Y.T.") and '80s offcuts "Scared Of The Moon"(Broadway bombast) and "We Are Here To Change The World"(burbling, of-their-era, sci-fi movie synths). The stuff from the '90s is remarkable, begging the question of why he stashed it away. "In The Back." is a dark, slow-burn groove; "Beautiful Girl"a dipping, swaying love song; "The Way You Love Me" is the heir to "Just My Imagination", no less. Mind you, "Monkey Business", from '89, features Bubbles the chimp on backing noises. No, really. Even Michael realised that'd have folks saying he was bananas. Thing is, it's more "Sexual Healing"than "Funky Gibbon", and therefore unusually involving. A gifted vessel rather than a visionary, he'll never recapture his golden run now, but for a spell there he was in the zone like few before or since, and full of fire.

Spanning 35 years of a career that really merits the adjective ‘extraordinary’, this is more than just another hits box. Among the 57 tracks are 13 previously unreleased, other rarities, and a DVD of a 1992 Bucharest concert. Those are the facts. The rest: well, you couldn’t make it up, could you? A Star Is Born meets Hollywood Babylon; Shirley Temple meets Fatty Arbuckle; with world domination, a credibility collapse to match Blair’s, and, somewhere in there, The Wiz. Jackson’s stock has plummeted of late. Aware that the King Of Pop pitch is tired and inaccurate, Sony present this archive with a grasping for artistic kudos, a valid cry that he makes (made?) some incredibly vital music. Nelson George’s essay urges upon us Michael’s authenticity as soul man and pioneer. “Just as he learnt from Stevie Wonder, Jackie Wilson and James Brown, so he’s educated R Kelly, Usher, Justin Timberlake and countless others, with Thriller as the textbook.”

George’s sincerity is evident, but overlooks that since his solo heyday?Bad was as great as Thriller, and Off The Wall was no slouch?Jackson’s quality control has been wayward. He turned down the songs that made Timberlake a star, and his ballads (from the boy who made “Got To Be There”) have been execrably overblown. His funk retains flair: “Blood On The Dancefloor”was underrated, and the ’90s outtakes are juicy. But he can’t reach past the parodied persona now, and neither can we.

Still, there’s a dazzling array of near-genius here. When he’s on it, the breaths, hiccups and falsetto “wee-hee”s not only start something (a terpsichorean bonfire) but see it through. While there’s much left off (“Ain’t No Sunshine”, “Earth Song”), and one wonders why the stodgy collaborations with McCartney and Jagger merited inclusion, Jackson’s heights are euphoric, Esperanto poetry. “Billie Jean”, “Don’t Stop”, “The Way You Make Me Feel”, “The Man In The Mirror”and maybe 10 more could not sound any better, from whipcrack to whoop, from walking bass to Quincy Jones’filigreed kitchen-sink production.

Among the collector’s items here are loose, lean demos (a rootsy “Shake Your Body”, a sketchy “P.Y.T.”) and ’80s offcuts “Scared Of The Moon”(Broadway bombast) and “We Are Here To Change The World”(burbling, of-their-era, sci-fi movie synths). The stuff from the ’90s is remarkable, begging the question of why he stashed it away. “In The Back.” is a dark, slow-burn groove; “Beautiful Girl”a dipping, swaying love song; “The Way You Love Me” is the heir to “Just My Imagination”, no less. Mind you, “Monkey Business”, from ’89, features Bubbles the chimp on backing noises. No, really. Even Michael realised that’d have folks saying he was bananas. Thing is, it’s more “Sexual Healing”than “Funky Gibbon”, and therefore unusually involving.

A gifted vessel rather than a visionary, he’ll never recapture his golden run now, but for a spell there he was in the zone like few before or since, and full of fire.

Dusty Springfield – Classics & Collectibles

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All the hits (enough said, surely). Plus: mono mixes, alternative vocal takes and an unreleased "Close To You". The slim gap? you could just slide a sheet of paper through there?between Dusty's aspirations to sound like her black heroines and the inescapable whiteness of her voice is what makes it so unique and affecting. A frustrated but not tragic character, she riddles every song?the Bacharachs, the Goffin/Kings?with solid sourness and cracked emotion. "Goin' Back" is just perfect. CHRIS ROBERTS

All the hits (enough said, surely). Plus: mono mixes, alternative vocal takes and an unreleased “Close To You”. The slim gap? you could just slide a sheet of paper through there?between Dusty’s aspirations to sound like her black heroines and the inescapable whiteness of her voice is what makes it so unique and affecting. A frustrated but not tragic character, she riddles every song?the Bacharachs, the Goffin/Kings?with solid sourness and cracked emotion. “Goin’ Back” is just perfect.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Various Artists – Dread Broadcasting Corporation: Rebel Radio

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While the UK was under heavy manners in the early '80s, DBC's weekend broadcasts made life in the capital almost bearable. While this comp only tacitly acknowledges the soca and calypso they used to play, it does full justice to the station's reggae output, drawing on everything from Tighten Up rudeness to cally weed anthems, from Rock Steady to Jump Up, and all points in between. As with all the best pirates, the jingles were often as good as the tunes they punctuated. Ranking Miss P's "Striving To Be Free" will bring it all back for anyone who was there. And if you weren't, start here.

While the UK was under heavy manners in the early ’80s, DBC’s weekend broadcasts made life in the capital almost bearable. While this comp only tacitly acknowledges the soca and calypso they used to play, it does full justice to the station’s reggae output, drawing on everything from Tighten Up rudeness to cally weed anthems, from Rock Steady to Jump Up, and all points in between. As with all the best pirates, the jingles were often as good as the tunes they punctuated. Ranking Miss P’s “Striving To Be Free” will bring it all back for anyone who was there. And if you weren’t, start here.