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Blazing Apostles

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THEY'RE ONE OF ROCK'S classic marginal bands, the resonance of whose name far outweighs recognition of their work. Everyone's heard of them, but few have heard their work. Give this a spin, though, and you won't be so sure. This excellent little compilation, timed to coincide with a new Bill Nelson post-Deluxe band autumn tour and biog, is pregnant with snippets that filled rock radio in the '70s? "Ships In The Night", "Sister Seagull"?and were endlessly touted by the likes of Johnny Walker and Alan Freeman as the next big thing. You can hear why?taut, self-referential art pop with enough nods to metal and prog stylings? notably in leader Nelson's blistering guitar work?to appeal across the board. Add a memorably literate imagistic discourse of an imagined future of Art Deco and Nelson's sublime gift for evocation and it should have been all so simple. People might even have overlooked Nelson's grotesque glam barnet and the awful Sunburst Finish LP cover from '76. But punk wasn't a forgiving phenomenon, and Deluxe were swept away by a movement whose more imaginative survivors might have felt considerable affinity with them (Bauhaus and Scritti Politti spring to mind). And there remains the suspicion that the smart-alecky eclecticism of Nelson's vision might have been a little too smart to win the band a niche market. For too long, this band have been termed a bunch of Roxy wannabes. This album, obviously the work of someone musically and lexically literate, gives the lie to that. Any song whose guitar lines are as ecstatic as those on "Maid In Heaven" was created by an unlucky band whose leader was unfortunate enough to choose Isherwood as his muse when Tolkien was the bard of choice. Go out and rediscover them. Now.

THEY’RE ONE OF ROCK’S classic marginal bands, the resonance of whose name far outweighs recognition of their work. Everyone’s heard of them, but few have heard their work. Give this a spin, though, and you won’t be so sure. This excellent little compilation, timed to coincide with a new Bill Nelson post-Deluxe band autumn tour and biog, is pregnant with snippets that filled rock radio in the ’70s? “Ships In The Night”, “Sister Seagull”?and were endlessly touted by the likes of Johnny Walker and Alan Freeman as the next big thing.

You can hear why?taut, self-referential art pop with enough nods to metal and prog stylings? notably in leader Nelson’s blistering guitar work?to appeal across the board. Add a memorably literate imagistic discourse of an imagined future of Art Deco and Nelson’s sublime gift for evocation and it should have been all so simple. People might even have overlooked Nelson’s grotesque glam barnet and the awful Sunburst Finish LP cover from ’76.

But punk wasn’t a forgiving phenomenon, and Deluxe were swept away by a movement whose more imaginative survivors might have felt considerable affinity with them (Bauhaus and Scritti Politti spring to mind). And there remains the suspicion that the smart-alecky eclecticism of Nelson’s vision might have been a little too smart to win the band a niche market.

For too long, this band have been termed a bunch of Roxy wannabes. This album, obviously the work of someone musically and lexically literate, gives the lie to that. Any song whose guitar lines are as ecstatic as those on “Maid In Heaven” was created by an unlucky band whose leader was unfortunate enough to choose Isherwood as his muse when Tolkien was the bard of choice. Go out and rediscover them. Now.

The Teardrop Explodes – Zoology

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Now his vast tome on monolithic Europe is finally complete, Julian Cope has, rather sweetly, redirected his Odinist energies to his personal ancient history. Zoology is, belatedly, a kind of musical companion to his 1994 autobiography Head-On, tracing the Teardrops' unsteady evolution from organ-drenched psych-punks to cavalier pop outsiders. Sixteen band members are psychically battered in the process, but the results are frequently magical: a belligerent live version of "Sleeping Gas"; a sepulchrally gloomy demo of "You Disappear From View" that is, according to Cope, "recorded as it should have sounded before the group got their mitts on it". Best of all, he magnanimously exhumes a clammy, intense take on "Books" by A Shallow Madness, the Teardrops forerunners fronted by Ian McCulloch. McCulloch sounds agitated and imperious. Within weeks, Cope had sacked him.

Now his vast tome on monolithic Europe is finally complete, Julian Cope has, rather sweetly, redirected his Odinist energies to his personal ancient history. Zoology is, belatedly, a kind of musical companion to his 1994 autobiography Head-On, tracing the Teardrops’ unsteady evolution from organ-drenched psych-punks to cavalier pop outsiders. Sixteen band members are psychically battered in the process, but the results are frequently magical: a belligerent live version of “Sleeping Gas”; a sepulchrally gloomy demo of “You Disappear From View” that is, according to Cope, “recorded as it should have sounded before the group got their mitts on it”. Best of all, he magnanimously exhumes a clammy, intense take on “Books” by A Shallow Madness, the Teardrops forerunners fronted by Ian McCulloch. McCulloch sounds agitated and imperious. Within weeks, Cope had sacked him.

Terry Reid – Silver White Light: Live At The Isle Of Wight

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First choice Led Zep frontman and Hendrix's jamming chum, Reid was almost lost in the midst of a Brit blue-eyed soul fraternity that included Burdon, Cocker, Fame, Farlowe, Marriott, Winwood, Stewart and Morrison. But before relocating Stateside, he confirmed his outstanding talent during his appearance at the 1970 Isle Of Wight Festival. Here, with David Lindley on all things stringed, there's a '70s West Coast feel not just to his own songs ("Silver White Light", "Things To Try" etc) but during a feisty cover of Dylan's "To Be Alone With You"

First choice Led Zep frontman and Hendrix’s jamming chum, Reid was almost lost in the midst of a Brit blue-eyed soul fraternity that included Burdon, Cocker, Fame, Farlowe, Marriott, Winwood, Stewart and Morrison. But before relocating Stateside, he confirmed his outstanding talent during his appearance at the 1970 Isle Of Wight Festival. Here, with David Lindley on all things stringed, there’s a ’70s West Coast feel not just to his own songs (“Silver White Light”, “Things To Try” etc) but during a feisty cover of Dylan’s “To Be Alone With You”

Michael Chapman – Dangerous When Sober: A Potted History 1966-1980

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Possessing abundant technical gifts and delivering his doleful acerbic observations in a hybridised Yorkshire Yankee growl, Michael Chapman remains one of the most underrated singer-songwriters of the not-quite-folk-not-quite-rock boom of the early '70s. Hopefully a complete reissue series of his Harvest output is on the cards. In the meantime, the earliest portions of this compilation remind you that, in full flow, he was as feisty and hilarious a stage performer as John Martyn. Unfortunately the lacklustre later material, recorded with an equally lacklustre band, does him little justice.

Possessing abundant technical gifts and delivering his doleful acerbic observations in a hybridised Yorkshire Yankee growl, Michael Chapman remains one of the most underrated singer-songwriters of the not-quite-folk-not-quite-rock boom of the early ’70s.

Hopefully a complete reissue series of his Harvest output is on the cards. In the meantime, the earliest portions of this compilation remind you that, in full flow, he was as feisty and hilarious a stage performer as John Martyn. Unfortunately the lacklustre later material, recorded with an equally lacklustre band, does him little justice.

Various Artists – The Leiber & Stoller Story: Vol 1—Hard Times

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Five years before they hit paydirt when Elvis covered "Hound Dog", back in 1951 Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller were scraping a living from penning gin-joint fodder for minor R&B labels. Bull Moose Jackson's "Nosey Joe" typifies the duo's nascent repertoire, which blended 12-bar boogies with black slang and bawdy double-entendre. This, the first of three compendiums, traces their triumphant rise from those same jukejoints to the Paris Olympia four years later, where "little Sparrow" Edith Piaf gives "Black Denim Trousers And Motorcycle Boots" a peculiar Gallic twist.

Five years before they hit paydirt when Elvis covered “Hound Dog”, back in 1951 Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller were scraping a living from penning gin-joint fodder for minor R&B labels. Bull Moose Jackson’s “Nosey Joe” typifies the duo’s nascent repertoire, which blended 12-bar boogies with black slang and bawdy double-entendre.

This, the first of three compendiums, traces their triumphant rise from those same jukejoints to the Paris Olympia four years later, where “little Sparrow” Edith Piaf gives “Black Denim Trousers And Motorcycle Boots” a peculiar Gallic twist.

Double Diamond

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Punk rock threw up some odd coves, but none more compellingly odd than Ian Dury. An undersized chap with a limp and stick (the result of a childhood run-in with polio) who fashioned himself as a Cockney Cole Porter, he was one of the most unlikely rock stars of all time. And New Boots..., his 1977 debut, stood out from the three-chord, safety-pinned punk pack like a diamond (geezer) ring on a wart-encrusted fist. Dury once declared that his true musical inspiration lay "in a place where your spirit and your arse land at the same time". It makes as much sense as any other attempt to nail down how he managed to strip-mine musical gold by mashing up vaudevillian knees-ups, sophisto-funk, pub-rock riffola and garage-land jazz, topping and tailing with a gor-blimey accent and clever-dicky lyrics that sifted through the English psyche and came up with nuggets of rib-tickling truth. This must-have deluxe two-disc edition generously boosts the original album with four extra songs, including the immortal "Sex & Drugs" and "Razzle In My Pocket". There's also an entire CD of demo versions that are worth the price of admission alone for a more expansive "My Old Man" and an early take on "Wake Up And Make Love With Me", for which Dury adopts a Barry White-style accent with hilarious consequences. But it's the original 10 tracks that prove most seductive and enduring. From the punkish clatter of "Sweet Gene Vincent" through the Max Miller-ish "Billericay Dickie" to the uproariously rude "Plaistow Patricia", with its still startling "arseholes, bastards, fucking c***s and pricks" opening. Every one a bleedin' coconut, as Dury himself might have said. All of it as warmly exhilarating as anything thrown up by Tamla Motown?hard though it is to imagine Smokey or Marvin delivering a line like: "I had a love affair with Nina in the back of my Cortina/A seasoned-up hyena could not have been more obscener."

Punk rock threw up some odd coves, but none more compellingly odd than Ian Dury. An undersized chap with a limp and stick (the result of a childhood run-in with polio) who fashioned himself as a Cockney Cole Porter, he was one of the most unlikely rock stars of all time. And New Boots…, his 1977 debut, stood out from the three-chord, safety-pinned punk pack like a diamond (geezer) ring on a wart-encrusted fist.

Dury once declared that his true musical inspiration lay “in a place where your spirit and your arse land at the same time”. It makes as much sense as any other attempt to nail down how he managed to strip-mine musical gold by mashing up vaudevillian knees-ups, sophisto-funk, pub-rock riffola and garage-land jazz, topping and tailing with a gor-blimey accent and clever-dicky lyrics that sifted through the English psyche and came up with nuggets of rib-tickling truth.

This must-have deluxe two-disc edition generously boosts the original album with four extra songs, including the immortal “Sex & Drugs” and “Razzle In My Pocket”. There’s also an entire CD of demo versions that are worth the price of admission alone for a more expansive “My Old Man” and an early take on “Wake Up And Make Love With Me”, for which Dury adopts a Barry White-style accent with hilarious consequences.

But it’s the original 10 tracks that prove most seductive and enduring. From the punkish clatter of “Sweet Gene Vincent” through the Max Miller-ish “Billericay Dickie” to the uproariously rude “Plaistow Patricia”, with its still startling “arseholes, bastards, fucking c***s and pricks” opening. Every one a bleedin’ coconut, as Dury himself might have said. All of it as warmly exhilarating as anything thrown up by Tamla Motown?hard though it is to imagine Smokey or Marvin delivering a line like: “I had a love affair with Nina in the back of my Cortina/A seasoned-up hyena could not have been more obscener.”

Buzzcocks – The Complete Singles Anthology

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This three-disc package of the Manc punk demigods' complete 45s catalogue amounts to 1979's 'every home should have one' hits collection Singles Going Steady? "plus". That "plus" includes: 1977's historic Devoto-sung, Hannett-produced "Spiral Scratch" EP; their later Hannett productions (1980's swan song Parts 1,2,3 EP); and a decade's worth of reunion water-treading. Inevitably, the innovation of the first 31 tracks (pre-split) is rehashed in the remaining 23 (post-reformation), though not enough to taint everything from "Breakdown" to "Harmony In My Head".

This three-disc package of the Manc punk demigods’ complete 45s catalogue amounts to 1979’s ‘every home should have one’ hits collection Singles Going Steady? “plus”. That “plus” includes: 1977’s historic Devoto-sung, Hannett-produced “Spiral Scratch” EP; their later Hannett productions (1980’s swan song Parts 1,2,3 EP); and a decade’s worth of reunion water-treading. Inevitably, the innovation of the first 31 tracks (pre-split) is rehashed in the remaining 23 (post-reformation), though not enough to taint everything from “Breakdown” to “Harmony In My Head”.

Graham Gouldman – The Graham Gouldman Thing

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Long before he was 2.5cc, Graham Gouldman penned a clutch of classic English pop songs for the likes of The Yardbirds ("For Your Love") and Herman's Hermits ("No Milk Today"). Rendered in a pleasingly plaintive style and boasting state-of-the-'60s-art baroque'n'roll arrangements from future Zep bassist John Paul Jones, Gouldman's songs evoke a time when lyricists could still write cute little domestic vignettes full of everyday imagery and girl-next-door yearning without a shred of self-consciousness. As competent and assured in their way as the hit versions.

Long before he was 2.5cc, Graham Gouldman penned a clutch of classic English pop songs for the likes of The Yardbirds (“For Your Love”) and Herman’s Hermits (“No Milk Today”). Rendered in a pleasingly plaintive style and boasting state-of-the-’60s-art baroque’n’roll arrangements from future Zep bassist John Paul Jones, Gouldman’s songs evoke a time when lyricists could still write cute little domestic vignettes full of everyday imagery and girl-next-door yearning without a shred of self-consciousness. As competent and assured in their way as the hit versions.

Kilburn And The High Roads – Handsome

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Unfairly consigned to a historical footnote, Handsome is?give or take the outr...

Unfairly consigned to a historical footnote, Handsome is?give or take the outr

Stephen Duffy – Music In Colours

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From Duran Duran to Robbie Williams via New Pop, folk-rock and cash-in Britpop, Duffy's career is not short of its curious ups and downs. But strangest of all may be the fact that he made his best album in collaboration with avant-yob Nigel Kennedy. Relishing a prog sheen after the austerity of The Lilac Time, Duffy's witty, pretty Revolver-songs ("Natalie" and "Totem" are featherlight knock-outs) are strung between Kennedy's psycho-classical "Transitoires", and the result is an affecting, beguiling and seamless suite of neuroses, new roses and elegant heartache.

From Duran Duran to Robbie Williams via New Pop, folk-rock and cash-in Britpop, Duffy’s career is not short of its curious ups and downs. But strangest of all may be the fact that he made his best album in collaboration with avant-yob Nigel Kennedy. Relishing a prog sheen after the austerity of The Lilac Time, Duffy’s witty, pretty Revolver-songs (“Natalie” and “Totem” are featherlight knock-outs) are strung between Kennedy’s psycho-classical “Transitoires”, and the result is an affecting, beguiling and seamless suite of neuroses, new roses and elegant heartache.

Jimmy Scott – Someone To Watch Over Me: The Definitive Jimmy Scott

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At 79, Scott continues to perform, despite suffering a minor heart attack on stage last year. Diagnosed with an hormonal deficiency in his teens that prevented his voice dropping, he turned the abnormality into an otherworldly asset. This handsome collection draws together selections recorded for several labels over five decades for the first time. What stands out is the awesome continuity, the angelic tone that held Marvin and Stevie in thrall, casting its spell into the 21st century. He's too good to remain a cognoscenti secret.

At 79, Scott continues to perform, despite suffering a minor heart attack on stage last year. Diagnosed with an hormonal deficiency in his teens that prevented his voice dropping, he turned the abnormality into an otherworldly asset. This handsome collection draws together selections recorded for several labels over five decades for the first time. What stands out is the awesome continuity, the angelic tone that held Marvin and Stevie in thrall, casting its spell into the 21st century. He’s too good to remain a cognoscenti secret.

Glittering Prize

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Lists are crass. But let's take a straw poll on Britain's greatest ever female singer anyway. Dusty Springfield, Kate Bush and Norma Waterson all have strong claims. Then there's Polly Harvey, Lisa Stansfield, Katie Melua... OK, that last name's not a serious suggestion. But it illustrates the poverty of the shortlist. Over the years, Britain has not only failed to produce home-grown giants to rival Ella, Aretha and Nina, but we've even struggled to come up with our own Janis, Madonna or even Alanis. Yet by the time you've finished listening to these five CDs, you should conclude that there is one name among the ranks of British female vocalists who outclasses them all. Sandy Denny started out as just another frumpy folk singer with an unusually pure voice. But she ended up as our answer to Joan Baez, Grace Slick and Joni Mitchell all rolled into one. The 88 tracks here are brilliantly selected to showcase both the breathtaking diversity and remarkable consistency of her talent. She had an intuitive feel for traditional English ballads ("Tam Lin", "A Sailor's Life", "Banks Of The Nile"). But she could also do justice to the songbooks of Leonard Cohen ("Bird On A Wire") and Bob Dylan ("Si Tu Dois Partir"). She could rock (Buddy Holly's "Learning The Game", Little Feat's "Easy to Slip") and she could sing country (the unreleased "Silver Threads", "Golden Needles" from the Fotheringay sessions). And on songs such as "Who Knows Where The Time Goes?", "The Sea" and "No More Sad Refrains", she proved she was a songwriter of some ability. Yet, by 1978, at the age of 31, she was dead. The best of Denny's widely available work with Fairport Convention, Fotheringay and solo is well represented. But almost a third of the tracks are previously unreleased, while another 17 have been difficult to track down until now. Among the most desirable gems are a wondrous version of Anne Briggs' "Go Your Way My Love", "Sir Patrick Spens" from a 1969 Peel session, and some extraordinary solo home demos of Denny originals such as "One Way Donkey Ride", "All Our Days" and "The Music Weaver"?her tribute to the great Richard Thompson. Just one complaint. Denny's duet with Robert Plant on "The Battle Of Evermore" from Led Zeppelin IV would have been a valuable adornment. Yet, even without this, A Boxful Of Treasures?with suitably sumptuous packaging to reflect its title?is still a contender for most significant retrospective of the year.

Lists are crass. But let’s take a straw poll on Britain’s greatest ever female singer anyway. Dusty Springfield, Kate Bush and Norma Waterson all have strong claims. Then there’s Polly Harvey, Lisa Stansfield, Katie Melua… OK, that last name’s not a serious suggestion. But it illustrates the poverty of the shortlist. Over the years, Britain has not only failed to produce home-grown giants to rival Ella, Aretha and Nina, but we’ve even struggled to come up with our own Janis, Madonna or even Alanis. Yet by the time you’ve finished listening to these five CDs, you should conclude that there is one name among the ranks of British female vocalists who outclasses them all.

Sandy Denny started out as just another frumpy folk singer with an unusually pure voice. But she ended up as our answer to Joan Baez, Grace Slick and Joni Mitchell all rolled into one. The 88 tracks here are brilliantly selected to showcase both the breathtaking diversity and remarkable consistency of her talent.

She had an intuitive feel for traditional English ballads (“Tam Lin”, “A Sailor’s Life”, “Banks Of The Nile”). But she could also do justice to the songbooks of Leonard Cohen (“Bird On A Wire”) and Bob Dylan (“Si Tu Dois Partir”). She could rock (Buddy Holly’s “Learning The Game”, Little Feat’s “Easy to Slip”) and she could sing country (the unreleased “Silver Threads”, “Golden Needles” from the Fotheringay sessions). And on songs such as “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?”, “The Sea” and “No More Sad Refrains”, she proved she was a songwriter of some ability. Yet, by 1978, at the age of 31, she was dead.

The best of Denny’s widely available work with Fairport Convention, Fotheringay and solo is well represented. But almost a third of the tracks are previously unreleased, while another 17 have been difficult to track down until now. Among the most desirable gems are a wondrous version of Anne Briggs’ “Go Your Way My Love”, “Sir Patrick Spens” from a 1969 Peel session, and some extraordinary solo home demos of Denny originals such as “One Way Donkey Ride”, “All Our Days” and “The Music Weaver”?her tribute to the great Richard Thompson.

Just one complaint. Denny’s duet with Robert Plant on “The Battle Of Evermore” from Led Zeppelin IV would have been a valuable adornment. Yet, even without this, A Boxful Of Treasures?with suitably sumptuous packaging to reflect its title?is still a contender for most significant retrospective of the year.

Virgin Prunes

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While U2, fellow members of the mid '70s Dublin clique known as Lypton Village, went on to become "the world's biggest band" TM, the Village's co-founders Virgin Prunes? led by Gavin Friday?pursued a far darker, experimental escape route. Their first four singles, collected as A New Form Of Beauty, ...

While U2, fellow members of the mid ’70s Dublin clique known as Lypton Village, went on to become “the world’s biggest band” TM, the Village’s co-founders Virgin Prunes? led by Gavin Friday?pursued a far darker, experimental escape route. Their first four singles, collected as A New Form Of Beauty, make for brutally uncomfortable listening, though Colin Newman of Wire softens the edges on follow-up If I Die…. Her

Neil Innes And The World – Lucky Planet

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Immediately after the demise of the Bonzos and long before he secured gainful employment with Rutland Weekend Television, Neil Innes made this little curio. Aided by former Bonzos sidekick Dennis Cowan, Innes showed that he was already in touch with his inner-Rutle, or at least his inner Badfinger, on "Angelina"and "Sail Away". Unfortunately, as Innes himself indicates in the sleevenotes, the project was hastily conceived and executed and is characterised by too many undistinguished moments to make it an essential purchase for anyone other than Bonzos completists.

Immediately after the demise of the Bonzos and long before he secured gainful employment with Rutland Weekend Television, Neil Innes made this little curio. Aided by former Bonzos sidekick Dennis Cowan, Innes showed that he was already in touch with his inner-Rutle, or at least his inner Badfinger, on “Angelina”and “Sail Away”. Unfortunately, as Innes himself indicates in the sleevenotes, the project was hastily conceived and executed and is characterised by too many undistinguished moments to make it an essential purchase for anyone other than Bonzos completists.

Simple Minds – Silver Box

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This exhaustive trawl through demo, session and concert detritus traces Simple Minds'25-year career from 1979, when they were still a Magazine supplement, through to the 1988 stadium bombast of "Mandela Day"and beyond. Yet it's likely to be of interest mostly due to the inclusion of Our Secrets Are The Same, recorded in 1999, yet stuck in contractual purgatory until now. It finds Kerr and Burchill still a bit in the slipstream of '90s U2?tastefully epic, techno-fringed and extravagantly exasperated (on "Death By Chocolate"and "Neon Cowboys") with the wickedness of a world gone wrong.

This exhaustive trawl through demo, session and concert detritus traces Simple Minds’25-year career from 1979, when they were still a Magazine supplement, through to the 1988 stadium bombast of “Mandela Day”and beyond. Yet it’s likely to be of interest mostly due to the inclusion of Our Secrets Are The Same, recorded in 1999, yet stuck in contractual purgatory until now. It finds Kerr and Burchill still a bit in the slipstream of ’90s U2?tastefully epic, techno-fringed and extravagantly exasperated (on “Death By Chocolate”and “Neon Cowboys”) with the wickedness of a world gone wrong.

Even Serpents Shine

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Namedrops keep falling on his head, so it's a wonder Lloyd Cole never found time to give Pauline Kael a cameo in the pomo-boho tangles of jangle and allusion that make up this 1984 debut. Because when she nailed Citizen Kane as a "shallow masterpiece", she could have been describing a tune like "Perfect Skin", all "cheekbones like geometry and eyes like sin", where the moral of the song is that "there never has been one". Maybe it was the turtlenecks, the 2CVs and basement flats, or maybe it was just the drabbest artwork in album sleeve history, but, in their time, the Commotions never really escaped the dowdy dorm rooms of the mid-'80s. Happily, at 20 years remove, Rattlesnakes sounds fresh and funny?wittily ambitious rather than earnest or gauche. Cole's was an old-fashioned kind of New Pop-the knock-kneed beatnikery of early Postcard buffed up for drivetime and scored for cinemascope. For a record so keen with wordy pleasures, Rattlesnakes has a rare sumptuousness: in the scorched guitar rising through "Forest Fire", the swampy undertow of "Speedboat", or the strings that swoop and soar alongside the Joan Didion highway of the title track. But the heart of the record lies in Cole's conceits. These songs know little of life beyond Penguin Modern Classics, repertory cinema and a musical Manhattan of the mind, but, like a young Tarantino, they find much fun within their fictive confines?"You came driving back to town in a beat-up Grace Kelly carl Looking like a friend of Truman Capote but looking exactly like you are". All the world's a sound-stage. The additional disc of demos and rarities shows a little too much of the working at times: a cover of Television's "Glory" and the line in "Beautiful City" remembering "Dancing round your flat/To 'Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat'" rather gives the game away. But if talent borrows and genius steals, then Rattlesnakes remains a delirious swagbag, ripe for reappraisal.

Namedrops keep falling on his head, so it’s a wonder Lloyd Cole never found time to give Pauline Kael a cameo in the pomo-boho tangles of jangle and allusion that make up this 1984 debut. Because when she nailed Citizen Kane as a “shallow masterpiece”, she could have been describing a tune like “Perfect Skin”, all “cheekbones like geometry and eyes like sin”, where the moral of the song is that “there never has been one”.

Maybe it was the turtlenecks, the 2CVs and basement flats, or maybe it was just the drabbest artwork in album sleeve history, but, in their time, the Commotions never really escaped the dowdy dorm rooms of the mid-’80s. Happily, at 20 years remove, Rattlesnakes sounds fresh and funny?wittily ambitious rather than earnest or gauche. Cole’s was an old-fashioned kind of New Pop-the knock-kneed beatnikery of early Postcard buffed up for drivetime and scored for cinemascope. For a record so keen with wordy pleasures, Rattlesnakes has a rare sumptuousness: in the scorched guitar rising through “Forest Fire”, the swampy undertow of “Speedboat”, or the strings that swoop and soar alongside the Joan Didion highway of the title track.

But the heart of the record lies in Cole’s conceits. These songs know little of life beyond Penguin Modern Classics, repertory cinema and a musical Manhattan of the mind, but, like a young Tarantino, they find much fun within their fictive confines?”You came driving back to town in a beat-up Grace Kelly carl Looking like a friend of Truman Capote but looking exactly like you are”. All the world’s a sound-stage.

The additional disc of demos and rarities shows a little too much of the working at times: a cover of Television’s “Glory” and the line in “Beautiful City” remembering “Dancing round your flat/To ‘Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat'” rather gives the game away. But if talent borrows and genius steals, then Rattlesnakes remains a delirious swagbag, ripe for reappraisal.

Various Artists – The Trip: Created By St Etienne

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Where St Etienne's recent Songs For Mario's Caf...

Where St Etienne’s recent Songs For Mario’s Caf

Various Artists – The Magic Of Motown

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There are countless Motown compilations on the market, but the ever-discerning Uncut readers'input helped to make this latest selection different. While songs branded on the heart of any '60s pop fan by Marvin, Stevie, The Isleys and The Temptations feature, the familiarity of these classics from the canon allows the spotlight to fall on more obscure, easily overlooked gems. Among those taking a bow are The Elgins, Caston & Majors, '80s angelic soul faves De Barge, future Elton John collaborator Kiki Dee and incongruous moonlighting star of stage and screen Albert Finney. If nothing else, Big Al's creepy "Those Other Men"proves that, at its most bizarre, Gordy's crossover dream really had no limits.

There are countless Motown compilations on the market, but the ever-discerning Uncut readers’input helped to make this latest selection different.

While songs branded on the heart of any ’60s pop fan by Marvin, Stevie, The Isleys and The Temptations feature, the familiarity of these classics from the canon allows the spotlight to fall on more obscure, easily overlooked gems. Among those taking a bow are The Elgins, Caston & Majors, ’80s angelic soul faves De Barge, future Elton John collaborator Kiki Dee and incongruous moonlighting star of stage and screen Albert Finney. If nothing else, Big Al’s creepy “Those Other Men”proves that, at its most bizarre, Gordy’s crossover dream really had no limits.

Galaxie 500 – Uncollected

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Back in 1989, any hyperbolic adjectives in the pages of Melody Maker that weren't thrust upon The Pixies were more than likely generously bequeathed to fellow Bostonians Galaxie 500. On this collector's disc of oddities (previously only available with Ryko's now deleted 1996 box set) we're reminded of the latter's peculiar, not to say predictable, ability to make any and every song sound like The Velvet Underground's "Heroin". Young Marble Giants' "Final Day" moulds effortlessly to the formula; The Rutles' "Cheese And Onions" less so. Distracting, but ultimately fans-only fare.

Back in 1989, any hyperbolic adjectives in the pages of Melody Maker that weren’t thrust upon The Pixies were more than likely generously bequeathed to fellow Bostonians Galaxie 500. On this collector’s disc of oddities (previously only available with Ryko’s now deleted 1996 box set) we’re reminded of the latter’s peculiar, not to say predictable, ability to make any and every song sound like The Velvet Underground’s “Heroin”. Young Marble Giants’ “Final Day” moulds effortlessly to the formula; The Rutles’ “Cheese And Onions” less so. Distracting, but ultimately fans-only fare.

The Creation – Psychedelic Rose

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For a group whose career spanned a mere 18 months, The Creation had a big impact on popular culture, giving rise to Alan McGee's band (Biff Bang Pow!) and record label, while the Pistols, Ride and Boney M interpreted their songs. This, their 'great lost album', won't excite the same response. Recorded 20 years after the original group split up, it bears scant relation to their '60s apogee, peddling as it does the kind of turgid, graceless rock that the one-time modernists set out to overthrow. "Radio Beautiful" has a certain unkempt charm but, ultimately, this is a lumbering reminder that precious little good comes from revisiting your past.

For a group whose career spanned a mere 18 months, The Creation had a big impact on popular culture, giving rise to Alan McGee’s band (Biff Bang Pow!) and record label, while the Pistols, Ride and Boney M interpreted their songs. This, their ‘great lost album’, won’t excite the same response.

Recorded 20 years after the original group split up, it bears scant relation to their ’60s apogee, peddling as it does the kind of turgid, graceless rock that the one-time modernists set out to overthrow. “Radio Beautiful” has a certain unkempt charm but, ultimately, this is a lumbering reminder that precious little good comes from revisiting your past.