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To Sleep With Anger

A superb lyrical antidote to the countless guns-and-gangs depictions of life in the black communities of LA, Charles Burnett directs Danny Glover as Harry Mention, a man who stirs up past tensions when he comes to visit old family friends. With an excellent blues, gospel and jazz soundtrack to boot.

A superb lyrical antidote to the countless guns-and-gangs depictions of life in the black communities of LA, Charles Burnett directs Danny Glover as Harry Mention, a man who stirs up past tensions when he comes to visit old family friends. With an excellent blues, gospel and jazz soundtrack to boot.

Taps

Harold Becker's tale of US Military School cadets squaring up against greedy property developers stars Timothy Hutton and a youthful Sean Penn and Tom Cruise. It's a faintly ludicrous story that works thanks to Becker's understated direction and three strong leading performances, made all the more interesting when you consider that a post-breakthrough Penn and Cruise would have been cast the other way round. Here, Cruise is the hothead and Penn the conscience-stricken man of reason.

Harold Becker’s tale of US Military School cadets squaring up against greedy property developers stars Timothy Hutton and a youthful Sean Penn and Tom Cruise. It’s a faintly ludicrous story that works thanks to Becker’s understated direction and three strong leading performances, made all the more interesting when you consider that a post-breakthrough Penn and Cruise would have been cast the other way round. Here, Cruise is the hothead and Penn the conscience-stricken man of reason.

Tommy: The Collector’s Edition

Ken Russell's 1975 adaptation of The Who's rock opera cast Roger Daltrey as the deaf, dumb and blind boy who finds enlightenment, but downplayed the mysticism in favour of addled Freudian guff. It's a real mish-mash, with some truly embarrassing moments (Paul Nicholas, for one), but is redeemed by the performances of Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed, interesting cameos from Elton John and Tina Turner, and a stylish sense of design.

Ken Russell’s 1975 adaptation of The Who’s rock opera cast Roger Daltrey as the deaf, dumb and blind boy who finds enlightenment, but downplayed the mysticism in favour of addled Freudian guff. It’s a real mish-mash, with some truly embarrassing moments (Paul Nicholas, for one), but is redeemed by the performances of Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed, interesting cameos from Elton John and Tina Turner, and a stylish sense of design.

Year Of The Dragon

Considering the testosterone on display both in front of and behind the camera (Mickey Rourke stars, Michael Cimino directs, screenplay by Oliver Stone), this 1985 cop thriller, with Rourke's decorated Viet Vet turned NYPD cop taking on the Triads in Chinatown, is nowhere near as deranged as you'd hope. The two set pieces?a gun battle in a Chinese restaurant and the final shoot-out?barely compensate for a disappointingly muted feel.

Considering the testosterone on display both in front of and behind the camera (Mickey Rourke stars, Michael Cimino directs, screenplay by Oliver Stone), this 1985 cop thriller, with Rourke’s decorated Viet Vet turned NYPD cop taking on the Triads in Chinatown, is nowhere near as deranged as you’d hope. The two set pieces?a gun battle in a Chinese restaurant and the final shoot-out?barely compensate for a disappointingly muted feel.

Halls Of Montezuma

Tense and grim war manoeuvres from director Lewis Milestone. Richard Widmark brings hints of mania to his portrayal of a Marine lieutenant leading his troops into enemy territory, scouring a battered Pacific island for prisoners who can reveal the whereabouts of a Japanese rocket base. Plagued by migraines, Widmark is a tough guy, but constantly in touch with fear he tries to mask from his men, among them the more fully neurotic Jack Palance.

Tense and grim war manoeuvres from director Lewis Milestone. Richard Widmark brings hints of mania to his portrayal of a Marine lieutenant leading his troops into enemy territory, scouring a battered Pacific island for prisoners who can reveal the whereabouts of a Japanese rocket base. Plagued by migraines, Widmark is a tough guy, but constantly in touch with fear he tries to mask from his men, among them the more fully neurotic Jack Palance.

Unfaithfully Yours

Impeccable 1948 Hollywood swan song from Preston Sturges detailing the destructive effect of marital infidelity on suave millionaire Rex Harrison (brilliantly unhinged). Naturally, there's polished badinage, snappy one-liners and physical comedy aplenty. But it's also curiously dark and modern?see Harrison mutilating his wife with a cut-throat razor, and forcing her to play Russian roulette.

Impeccable 1948 Hollywood swan song from Preston Sturges detailing the destructive effect of marital infidelity on suave millionaire Rex Harrison (brilliantly unhinged). Naturally, there’s polished badinage, snappy one-liners and physical comedy aplenty. But it’s also curiously dark and modern?see Harrison mutilating his wife with a cut-throat razor, and forcing her to play Russian roulette.

Reservoir Dogs: Special Edition

Timely reminder, in the midst of all the Kill Bill hyperbole, of true balls-to-the-wall Tarantino talent?that sickly mint-green warehouse, those black suits, that red blood, the infectious music, the terrifying Hawksian machismo and, mostly, that dialogue: witty and crude, poignant and allusive, naturalistic and downright poetic. Nothing less than genius.

Timely reminder, in the midst of all the Kill Bill hyperbole, of true balls-to-the-wall Tarantino talent?that sickly mint-green warehouse, those black suits, that red blood, the infectious music, the terrifying Hawksian machismo and, mostly, that dialogue: witty and crude, poignant and allusive, naturalistic and downright poetic. Nothing less than genius.

Bullet The Blue Sky

Kevin Costner directs this handsome, old-fashioned western?in which he also stars alongside Robert Duvall?with genuine affection for the great traditions of a once-glorious movie genre, now largely ignored by Hollywood. The film deals with classic western themes?stubborn men in changing times, unable to adapt, unwilling to recognise their days are numbered, the frontier closing around them, the country being 'civilised', the West 'tamed', corrupt and vicious landowners running vast tracts of the land like private republics, fiefdoms policed by corrupt lawmen and hired guns. In Open Range, Costner and Robert Duvall are ageing cowpokes Boss Spearman and Charley Waite, "freegrazers", men who for years have roamed the prairies with their small herds of cattle and ponies, living off the plentiful land. Unfortunately, the land in question is increasingly owned by malignant ranchers like Michael Gambon's ruthless Denton Baxter, a man of demonic temperament much given to violence, intimidation and murder. When Baxter's feral regulators make the grim mistake of shooting up Boss and Charley's camp, in the process killing Charley's dog, Boss and Charley do what they have to do?which in this typical instance means killing everyone who stands against them, whatever the fucking odds. Cue a protracted gunfight that would, I'm sure, bring approving nods from Hill and Peckinpah, past masters at this kind of unilateral bloody mayhem.

Kevin Costner directs this handsome, old-fashioned western?in which he also stars alongside Robert Duvall?with genuine affection for the great traditions of a once-glorious movie genre, now largely ignored by Hollywood. The film deals with classic western themes?stubborn men in changing times, unable to adapt, unwilling to recognise their days are numbered, the frontier closing around them, the country being ‘civilised’, the West ‘tamed’, corrupt and vicious landowners running vast tracts of the land like private republics, fiefdoms policed by corrupt lawmen and hired guns.

In Open Range, Costner and Robert Duvall are ageing cowpokes Boss Spearman and Charley Waite, “freegrazers”, men who for years have roamed the prairies with their small herds of cattle and ponies, living off the plentiful land. Unfortunately, the land in question is increasingly owned by malignant ranchers like Michael Gambon’s ruthless Denton Baxter, a man of demonic temperament much given to violence, intimidation and murder.

When Baxter’s feral regulators make the grim mistake of shooting up Boss and Charley’s camp, in the process killing Charley’s dog, Boss and Charley do what they have to do?which in this typical instance means killing everyone who stands against them, whatever the fucking odds. Cue a protracted gunfight that would, I’m sure, bring approving nods from Hill and Peckinpah, past masters at this kind of unilateral bloody mayhem.

Le Chignon D’Olga

A debut from 24-year-old J...

A debut from 24-year-old J

Great Eastern

Has anyone done baffled disenchantment and bone-weary melancholy as brilliantly as Bill Murray in Sofia Coppola's achingly beautiful, wonderfully droll and dreamily sad Lost In Translation? Murray is Bob Harris, a Hollywood film star, in Tokyo to shoot a whiskey commercial. When we first meet him, he's just arrived in Japan. He seems smirking, flippant, a condescending prick. We soon discover, however, that Bob's world is a diminished place. He's lonely, adrift: his movie career is faltering, the parts not coming to him like they used to, and his marriage is becalmed?his wife someone he no longer knows well enough to talk to, prone to faxing him carpet samples for an opinion she's not really interested in. Unable to sleep, Bob spends the dismal early hours in the hotel bar where he meets Scarlett Johansson's Charlotte?much younger, newly married, but similarly lost, abandoned to restless introspection by her husband, a celebrity photographer, here on an exotic assignment from which she is entirely excluded. Bob and Charlotte are drawn together by loneliness, boredom, a sense of futility, a need for uncomplicated affection, the attention of someone who cares. Anyone with a taste only for the noise and commotion of most modern movies will probably be somewhat puzzled by what happens next, because nothing really does. Which isn't the same thing as saying Lost In Translation is uneventful. In fact, it's packed with incident?and a lot of its scenes have become classics of their kind for the film's fans: Bob's growing bewilderment during the filming of the whiskey ad, a karaoke party where Murray sings Nick Lowe's "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding" and Roxy Music's "More Than This" and Johansson vamps to The Pretenders' "Brass In Pocket", Bob waiting for Charlotte in a hospital waiting room, Bob battling with an exercise machine. Coppola's screenplay doesn't have to be explicit about Bob's jaded desperation. It's all in Murray's face, the crumpled sag and hanging droop of sallow skin, the somnambulant stare, the wistful gaze: the sense of something missing in his life that he's beginning to feel nothing now will fill. It's a magnificent performance that doesn't seem like acting at all?which is probably why this year's Oscar for Best Actor went to Sean Penn for his noisy turn in Mystic River?and is one of many reasons to cherish this extraordinary film.

Has anyone done baffled disenchantment and bone-weary melancholy as brilliantly as Bill Murray in Sofia Coppola’s achingly beautiful, wonderfully droll and dreamily sad Lost In Translation?

Murray is Bob Harris, a Hollywood film star, in Tokyo to shoot a whiskey commercial. When we first meet him, he’s just arrived in Japan. He seems smirking, flippant, a condescending prick. We soon discover, however, that Bob’s world is a diminished place. He’s lonely, adrift: his movie career is faltering, the parts not coming to him like they used to, and his marriage is becalmed?his wife someone he no longer knows well enough to talk to, prone to faxing him carpet samples for an opinion she’s not really interested in.

Unable to sleep, Bob spends the dismal early hours in the hotel bar where he meets Scarlett Johansson’s Charlotte?much younger, newly married, but similarly lost, abandoned to restless introspection by her husband, a celebrity photographer, here on an exotic assignment from which she is entirely excluded.

Bob and Charlotte are drawn together by loneliness, boredom, a sense of futility, a need for uncomplicated affection, the attention of someone who cares.

Anyone with a taste only for the noise and commotion of most modern movies will probably be somewhat puzzled by what happens next, because nothing really does. Which isn’t the same thing as saying Lost In Translation is uneventful. In fact, it’s packed with incident?and a lot of its scenes have become classics of their kind for the film’s fans: Bob’s growing bewilderment during the filming of the whiskey ad, a karaoke party where Murray sings Nick Lowe’s “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding” and Roxy Music’s “More Than This” and Johansson vamps to The Pretenders’ “Brass In Pocket”, Bob waiting for Charlotte in a hospital waiting room, Bob battling with an exercise machine.

Coppola’s screenplay doesn’t have to be explicit about Bob’s jaded desperation. It’s all in Murray’s face, the crumpled sag and hanging droop of sallow skin, the somnambulant stare, the wistful gaze: the sense of something missing in his life that he’s beginning to feel nothing now will fill. It’s a magnificent performance that doesn’t seem like acting at all?which is probably why this year’s Oscar for Best Actor went to Sean Penn for his noisy turn in Mystic River?and is one of many reasons to cherish this extraordinary film.

Stand-Up For Your Rights

Live in concert, recorded at the Terrace Theatre in Long Beach, California in 1979, captures Richard Pryor at the peak of his powers and his fame as probably America's most toweringly influential black figurehead of that decade pace Ali, easily eclipsing Jesse Jackson. In fact, in one of the DVD extras here, Pryor plays the first black US President in a sketch from his celebrated but compromised and censored late-'70s NBC TV show. It could have happened. Pryor wasn't just hilarious; he had socio-political heft. People may have been laughing, but they took him seriously. This doesn't happen very often. Sacrilegious as it may sound, Eddie Murphy's Delirious (1983) probably topped Live In Concert in terms of sheer velocity and viciousness, while Chris Rock circa Roll With The New (1997) offered a yet more brute intensification of Pryor's breathless, blasphemous rat-a-tat. But you couldn't imagine Rock or Murphy running for office. Pryor, though, his righteous indignation tempered by a realist's acceptance of the status quo, one imagines could have gone all the way from the flophouse?his mother was a prostitute, his father a pimp, and he was brought up by his madam grandmother in a brothel?to the White House. If only he hadn't been derailed by too many bad movies and too much good crack cocaine... Still, Pryor, now 63 and suffering from MS, has at least left us with Live In Concert, the Live At The Apollo of black American stand-up. Remembering him for his films is as wrongheaded as basing Elvis' posthumous reputation on Harum Scarum. This is groundbreaking stuff; the missing link between Bill Cosby and NWA. It's ghetto humour with one foot in the variety era. Pryor, who began his career doing far less volatile material before his transition in the late '60s to the hyperkinetic all-swearing truth-sayer we see here, filtered Cosby's benign, observational world view through the profane iconoclasm and profound insightfulness of Lenny Bruce. For all his taboo licentiousness, he still drew as many liberal whites as he did hipster blacks?you can see them all filing in at the start of this show, just waiting to be lampooned by Pryor with all the gentle relentlessness of Jackie Mason at his Gentile-baiting best. So this is the performance on which rests Pryor's rep as the funniest motherfucker on the planet. It actually feels earlier than '79?more Nixon/Watergate-era, more '73. There's an over-reliance on "don't-animals-do-the-strangest-things" routines, all zany monkeys and dippy dogs, when really you just want Pryor in full lacerating autobiographical mode. This was the year, after all, when he got arrested for "killing" his car so that his wife couldn't take it with her when she left him, and the year of his first heart attack. The full horror of both experiences is conveyed here, Pryor sparing the audience no sordid detail or indignity. That nigger's still crazy. Hell, yeah. It's just a surprise that, considering the torment he suffered in his life, the childhood rape and the addictions to narcotics, how tame much of this seems today. He doesn't rage quite as hard as you might expect. Remember:this is a man who set himself on fire in pursuit of his cravings. But then, in a way Pryor suffers from being a pioneer, from being first. To avoid anticlimax, then, Uncut's advice would be to experience the last four decades' stand-ups in the order in which they happened (Cosby-Pryor-Murphy-Rock) and then see Live In Concert for what it is:the crucial second?and biggest?building block in the foundation of black American comedy.

Live in concert, recorded at the Terrace Theatre in Long Beach, California in 1979, captures Richard Pryor at the peak of his powers and his fame as probably America’s most toweringly influential black figurehead of that decade pace Ali, easily eclipsing Jesse Jackson. In fact, in one of the DVD extras here, Pryor plays the first black US President in a sketch from his celebrated but compromised and censored late-’70s NBC TV show. It could have happened.

Pryor wasn’t just hilarious; he had socio-political heft. People may have been laughing, but they took him seriously. This doesn’t happen very often. Sacrilegious as it may sound, Eddie Murphy’s Delirious (1983) probably topped Live In Concert in terms of sheer velocity and viciousness, while Chris Rock circa Roll With The New (1997) offered a yet more brute intensification of Pryor’s breathless, blasphemous rat-a-tat. But you couldn’t imagine Rock or Murphy running for office. Pryor, though, his righteous indignation tempered by a realist’s acceptance of the status quo, one imagines could have gone all the way from the flophouse?his mother was a prostitute, his father a pimp, and he was brought up by his madam grandmother in a brothel?to the White House. If only he hadn’t been derailed by too many bad movies and too much good crack cocaine…

Still, Pryor, now 63 and suffering from MS, has at least left us with Live In Concert, the Live At The Apollo of black American stand-up. Remembering him for his films is as wrongheaded as basing Elvis’ posthumous reputation on Harum Scarum. This is groundbreaking stuff; the missing link between Bill Cosby and NWA. It’s ghetto humour with one foot in the variety era. Pryor, who began his career doing far less volatile material before his transition in the late ’60s to the hyperkinetic all-swearing truth-sayer we see here, filtered Cosby’s benign, observational world view through the profane iconoclasm and profound insightfulness of Lenny Bruce. For all his taboo licentiousness, he still drew as many liberal whites as he did hipster blacks?you can see them all filing in at the start of this show, just waiting to be lampooned by Pryor with all the gentle relentlessness of Jackie Mason at his Gentile-baiting best.

So this is the performance on which rests Pryor’s rep as the funniest motherfucker on the planet. It actually feels earlier than ’79?more Nixon/Watergate-era, more ’73. There’s an over-reliance on “don’t-animals-do-the-strangest-things” routines, all zany monkeys and dippy dogs, when really you just want Pryor in full lacerating autobiographical mode. This was the year, after all, when he got arrested for “killing” his car so that his wife couldn’t take it with her when she left him, and the year of his first heart attack. The full horror of both experiences is conveyed here, Pryor sparing the audience no sordid detail or indignity. That nigger’s still crazy. Hell, yeah.

It’s just a surprise that, considering the torment he suffered in his life, the childhood rape and the addictions to narcotics, how tame much of this seems today. He doesn’t rage quite as hard as you might expect. Remember:this is a man who set himself on fire in pursuit of his cravings. But then, in a way Pryor suffers from being a pioneer, from being first. To avoid anticlimax, then, Uncut’s advice would be to experience the last four decades’ stand-ups in the order in which they happened (Cosby-Pryor-Murphy-Rock) and then see Live In Concert for what it is:the crucial second?and biggest?building block in the foundation of black American comedy.

Primal Dream

The Pixies' blasted mix of surf-pop-punk, coupled with Frank Black's twisted lyrical preoccupations (UFOs, classical mythology, Old Testament horror stories), created something dark and twisted, like the baby in Eraserhead; a primal and terrible thing. And now they've reconvened following their expl...

The Pixies’ blasted mix of surf-pop-punk, coupled with Frank Black’s twisted lyrical preoccupations (UFOs, classical mythology, Old Testament horror stories), created something dark and twisted, like the baby in Eraserhead; a primal and terrible thing. And now they’ve reconvened following their explosive Coachella festival appearance, bigger than ever, eclipsing even the 10th anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s death. Which is as it should be, as the Pixies were the band that Nirvana most aspired to sound like.

So, who were the Pixies?

In the mid-’80s, college friends Charles Thomson, aka Black Francis, aka Frank Black, and Filipino-born guitarist Joey Santiago (native tongue: Tagalog) formed Pixies In Panoply. Via an ad reading “bassist wanted for H

Jimmy Martin – King Of Bluegrass

Now 77, Jimmy Martin has been a bluegrass legend since he became lead singer and guitarist in Bill Monroe's band in 1949 and helped pioneer that "High Lonesome Sound" (see This Month In Americana, p98). His story is told through archive and contemporary footage, and Martin proves to be a highly engaging raconteur, although you might wish for a little more music and fewer talking heads.

Now 77, Jimmy Martin has been a bluegrass legend since he became lead singer and guitarist in Bill Monroe’s band in 1949 and helped pioneer that “High Lonesome Sound” (see This Month In Americana, p98). His story is told through archive and contemporary footage, and Martin proves to be a highly engaging raconteur, although you might wish for a little more music and fewer talking heads.

DJ Shadow – In Tune And On Time

No matter how much his music is over-used on crap TV travel shows, there's no denying that DJ Shadow is hip hop's premier auteur. His trademark (pyro)technics signature is all over this live performance from Brixton Academy, June 2002. Performance in this context means a silhouetted, hooded man mixing up a subtle sonic brew in front of some spiffy visuals for 50 minutes, but the crowd lap it up.

No matter how much his music is over-used on crap TV travel shows, there’s no denying that DJ Shadow is hip hop’s premier auteur. His trademark (pyro)technics signature is all over this live performance from Brixton Academy, June 2002. Performance in this context means a silhouetted, hooded man mixing up a subtle sonic brew in front of some spiffy visuals for 50 minutes, but the crowd lap it up.

Elvis Presley – The Last 24 Hours

A potentially tasteless cash-in (given that the makers can't even get the date of his death right on the back jacket), surprisingly this turns out to be an immensely watchable documentary detailing Elvis' tragic demise. The usual suspects from the "Memphis Mafia" line up to share tearjerking anecdotes about junk food and drugs ("he jurst ferkin' lurved 'em!"). Morbidly fascinating.

A potentially tasteless cash-in (given that the makers can’t even get the date of his death right on the back jacket), surprisingly this turns out to be an immensely watchable documentary detailing Elvis’ tragic demise. The usual suspects from the “Memphis Mafia” line up to share tearjerking anecdotes about junk food and drugs (“he jurst ferkin’ lurved ’em!”). Morbidly fascinating.

The Rapture – The Rapture Are Alive And Well In New York City

An object lesson in filming a gig, this, as Patrick Daughters (director of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' stunning "Maps" promo) captures The Rapture's nervous energies in long, unfussy, elegant shots. Recorded last Christmas, the quartet still resemble?happily?enthusiastic grad students who've stumbled on the ideal disco/punk hybrid. But Daughters exploits this, making them?especially soulful-eyed frontman Luke Jenner?look at once gawky and iconic.

An object lesson in filming a gig, this, as Patrick Daughters (director of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ stunning “Maps” promo) captures The Rapture’s nervous energies in long, unfussy, elegant shots. Recorded last Christmas, the quartet still resemble?happily?enthusiastic grad students who’ve stumbled on the ideal disco/punk hybrid. But Daughters exploits this, making them?especially soulful-eyed frontman Luke Jenner?look at once gawky and iconic.

Rory Gallagher – At Rockpalast

Two full German performances from 1976 and 1977, with the master craftsman showing how it's done on acoustic, slide and electric guitars. Caught in his prime, we see him play early favourites?"Pistol Slapper Blues" "Banker's Blues" and "Messin' With The Kid"?alongside later fare usually found on his compilations. And the rock'n'roll jam with a woozy Frankie Miller is deliciously informal.

Two full German performances from 1976 and 1977, with the master craftsman showing how it’s done on acoustic, slide and electric guitars. Caught in his prime, we see him play early favourites?”Pistol Slapper Blues” “Banker’s Blues” and “Messin’ With The Kid”?alongside later fare usually found on his compilations. And the rock’n’roll jam with a woozy Frankie Miller is deliciously informal.

Cat Stevens – Majikat

Filmed on his final 1976 tour, before he became Yusuf Islam and rejected music, Majikat finds the artist formerly known as Cat enhancing the simplicity of songs such as "Moonshadow" and "Father & Son" with a show featuring live magicians and a stage set of Floyd-style grandeur. Less precious than on record, he proves to be a surprisingly engaging performer.

Filmed on his final 1976 tour, before he became Yusuf Islam and rejected music, Majikat finds the artist formerly known as Cat enhancing the simplicity of songs such as “Moonshadow” and “Father & Son” with a show featuring live magicians and a stage set of Floyd-style grandeur. Less precious than on record, he proves to be a surprisingly engaging performer.

Josh Rouse – The Smooth Sounds Of Josh Rouse

It's New Year's Eve 2003, and Josh Rouse is wowing a hometown Nashville crowd with an Isley-tastic version of "Under Cold Blue Stars" that virtually melts into Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour". An excellent concert DVD in its own right, this gets five stars for the added Many Moods Of... documentary in which we see the BBC's Janice Long being visibly moved to tears. Watch and weep with her.

It’s New Year’s Eve 2003, and Josh Rouse is wowing a hometown Nashville crowd with an Isley-tastic version of “Under Cold Blue Stars” that virtually melts into Stevie Wonder’s “My Cherie Amour”. An excellent concert DVD in its own right, this gets five stars for the added Many Moods Of… documentary in which we see the BBC’s Janice Long being visibly moved to tears. Watch and weep with her.

Supergrass – Supergrass Is 10

An exuberant two-disc anniversary set includes all the videos?the sugar-buzz of "Alright", "Late In The Day"'s pogoing in the rain, the inspired foam-puppetry of "Pumping On Your Stereo" et al. There's also home movies, unseen material, TV appearances and fresh interviews with the lads, who emerge as that rarest of musical beasts: mates first, a band second.

An exuberant two-disc anniversary set includes all the videos?the sugar-buzz of “Alright”, “Late In The Day”‘s pogoing in the rain, the inspired foam-puppetry of “Pumping On Your Stereo” et al. There’s also home movies, unseen material, TV appearances and fresh interviews with the lads, who emerge as that rarest of musical beasts: mates first, a band second.