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Thin Lizzy – At Rockpalast

It's not an exhilarating concert. Even "The Boys Are Back In Town", "Jailbreak", "Waiting For An Alibi" and "Don't Believe A Word" lack lustre, as do Phil Lynott's eyes and the dynamics of the band. The audience is polite, excepting the odd permed headbanger. Uninspiring.

It’s not an exhilarating concert. Even “The Boys Are Back In Town”, “Jailbreak”, “Waiting For An Alibi” and “Don’t Believe A Word” lack lustre, as do Phil Lynott’s eyes and the dynamics of the band. The audience is polite, excepting the odd permed headbanger. Uninspiring.

Calexico – The Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

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As a prelude to tonight's particularly goosefleshy rendition of "Not Even Stevie Nicks...", Calexico frontman Joey Burns gets to tell his Glen Campbell story. "Scottsdale, Arizona, is a very strange place," he begins. "We have friends who've been to his house there. As you enter the driveway, electric bells start playing 'Rhinestone Cowboy', then barking dogs drown out the chorus." Burns stops fingering the chords of the buckskin balladeer's biggest hit and pauses, senses a certain bafflement in the audience. "They don't care about the West over here," he says then, to no one in particular. "All they care about is Posh'n'Becks." Tucson?that specific cultural vat of the US West that Calexico mainstays Burns and drummer/percussionist John Convertino inhabit?seems in a similar way equally at odds with the hedonistic hum of LA. New Mexico seems like another world?a land of myth and religion. Of tension and renewal. As a result, their music?a hybrid of mariachi, jazzy minimalism and scorched twang?seems more like imprints of places and emotional DNA than straightforward narrative. For all their Hispanic border-straddling though, the key to their soul lies in their distinctly Californian choice of covers. An incredible mid-show blast through Love's "Alone Again Or" captures the creeping dread inherent in Bryan MacLean's sinister flipside of the great SoCal dream, while "Quattro" drifts in on Gene Clark's noirish "Silver Raven". A great walking guitar part ushers in the drunk blues of The Minutemen's "Jesus And Tequila". All three point to troubled shadows shifting beneath the sun. However paradisical the climate, Calexico?like their forebearers?belong at the dark end of the street. This is nocturnal music first and last, albeit lit with the midday glare of a desert sun. With Burns and Convertino come sometime Lambchop pedal-steeler Paul Niehaus, Volker Zander on upright bass, Martin Wenk (trumpet/accordion/vibes) and Jacob Valenzuela (trumpet), sounding as fluidly rich as they are intricate. "Pepita" (from the Adidas ad) and "El Picador" are delicate and tightly woven, rippling with Hispanic flourish and counter-flourish. The irresistible "Black Heart" and "Not Even Stevie Nicks..."?the best things they've ever written-underscores the transition from moody soundtrackers of yore to robust songsmiths. At full tilt, they're spectacular. Outsiders morphing frontier music into brave new drama. Tijuana brassnecks with balls to match.

As a prelude to tonight’s particularly goosefleshy rendition of “Not Even Stevie Nicks…”, Calexico frontman Joey Burns gets to tell his Glen Campbell story. “Scottsdale, Arizona, is a very strange place,” he begins. “We have friends who’ve been to his house there. As you enter the driveway, electric bells start playing ‘Rhinestone Cowboy’, then barking dogs drown out the chorus.” Burns stops fingering the chords of the buckskin balladeer’s biggest hit and pauses, senses a certain bafflement in the audience. “They don’t care about the West over here,” he says then, to no one in particular. “All they care about is Posh’n’Becks.”

Tucson?that specific cultural vat of the US West that Calexico mainstays Burns and drummer/percussionist John Convertino inhabit?seems in a similar way equally at odds with the hedonistic hum of LA. New Mexico seems like another world?a land of myth and religion. Of tension and renewal. As a result, their music?a hybrid of mariachi, jazzy minimalism and scorched twang?seems more like imprints of places and emotional DNA than straightforward narrative.

For all their Hispanic border-straddling though, the key to their soul lies in their distinctly Californian choice of covers. An incredible mid-show blast through Love’s “Alone Again Or” captures the creeping dread inherent in Bryan MacLean’s sinister flipside of the great SoCal dream, while “Quattro” drifts in on Gene Clark’s noirish “Silver Raven”. A great walking guitar part ushers in the drunk blues of The Minutemen’s “Jesus And Tequila”. All three point to troubled shadows shifting beneath the sun. However paradisical the climate, Calexico?like their forebearers?belong at the dark end of the street. This is nocturnal music first and last, albeit lit with the midday glare of a desert sun.

With Burns and Convertino come sometime Lambchop pedal-steeler Paul Niehaus, Volker Zander on upright bass, Martin Wenk (trumpet/accordion/vibes) and Jacob Valenzuela (trumpet), sounding as fluidly rich as they are intricate. “Pepita” (from the Adidas ad) and “El Picador” are delicate and tightly woven, rippling with Hispanic flourish and counter-flourish. The irresistible “Black Heart” and “Not Even Stevie Nicks…”?the best things they’ve ever written-underscores the transition from moody soundtrackers of yore to robust songsmiths. At full tilt, they’re spectacular. Outsiders morphing frontier music into brave new drama. Tijuana brassnecks with balls to match.

Flaming Groovy

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Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival INDIO, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, MAY 1 AND 2 California's burning. Down the road in Palm Springs, it's 112 degrees. Bush fires are threatening to torch Santa Barbara and right here in Indio, three hours desertwards from LA, Frank Black is screaming into the glare: "Now there's a hole in the sky/And the ground's not cold/And if the ground's not cold/Everything is gonna burn/We'll all take turns..." The reformed PIXIES are the red hot triumph of the fifth Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival and you couldn't ask for a more apposite theme song for the blistering weekend than "Monkey Gone To Heaven", delivered at a speed that wouldn't shame The Ramones in the midst of a celebratory set of should-have-been hits. "Here Comes Your Man", "Debaser", "Caribou"... songs that were shunned by American radio over a decade ago now sound more fucked and alive and relevant than ever. Thom Yorke, whose RADIOHEAD have the unenviable job of following Frank and co in the Saturday headline slot, pretty much admits defeat, dedicating "Creep" to the band and telling the crowd, in an uncharacteristic address, that "the Pixies changed my life. "This is the final stop on the 'Head's year-long, worldwide tour and Thom's throat's so wrecked he's already cancelled some shows this week. Which might explain the band's rather desultory showing. Still, they cram in "You And Whose Army" as an encore and send a large proportion of the 50,000-strong crowd away happy, legging it across the lush polo field to the Sahara Tent where KRAFTWERK close down the first day with the same flawless set they've been touting around the globe on their latest re-emergence. Sunday belongs to THE CURE, who start uncertainly with the harsh, new "Lost" but build to something approaching their ancient majesty with a set that includes their poppier nuggets "Boys Don't Cry", "Just Like Heaven" and "Pictures Of You." The American press is calling Smith's hoary bunch "the mother of all emo bands" and, with the forthcoming Ross Robinson-produced album titled defiantly and definitively The Cure, they seem to have rediscovered a focus they've been lacking for years. Prior to all the lipstick and mascara, Wayne Coyne cheekily tries to steal The Cure's thunder by appearing on stage with THE FLAMING LIPS inside a huge plastic bubble. It might have seemed a good idea at the time, but staggering out over the crowd inside the wobbling orb takes up most of the set, which is reduced to Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots, an anti-Bush harangue and a communal happy birthday to Beck's unborn child. BECK is Saturday's surprise guest. Appearing in the tiny Gobi Tent, he strums through a downhome set that includes Big Star's "Kangaroo", The Korgis' "Everybody's Gotta Learn Sometime" and The Kinks' "Nothin' In This World Can Stop Me Worryin' About That Girl". Elsewhere, Josh Homme's DESERT SESSIONS ensemble unleashes some goth splendour and guest appearances from The Distillers' Brody Dalle and sometime Queen Of The Stone Age Mark Lanegan, while Jane's Addiction's PERRY FARRELL makes it five appearances in Indio in five years with an afternoon DJ set. Coachella 2004 is the first total sell-out in the Festival's history. It is now America's hottest alternative rock ticket. Quite literally.

Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival

INDIO, CALIFORNIA, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, MAY 1 AND 2

California’s burning. Down the road in Palm Springs, it’s 112 degrees. Bush fires are threatening to torch Santa Barbara and right here in Indio, three hours desertwards from LA, Frank Black is screaming into the glare: “Now there’s a hole in the sky/And the ground’s not cold/And if the ground’s not cold/Everything is gonna burn/We’ll all take turns…”

The reformed PIXIES are the red hot triumph of the fifth Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival and you couldn’t ask for a more apposite theme song for the blistering weekend than “Monkey Gone To Heaven”, delivered at a speed that wouldn’t shame The Ramones in the midst of a celebratory set of should-have-been hits. “Here Comes Your Man”, “Debaser”, “Caribou”… songs that were shunned by American radio over a decade ago now sound more fucked and alive and relevant than ever.

Thom Yorke, whose RADIOHEAD have the unenviable job of following Frank and co in the Saturday headline slot, pretty much admits defeat, dedicating “Creep” to the band and telling the crowd, in an uncharacteristic address, that “the Pixies changed my life. “This is the final stop on the ‘Head’s year-long, worldwide tour and Thom’s throat’s so wrecked he’s already cancelled some shows this week. Which might explain the band’s rather desultory showing. Still, they cram in “You And Whose Army” as an encore and send a large proportion of the 50,000-strong crowd away happy, legging it across the lush polo field to the Sahara Tent where KRAFTWERK close down the first day with the same flawless set they’ve been touting around the globe on their latest re-emergence.

Sunday belongs to THE CURE, who start uncertainly with the harsh, new “Lost” but build to something approaching their ancient majesty with a set that includes their poppier nuggets “Boys Don’t Cry”, “Just Like Heaven” and “Pictures Of You.” The American press is calling Smith’s hoary bunch “the mother of all emo bands” and, with the forthcoming Ross Robinson-produced album titled defiantly and definitively The Cure, they seem to have rediscovered a focus they’ve been lacking for years.

Prior to all the lipstick and mascara, Wayne Coyne cheekily tries to steal The Cure’s thunder by appearing on stage with THE FLAMING LIPS inside a huge plastic bubble. It might have seemed a good idea at the time, but staggering out over the crowd inside the wobbling orb takes up most of the set, which is reduced to Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots, an anti-Bush harangue and a communal happy birthday to Beck’s unborn child.

BECK is Saturday’s surprise guest. Appearing in the tiny Gobi Tent, he strums through a downhome set that includes Big Star’s “Kangaroo”, The Korgis’ “Everybody’s Gotta Learn Sometime” and The Kinks’ “Nothin’ In This World Can Stop Me Worryin’ About That Girl”. Elsewhere, Josh Homme’s DESERT SESSIONS ensemble unleashes some goth splendour and guest appearances from The Distillers’ Brody Dalle and sometime Queen Of The Stone Age Mark Lanegan, while Jane’s Addiction’s PERRY FARRELL makes it five appearances in Indio in five years with an afternoon DJ set.

Coachella 2004 is the first total sell-out in the Festival’s history. It is now America’s hottest alternative rock ticket. Quite literally.

The Wizard Of Odd

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Todd Rundgren THE COUNT BASIE THEATRE, NEW JERSEY Friday April 23, 2004 JOE'S PUB, NEW YORK Saturday April 24, 2004 WESTHAMPTON BEACH PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE, NEW YORK Sunday April 25, 2004 Until captain beefheart decides to perform at Butlins, or Squarepusher entertains the troops in the Gulf, there will be few mismatches as spectacular as the one between artist and audience on Todd Rundgren's current tour of the States to promote his acclaimed new album, Liars. Typically, Rundgren, the most recklessly uncompromising musician ever to have pop hits, makes no concessions towards the crowd of New Jersey wiseguys and their wives on Friday night or the manicured yentas in the Hamptons on Sunday. They have come in their hundreds?in fact, he's playing to around 1500 people a night, not bad for someone whose last Top 30 chart entry was in 1978?to see the winsome balladeer whose "Hello It's Me" provided their soundtrack to High School romance. His reputation as the missing link between Hendrix and Aphex, the acid-fried computer/guitar geek with the luminous highlights responsible for impenetrable, hour-long conceptualised electro-thons might precede him in the UK, but in the States he's known as a Billy Joel-style piano man, only with weird hair. Which is why the US audience gets such a shock. For a start, the backing band?The Liars?are standing inside their own individual space-rock music pods. And they're dressed outlandishly as peddlers of religious truth. Drummer Prairie Prince is a stylised Pope. On bass is ex-Utopia pretty boy Kasim Sulton as the Baptist cowboy. Guitarist Jesse Gress is a Chinese medicine man. And on keyboards is John Ferenzik the Bedouin monk. When Rundgren bounds on stage like Marilyn Manson's eccentric uncle and whips off his hooded cloak to reveal his streaky skunk mane and black sarong, and The Liars launch into two blasts of industrial metal invective called "Fascist Christ" and "I Hate My Frickin ISP", you could say the crowd are a tad surprised. He could, of course, have done a Brian Wilson and flaunted one of the best back catalogues in the business, followed by A Wizard, A True Star (aka The Smile That Saw An Official Release) in its entirety. That he doesn't is either admirable or self-destructively contrary. You get some sense of how frustrating it must have been to see Todd blow his chance at superstardom when he performed "Hello It's Me" on Midnight Special in December '73 made up like a preying mantis. Neither credibility nor eleventh-hour bids to rescue his career commercially, however, are particularly high on Todd's list of priorities. The ambition, as ever, is to perplex. This he achieves with a show of two halves, the first of which is pure sonic assault with Rundgren as deranged shaman, the second of which sees him return as a Vegas showman surrounded by The Liars, now in pimp suits of various garish hues, like some lounge act from Venus. This latter half opens with a supperclub rendition of "Born To Synthesize", with Todd as Vic Damone crooning "the red polygon's only desire/Is to get to the blue triangle" and other such metaphysical vagaries. It also includes what Rundgren dismisses backstage as "pandering", ie, Songs That People Want To Hear, notably "Just One Victory", three decades from the moment of maximum impact?the version he sang in Central Park, 1973, to 20,000 acolytes there for his 25th birthday?yet still devastatingly poignant. In between these twin attacks on the US heartland is Saturday night's amazing performance in a New York club of Up Against It, a musical that Rundgren penned in the late '80s based on the screenplay of a projected third Beatles movie by Joe Orton, with most of the original cast plus a cameo from Joe Jackson. Think Gilbert & Sullivan, with a side order of Sondheim. A bespectacled Rundgren, America's liberal arts conscience personified, narrates with the mordant wit that gets him invited regularly onto The Late Show With David Letterman. It's for charity, and the seats are 100 bucks apiece, so he prefaces the complex vocal callisthenics with a bit more solo pandering: "Song Of The Viking", "It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference", "Too Far Gone" and "I Saw The Light". "That's it," he says after Tony Blackburn's former Record Of The Week. "I'm all out of cheese." You've got to applaud such a multi-talented individual so determined to defy expectations after all these years.

Todd Rundgren

THE COUNT BASIE THEATRE, NEW JERSEY

Friday April 23, 2004

JOE’S PUB, NEW YORK

Saturday April 24, 2004

WESTHAMPTON BEACH PERFORMING ARTS CENTRE, NEW YORK

Sunday April 25, 2004

Until captain beefheart decides to perform at Butlins, or Squarepusher entertains the troops in the Gulf, there will be few mismatches as spectacular as the one between artist and audience on Todd Rundgren’s current tour of the States to promote his acclaimed new album, Liars. Typically, Rundgren, the most recklessly uncompromising musician ever to have pop hits, makes no concessions towards the crowd of New Jersey wiseguys and their wives on Friday night or the manicured yentas in the Hamptons on Sunday. They have come in their hundreds?in fact, he’s playing to around 1500 people a night, not bad for someone whose last Top 30 chart entry was in 1978?to see the winsome balladeer whose “Hello It’s Me” provided their soundtrack to High School romance. His reputation as the missing link between Hendrix and Aphex, the acid-fried computer/guitar geek with the luminous highlights responsible for impenetrable, hour-long conceptualised electro-thons might precede him in the UK, but in the States he’s known as a Billy Joel-style piano man, only with weird hair.

Which is why the US audience gets such a shock. For a start, the backing band?The Liars?are standing inside their own individual space-rock music pods. And they’re dressed outlandishly as peddlers of religious truth. Drummer Prairie Prince is a stylised Pope. On bass is ex-Utopia pretty boy Kasim Sulton as the Baptist cowboy. Guitarist Jesse Gress is a Chinese medicine man. And on keyboards is John Ferenzik the Bedouin monk. When Rundgren bounds on stage like Marilyn Manson’s eccentric uncle and whips off his hooded cloak to reveal his streaky skunk mane and black sarong, and The Liars launch into two blasts of industrial metal invective called “Fascist Christ” and “I Hate My Frickin ISP”, you could say the crowd are a tad surprised. He could, of course, have done a Brian Wilson and flaunted one of the best back catalogues in the business, followed by A Wizard, A True Star (aka The Smile That Saw An Official Release) in its entirety. That he doesn’t is either admirable or self-destructively contrary. You get some sense of how frustrating it must have been to see Todd blow his chance at superstardom when he performed “Hello It’s Me” on Midnight Special in December ’73 made up like a preying mantis.

Neither credibility nor eleventh-hour bids to rescue his career commercially, however, are particularly high on Todd’s list of priorities. The ambition, as ever, is to perplex. This he achieves with a show of two halves, the first of which is pure sonic assault with Rundgren as deranged shaman, the second of which sees him return as a Vegas showman surrounded by The Liars, now in pimp suits of various garish hues, like some lounge act from Venus. This latter half opens with a supperclub rendition of “Born To Synthesize”, with Todd as Vic Damone crooning “the red polygon’s only desire/Is to get to the blue triangle” and other such metaphysical vagaries. It also includes what Rundgren dismisses backstage as “pandering”, ie, Songs That People Want To Hear, notably “Just One Victory”, three decades from the moment of maximum impact?the version he sang in Central Park, 1973, to 20,000 acolytes there for his 25th birthday?yet still devastatingly poignant.

In between these twin attacks on the US heartland is Saturday night’s amazing performance in a New York club of Up Against It, a musical that Rundgren penned in the late ’80s based on the screenplay of a projected third Beatles movie by Joe Orton, with most of the original cast plus a cameo from Joe Jackson. Think Gilbert & Sullivan, with a side order of Sondheim. A bespectacled Rundgren, America’s liberal arts conscience personified, narrates with the mordant wit that gets him invited regularly onto The Late Show With David Letterman. It’s for charity, and the seats are 100 bucks apiece, so he prefaces the complex vocal callisthenics with a bit more solo pandering: “Song Of The Viking”, “It Wouldn’t Have Made Any Difference”, “Too Far Gone” and “I Saw The Light”. “That’s it,” he says after Tony Blackburn’s former Record Of The Week. “I’m all out of cheese.” You’ve got to applaud such a multi-talented individual so determined to defy expectations after all these years.

Carla Bozulich – I’m Gonna Stop Killing

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A companion piece to last year's sensual reimagining of Willie Nelson's Red Headed Stranger, Bozulich's latest offers two tasters from there ("Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain"; "Can I Sleep In Your Arms?", with Nelson duetting) alongside the outr...

A companion piece to last year’s sensual reimagining of Willie Nelson’s Red Headed Stranger, Bozulich’s latest offers two tasters from there (“Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain”; “Can I Sleep In Your Arms?”, with Nelson duetting) alongside the outr

Jon Langford – All The Fame Of Lofty Deeds

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A concept album of sorts, the second solo release from the Mekons founder and Chicago-expat charts the rise and demise of honky-tonker Lofty Deeds as a metaphor for US history. Like all things Langford, though, it's not heavy-handed or portentous, the music rollicking like a midnight special braced against the hard wind of his uniquely British delivery. Amid the hillbilly clatter?and covers of Procol Harum ("Homburg") and Bob Wills ("Trouble In Mind")?the Welshman takes swipes at the US ("The Country Is Young") while revamping past glories with both the skiffle-guitar and bar-room piano of "Over The Cliff" and a wonderful Hank Williams lament, "Nashville Radio".

A concept album of sorts, the second solo release from the Mekons founder and Chicago-expat charts the rise and demise of honky-tonker Lofty Deeds as a metaphor for US history. Like all things Langford, though, it’s not heavy-handed or portentous, the music rollicking like a midnight special braced against the hard wind of his uniquely British delivery. Amid the hillbilly clatter?and covers of Procol Harum (“Homburg”) and Bob Wills (“Trouble In Mind”)?the Welshman takes swipes at the US (“The Country Is Young”) while revamping past glories with both the skiffle-guitar and bar-room piano of “Over The Cliff” and a wonderful Hank Williams lament, “Nashville Radio”.

Pale Horse And Rider – Moody Pike

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Brooklynite Jon DeRosa's outfit are deceptive. At face value, PHAR offer little more than a sad shuffle, the odd cracked waltz and scattered flurries of noise. But give it time and these trampled-heart melodies burrow under the skin. Last year's Uncut-endorsed These Are The New Good Times was DeRosa's stoned-slacker take on slo-mo country mores, but here he broadens the palette with the addition of Low collaborator Marc Gartman as co-songwriter and ex-Mercury Rev pedal-steeler Gerald Menke. The tone is sepia, but softly spiralling guitars, cold shivers of banjo and the bedsit-meets-prairie duality of the two leads texture the whole like a relief painting.

Brooklynite Jon DeRosa’s outfit are deceptive. At face value, PHAR offer little more than a sad shuffle, the odd cracked waltz and scattered flurries of noise. But give it time and these trampled-heart melodies burrow under the skin. Last year’s Uncut-endorsed These Are The New Good Times was DeRosa’s stoned-slacker take on slo-mo country mores, but here he broadens the palette with the addition of Low collaborator Marc Gartman as co-songwriter and ex-Mercury Rev pedal-steeler Gerald Menke. The tone is sepia, but softly spiralling guitars, cold shivers of banjo and the bedsit-meets-prairie duality of the two leads texture the whole like a relief painting.

Broadcast News

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Following the critical success of last summer's "Young Liars" EP, New York's TV On The Radio continue to come at you from all sides with their debut album. There are various precedents bundled together here?Suicide, Zappa, The Beach Boys, Sun Ra. However, a cover of the Pixies' "Mr Grieves" on "Young Liars" suggested a lineage to which you could attach Yeah Yeah Yeahs producer David Sitek and vocalist Tunde Adebimpe's outfit. Like the Pixies, they manage to combine a sense of raging intensity while being off-centre, rather than merely straight-ahead rock. Whereas the Pixies sometimes felt empty at heart, however, that organ is positively bursting in TV On The Radio. "I know your heart can't breathe what your eyes won't see," cries Adebimpe on "Dreams". It's like Brian Wilson's upper register lamentations ratcheted up yet one more notch. Now augmented by guitarist Kyp Malone, who also adds falsetto vocals, TV On The Radio still feel more like a shock-rock proposition, a crashing alternative to the often retro, posturing New York noo rawk scene, still subsisting on punk's trust fund. Opener "The Wrong Way", with its motorik electro-pulse, skittering guitars and parping horns, is a far more effective transcription of frantic, funky Manhattan than the CBGBs set ever dreamt of. The soul fibres of "Don't Love You" unravel like the relationship depicted in the lyric, and "Bomb Yourself" pumps both blood and adrenalin. The present line-up of two black to one white man ought not raise eyebrows this late on, and the band would doubtless see this as a natural coming together rather than a multi-cultural experiment. Still, with rock and pop more, not less racially polarised than 20 years ago, it is striking. "Ambulance" perhaps slyly references the (non-)issue of the band's ethnicity. But what grabs you by the lapels is their sonic colourisation, their rush of tangents, their melding of cool experimentalism with red-hot purpose. And what's most frightening is that, mighty as Desperate Youth... is, their real stone killer is probably yet to come.

Following the critical success of last summer’s “Young Liars” EP, New York’s TV On The Radio continue to come at you from all sides with their debut album. There are various precedents bundled together here?Suicide, Zappa, The Beach Boys, Sun Ra. However, a cover of the Pixies’ “Mr Grieves” on “Young Liars” suggested a lineage to which you could attach Yeah Yeah Yeahs producer David Sitek and vocalist Tunde Adebimpe’s outfit. Like the Pixies, they manage to combine a sense of raging intensity while being off-centre, rather than merely straight-ahead rock. Whereas the Pixies sometimes felt empty at heart, however, that organ is positively bursting in TV On The Radio. “I know your heart can’t breathe what your eyes won’t see,” cries Adebimpe on “Dreams”. It’s like Brian Wilson’s upper register lamentations ratcheted up yet one more notch.

Now augmented by guitarist Kyp Malone, who also adds falsetto vocals, TV On The Radio still feel more like a shock-rock proposition, a crashing alternative to the often retro, posturing New York noo rawk scene, still subsisting on punk’s trust fund. Opener “The Wrong Way”, with its motorik electro-pulse, skittering guitars and parping horns, is a far more effective transcription of frantic, funky Manhattan than the CBGBs set ever dreamt of. The soul fibres of “Don’t Love You” unravel like the relationship depicted in the lyric, and “Bomb Yourself” pumps both blood and adrenalin. The present line-up of two black to one white man ought not raise eyebrows this late on, and the band would doubtless see this as a natural coming together rather than a multi-cultural experiment. Still, with rock and pop more, not less racially polarised than 20 years ago, it is striking. “Ambulance” perhaps slyly references the (non-)issue of the band’s ethnicity.

But what grabs you by the lapels is their sonic colourisation, their rush of tangents, their melding of cool experimentalism with red-hot purpose. And what’s most frightening is that, mighty as Desperate Youth… is, their real stone killer is probably yet to come.

Grand National – Kicking The National Habit

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Grand National began life when Lawrence "La" Rudd (vocals) and Rupert Lyddon (instruments), now in their late twenties, played in a band that performed cover versions of Queen and Police songs on the west London pub circuit. The influence of "Fat Bottomed Girls" and "Bohemian Rhapsody" is less discernible on their much-delayed debut than the bleach blond boys?"Playing In the Distance", the first track Rudd and Lyddon wrote together, has the choppy urgency of "Roxanne", while throughout Rudd approximates Sting's aerated yodel. Elsewhere, touches of ska ("Boner") and ethereal dream-rock ("Litter Bin") betray a penchant for late-'70s guitar experimentation, alchemised here by a brilliant pop sheen.

Grand National began life when Lawrence “La” Rudd (vocals) and Rupert Lyddon (instruments), now in their late twenties, played in a band that performed cover versions of Queen and Police songs on the west London pub circuit. The influence of “Fat Bottomed Girls” and “Bohemian Rhapsody” is less discernible on their much-delayed debut than the bleach blond boys?”Playing In the Distance”, the first track Rudd and Lyddon wrote together, has the choppy urgency of “Roxanne”, while throughout Rudd approximates Sting’s aerated yodel. Elsewhere, touches of ska (“Boner”) and ethereal dream-rock (“Litter Bin”) betray a penchant for late-’70s guitar experimentation, alchemised here by a brilliant pop sheen.

A Girl Called Eddy

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Eddy is Erin Moran, from Greenwich Village via New Jersey, who flew to Sheffield to record this with Richard Hawley producing (and his Lowedges band backing) because "the rain suited the mood of the songs". Not just another wordy nerd or feisty fronter, Moran exhibits gorgeously gauged soul and shrewdness on a record that?and we don't say this lightly?sounds like a new Karen Carpenter album. While the deft dolour of Cowboy Junkies or the archest alt.country filters through "Tears All Over Town" or "Somebody Hurt You", her low voice and lyrical longing elevate "Girls Can Really Tear You Up Inside" and "People Used To Dream About The Future" into Hal David-writes-for-Orbison classics. Better yet, "Golden" is a "Goodbye To Love" for this millennium.

Eddy is Erin Moran, from Greenwich Village via New Jersey, who flew to Sheffield to record this with Richard Hawley producing (and his Lowedges band backing) because “the rain suited the mood of the songs”. Not just another wordy nerd or feisty fronter, Moran exhibits gorgeously gauged soul and shrewdness on a record that?and we don’t say this lightly?sounds like a new Karen Carpenter album. While the deft dolour of Cowboy Junkies or the archest alt.country filters through “Tears All Over Town” or “Somebody Hurt You”, her low voice and lyrical longing elevate “Girls Can Really Tear You Up Inside” and “People Used To Dream About The Future” into Hal David-writes-for-Orbison classics. Better yet, “Golden” is a “Goodbye To Love” for this millennium.

The Charlatans – Up At The Lake

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As usual, The Charlatans follow a stylistic switch with an album marking time. So in the wake of Wonderland's sharp Curtis Mayfield curve, Up At The Lake is a curate's egg of tested pop styles, each song a discreet dabble in the likes of Fleetwood Mac and Wings. Though hardly the album-length E-rush of career peak Tellin' Stories (1997), this approach still offers small gems: "I'll Sing A Hymn", on which Burgess essays the satisfied mind of Dylan circa New Morning; or "Try Again Today", which, with its McCartney-esque melody, soaring chorus and blissed ache, is a fraction short of the great mid-'90s singles that made Britpop seem a good idea.

As usual, The Charlatans follow a stylistic switch with an album marking time. So in the wake of Wonderland’s sharp Curtis Mayfield curve, Up At The Lake is a curate’s egg of tested pop styles, each song a discreet dabble in the likes of Fleetwood Mac and Wings. Though hardly the album-length E-rush of career peak Tellin’ Stories (1997), this approach still offers small gems: “I’ll Sing A Hymn”, on which Burgess essays the satisfied mind of Dylan circa New Morning; or “Try Again Today”, which, with its McCartney-esque melody, soaring chorus and blissed ache, is a fraction short of the great mid-’90s singles that made Britpop seem a good idea.

JJ Cale – To Tulsa And Back

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Though he never seemed young, it's still a shock to realise that JJ Cale is 65. But, like the breeze in his song, he keeps blowing down the road. Since regular producer Audie Ashworth quit the saloon, Cale has returned to his Tulsa roots, teaming up with a bunch of old-timers for a session of city blues and country, leavened with the light touch of an old master. Cale doesn't often stray from his territory; the likes of "My Gal" and "Blues For Mama" are Okie without being hokey. But he's also included a deft eco song, "Stone River", and the wryly apolitical "The Problem", so there's plenty of light and shade here.

Though he never seemed young, it’s still a shock to realise that JJ Cale is 65. But, like the breeze in his song, he keeps blowing down the road. Since regular producer Audie Ashworth quit the saloon, Cale has returned to his Tulsa roots, teaming up with a bunch of old-timers for a session of city blues and country, leavened with the light touch of an old master. Cale doesn’t often stray from his territory; the likes of “My Gal” and “Blues For Mama” are Okie without being hokey. But he’s also included a deft eco song, “Stone River”, and the wryly apolitical “The Problem”, so there’s plenty of light and shade here.

Kings Of Convenience – Various Artists

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The success of Kings Of Convenience's remarkably Simon & Garfunkel-esque 2001 debut Quiet Is The New Loud had a dramatic effect on its authors. Sick of touring, guitarist/vocalist Eirek Glambek B...

The success of Kings Of Convenience’s remarkably Simon & Garfunkel-esque 2001 debut Quiet Is The New Loud had a dramatic effect on its authors. Sick of touring, guitarist/vocalist Eirek Glambek B

Ready To Depart

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There was a rumour, just before the release of the last Strokes album, that the nouveau garage band had hooked up with legendary Off The Wall/Thriller producer Quincy Jones for their follow-up to Is This it. Of course, it turned out to be yet more safe white retro CBGBs drone-rock predictably helmed by Gordon Raphael, but it did make one long for the days when indie bands would, if not call upon the services of black/electronic music auteurs, at least attempt to engage with the culture. Circa '81/'82, the likes of Orange Juice would cover Al Green without irony, while The Human League aped Moroder, and Heaven 17 and ABC absorbed the influence of NYC clubland. To put it in current terms, imagine Franz Ferdinand joining forces with Pharrell Williams. Now, every white group pays lip service to the radical "tic time" and stutter rhythms of Timbaland and The Neptunes. But only Junior Boys?24-year-old technophile Jeremy Greenspan from Hamilton, Canada, and two buddies?have put their money where their mouth is and made an LP steeped in recent avant-dance developments. Last Exit acknowledges everything from the digital funk of Timbaland to UK garage/2-step to clicks and cuts (dance music based on machine faults). Greenspan's real coup, however, is to combine the dry formalism of, say, Pole and labels such as Mille Plateaux with the wan melodies of his favourite groups?masters of studio confection from Steely Dan to Prefab Sprout and all synth points between?and then deliver this new kind of pop song in the sort of exquisitely forlorn whisper-murmur not heard since Paddy McAloon or Green Gartside. This is where The Wire aesthetic meets early-'80s Smash Hits. The contrast between romanticism and sonic daring, alien time signatures and freakishly pretty tunes, is irresistible. Greenspan's unremittingly bleak, crushed world view, put-on or otherwise, expressed on titles such as "High Come Down" and "Teach Me How To Fight", is no less addictive. No group since New Order has so effectively communicated such pristine woe. Whether or not this signals a future dub-spacious direction for alternative pop music, or a devastating one-off, remains to be seen. But it's hard to believe there will be a better record than Last Exit released this year.

There was a rumour, just before the release of the last Strokes album, that the nouveau garage band had hooked up with legendary Off The Wall/Thriller producer Quincy Jones for their follow-up to Is This it. Of course, it turned out to be yet more safe white retro CBGBs drone-rock predictably helmed by Gordon Raphael, but it did make one long for the days when indie bands would, if not call upon the services of black/electronic music auteurs, at least attempt to engage with the culture. Circa ’81/’82, the likes of Orange Juice would cover Al Green without irony, while The Human League aped Moroder, and Heaven 17 and ABC absorbed the influence of NYC clubland. To put it in current terms, imagine Franz Ferdinand joining forces with Pharrell Williams. Now, every white group pays lip service to the radical “tic time” and stutter rhythms of Timbaland and The Neptunes. But only Junior Boys?24-year-old technophile Jeremy Greenspan from Hamilton, Canada, and two buddies?have put their money where their mouth is and made an LP steeped in recent avant-dance developments. Last Exit acknowledges everything from the digital funk of Timbaland to UK garage/2-step to clicks and cuts (dance music based on machine faults). Greenspan’s real coup, however, is to combine the dry formalism of, say, Pole and labels such as Mille Plateaux with the wan melodies of his favourite groups?masters of studio confection from Steely Dan to Prefab Sprout and all synth points between?and then deliver this new kind of pop song in the sort of exquisitely forlorn whisper-murmur not heard since Paddy McAloon or Green Gartside. This is where The Wire aesthetic meets early-’80s Smash Hits.

The contrast between romanticism and sonic daring, alien time signatures and freakishly pretty tunes, is irresistible. Greenspan’s unremittingly bleak, crushed world view, put-on or otherwise, expressed on titles such as “High Come Down” and “Teach Me How To Fight”, is no less addictive. No group since New Order has so effectively communicated such pristine woe. Whether or not this signals a future dub-spacious direction for alternative pop music, or a devastating one-off, remains to be seen. But it’s hard to believe there will be a better record than Last Exit released this year.

Badly Drawn Boy – One Plus One Is One

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"Back to being who I was before," sings Damon Gough on the title track here, and there's no doubting his sincerity in wishing to retain touch with his hallowed, pre-fame self. Hard, then, to pinpoint what's lacking on One Plus One Is One, which is more pebbles then pearls. The arrangements are elabo...

“Back to being who I was before,” sings Damon Gough on the title track here, and there’s no doubting his sincerity in wishing to retain touch with his hallowed, pre-fame self. Hard, then, to pinpoint what’s lacking on One Plus One Is One, which is more pebbles then pearls. The arrangements are elaborate, with the exception of a school chorus on “Holy Grail”, which feels very clich

Deerhoof – Milk Man

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At times, the seventh album by this San Franciscan quartet sounds like a peculiarly avant-garde episode of Sesame Street. Enchanted nursery songs are apparently splintered and reconstructed amid fragments of post-punk, prog-rock, glitch and plenty more theoretically adult, po-faced musics. On paper, it might appear a pretty sickly exercise?a whimsical Blonde Redhead, perhaps. But Deerhoof's skittish collages always, miraculously, have a pop logic to them, and their desire to show that experimental music can be playful rather than forbidding is often heroic. Astonishingly, too, Milk Man's quirks are charming instead of self-conscious: the eponymous Milk Man may be a masked child-snatcher with bananas gouged into his flesh, but vocalist Satomi Matsuzaki's ingenuous squeaks make even this nightmare figure endearing.

At times, the seventh album by this San Franciscan quartet sounds like a peculiarly avant-garde episode of Sesame Street. Enchanted nursery songs are apparently splintered and reconstructed amid fragments of post-punk, prog-rock, glitch and plenty more theoretically adult, po-faced musics. On paper, it might appear a pretty sickly exercise?a whimsical Blonde Redhead, perhaps. But Deerhoof’s skittish collages always, miraculously, have a pop logic to them, and their desire to show that experimental music can be playful rather than forbidding is often heroic. Astonishingly, too, Milk Man’s quirks are charming instead of self-conscious: the eponymous Milk Man may be a masked child-snatcher with bananas gouged into his flesh, but vocalist Satomi Matsuzaki’s ingenuous squeaks make even this nightmare figure endearing.

Ikara Colt – Modern Apprentice

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Ikara Colt's impassioned dealings in the gnarlier end of art-rock should by now have elevated the London-based quartet into the indie Premiership. Hampered by misfortune and incompetence (their original bassist quit, replaced by Tracy Bellaries), their second album, helmed by At The Drive-In producer Alex Newport, channels a palpable love of early Fall (check singer Paul Resende's Smith-like vowel-mangling on "Repro/Roadshow/Nightmare") and Daydream Nation-period Sonic Youth ("Waste Ground") into a convincing half-hour that teeters, teasingly, on the brink of collapse. The slinky punk-pop of "Modern Feeling" proves they've also got chart appeal, though you suspect Top Of The Pops is not yet a priority.

Ikara Colt’s impassioned dealings in the gnarlier end of art-rock should by now have elevated the London-based quartet into the indie Premiership. Hampered by misfortune and incompetence (their original bassist quit, replaced by Tracy Bellaries), their second album, helmed by At The Drive-In producer Alex Newport, channels a palpable love of early Fall (check singer Paul Resende’s Smith-like vowel-mangling on “Repro/Roadshow/Nightmare”) and Daydream Nation-period Sonic Youth (“Waste Ground”) into a convincing half-hour that teeters, teasingly, on the brink of collapse. The slinky punk-pop of “Modern Feeling” proves they’ve also got chart appeal, though you suspect Top Of The Pops is not yet a priority.

Omara Portuondo – Flor De Amor

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Omara Portuondo is the sole female member of the Buena Vista Social Club network and, for me, her duet with Ibrahim Ferrer in the Buena Vista movie instantly gave Wim Wenders' lugubrious film an injection of sexy Cuban attitude. On Flor De Amor (translation: "Flower Of Love") the 74-year-old diva remains in remarkable voice, crooning in a dark, lived-in yet tender voice over a large Buena Vista backing band. The music remains the classic Cuban boleros (ballads) and hip-swinging mambo workouts of pre-revolution Cuba, while producer Nick Gold has brought in several Brazilian musicians to lend a pan-Latin flavour to the proceedings. Omara remains defiantly old-school?no attempts at salsa or Shakira-type Latin rock crossover. Instead she concentrates on singing with grace, never uttering a false note or over-emoting. In doing so, she's created a great soundtrack for the summer, and as perfect a Latin album as you could hope to find.

Omara Portuondo is the sole female member of the Buena Vista Social Club network and, for me, her duet with Ibrahim Ferrer in the Buena Vista movie instantly gave Wim Wenders’ lugubrious film an injection of sexy Cuban attitude. On Flor De Amor (translation: “Flower Of Love”) the 74-year-old diva remains in remarkable voice, crooning in a dark, lived-in yet tender voice over a large Buena Vista backing band. The music remains the classic Cuban boleros (ballads) and hip-swinging mambo workouts of pre-revolution Cuba, while producer Nick Gold has brought in several Brazilian musicians to lend a pan-Latin flavour to the proceedings. Omara remains defiantly old-school?no attempts at salsa or Shakira-type Latin rock crossover. Instead she concentrates on singing with grace, never uttering a false note or over-emoting. In doing so, she’s created a great soundtrack for the summer, and as perfect a Latin album as you could hope to find.

This Month In Soundtracks

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Describing itself as "the evil twin to the ecstatically decadent Boogie Nights soundtrack", the merits of this collection dwarf even Val Kilmer's (it says here) 13-inch penis. Okay, so he was playing porn legend John Holmes. But we don't even want to think about the method acting. Instead, let's explain why this soundtrack is so excellent. It's very simple: most of the songs they've chosen are classics. As opposed to the tired drek clueless movie producers compiling soundtracks usually think are classics (Dido, The Troggs). Wonderland is a rarity, and gets it absolutely right. Bookended by lewd dialogue from Kilmer and cronies, and a demented version of Neil Diamond's "Love On The Rocks" by Korn's Jonathan Davies (which intones, "Pour me a drink, bitch"), are: T. Rex's "20th Century Boy", The Stooges' "Search And Destroy", Roxy's. "In Every Dream Home A Heartache", Patti Smith's "Gloria" and Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read My Mind". Having fun yet? Okay, throw in Bob Dylan's "Quinn The Eskimo", Bad Company's "Shooting Star" (c'mon, you love it) and The Cars' "Good Times Roll" (c'mon, you...etc). Most of these are probably among your desert island discs. Duran Duran's "Girls On Film" is probably your desert island video. And Dobie Gray's "Drift Away" is ubiquitous whether we like it or not. Terry Reid, Ted Nugent and Billy Joel make up the numbers. But we'll ignore them because they spoil our flow. Wonderland leaps louchely from the "world's forgotten boy" to "friends say it's fine, friends say it's good". From "G-L-O-R-I-A" to "I blew up your body, but you blew my mind". Anybody not knowing which tracks these lines are from has no business sticking around. We'll manage without you. By accident or design, an exhilarating set which claims it captures "sleaze, paranoia, violence, sex and drugs", and claims well.

Describing itself as “the evil twin to the ecstatically decadent Boogie Nights soundtrack”, the merits of this collection dwarf even Val Kilmer’s (it says here) 13-inch penis. Okay, so he was playing porn legend John Holmes. But we don’t even want to think about the method acting. Instead, let’s explain why this soundtrack is so excellent. It’s very simple: most of the songs they’ve chosen are classics. As opposed to the tired drek clueless movie producers compiling soundtracks usually think are classics (Dido, The Troggs). Wonderland is a rarity, and gets it absolutely right.

Bookended by lewd dialogue from Kilmer and cronies, and a demented version of Neil Diamond’s “Love On The Rocks” by Korn’s Jonathan Davies (which intones, “Pour me a drink, bitch”), are: T. Rex’s “20th Century Boy”, The Stooges’ “Search And Destroy”, Roxy’s. “In Every Dream Home A Heartache”, Patti Smith’s “Gloria” and Gordon Lightfoot’s “If You Could Read My Mind”. Having fun yet? Okay, throw in Bob Dylan’s “Quinn The Eskimo”, Bad Company’s “Shooting Star” (c’mon, you love it) and The Cars’ “Good Times Roll” (c’mon, you…etc). Most of these are probably among your desert island discs. Duran Duran’s “Girls On Film” is probably your desert island video. And Dobie Gray’s “Drift Away” is ubiquitous whether we like it or not. Terry Reid, Ted Nugent and Billy Joel make up the numbers. But we’ll ignore them because they spoil our flow. Wonderland leaps louchely from the “world’s forgotten boy” to “friends say it’s fine, friends say it’s good”. From “G-L-O-R-I-A” to “I blew up your body, but you blew my mind”. Anybody not knowing which tracks these lines are from has no business sticking around. We’ll manage without you. By accident or design, an exhilarating set which claims it captures “sleaze, paranoia, violence, sex and drugs”, and claims well.

The Futureheads

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Sunderland's Futureheads once claimed they started a band because their city had no cinema. As beliefs in punk's original diktat regarding necessity's relationship to invention go, it's about as old-school as you could get. Their striking debut resembles a late-'70s manifesto?all nervy guitar and barked observations. But The Futureheads understand that a love of The Jam, early Clash and Gang Of Four (Andy Gill produced) means nothing without... well, meaning of one's own. "First Day" and "The City Is Here For You To Use" match belief with bravado, marking The Futureheads out as a fresh, capable talent.

Sunderland’s Futureheads once claimed they started a band because their city had no cinema. As beliefs in punk’s original diktat regarding necessity’s relationship to invention go, it’s about as old-school as you could get. Their striking debut resembles a late-’70s manifesto?all nervy guitar and barked observations. But The Futureheads understand that a love of The Jam, early Clash and Gang Of Four (Andy Gill produced) means nothing without… well, meaning of one’s own. “First Day” and “The City Is Here For You To Use” match belief with bravado, marking The Futureheads out as a fresh, capable talent.