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Eagles Of Death Metal – Peace Love Death Metal

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With Queens Of The Stone Age seemingly in flux, Josh Homme's murderous work ethic is focused on the Eagles Of Death Metal this month. Here, he's unconvincingly disguised as Carlo Von Sexron in a "bluegrass stripper dance" band fronted by his old friend Jesse "The Devil" Hughes. Homme provides ticking drums and unsteady falsetto harmonies for this wicked, dumb?and misleadingly named?project, which references Devo, early ZZTop, T. Rex, Canned Heat and Some Girls-era Stones. Often shambolic and in-jokey, it's also sensationally good fun. "That was magic," whispers Hughes at the end of a rickety version of "Stuck In The Middle With You". If they played your party, you'd be tempted to agree.

With Queens Of The Stone Age seemingly in flux, Josh Homme’s murderous work ethic is focused on the Eagles Of Death Metal this month. Here, he’s unconvincingly disguised as Carlo Von Sexron in a “bluegrass stripper dance” band fronted by his old friend Jesse “The Devil” Hughes. Homme provides ticking drums and unsteady falsetto harmonies for this wicked, dumb?and misleadingly named?project, which references Devo, early ZZTop, T. Rex, Canned Heat and Some Girls-era Stones. Often shambolic and in-jokey, it’s also sensationally good fun. “That was magic,” whispers Hughes at the end of a rickety version of “Stuck In The Middle With You”. If they played your party, you’d be tempted to agree.

Tortoise – It’s All Around You

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It's now approaching a decade since Tortoise's masterpiece, Millions Now Living Will Never Die, which seems to have proved to be the beginning and end of post-rock. Since then they've shown few signs of escaping their aesthetic cul-de-sac, and It's All Around You documents a continuing decline. Long since superseded by Godspeeds and Mogwais, Tortoise attempt to emulate the grandeur of the latter on tracks like "Unknown" to little effect. Elsewhere, "Sail The Skies" again proves how useless they are at rocking out; "On The Chin" is pretty in a High Llamas-backing-track kind of way; and one just has to say NO to the pompous "Crest", which recalls nothing less than early-'80s Mike Oldfield. Tortoise in 2004?what's the point?

It’s now approaching a decade since Tortoise’s masterpiece, Millions Now Living Will Never Die, which seems to have proved to be the beginning and end of post-rock. Since then they’ve shown few signs of escaping their aesthetic cul-de-sac, and It’s All Around You documents a continuing decline. Long since superseded by Godspeeds and Mogwais, Tortoise attempt to emulate the grandeur of the latter on tracks like “Unknown” to little effect. Elsewhere, “Sail The Skies” again proves how useless they are at rocking out; “On The Chin” is pretty in a High Llamas-backing-track kind of way; and one just has to say NO to the pompous “Crest”, which recalls nothing less than early-’80s Mike Oldfield. Tortoise in 2004?what’s the point?

Jane Birkin – Rendez-vous

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Though her former partner has been dead since 1991, Rendez-vous is only the second Birkin album not to consist solely of songs written, produced or arranged (or all three) by Serge Gainsbourg. But it's impossible to avoid his spirit; indeed, Birkin's history is the stuff of opener "Je m'appelle Jane", a superb calling card written with rising French. world-pop alchemist Mickey 3D, which skips like some gypsy-gangsta brag, Mickey's Sergeish growls answered with innocent mischief by Birkin the breathy choirgirl. After this caper, wistful melancholy descends, but in other ways its Romany hop sets the pace. While a thoroughly French affair, Rendez-vous, with Birkin calling in collaborators from around the globe, extends the world-tripping of her last recording, Arabesque (which saw her transpose Gainsbourg to north Africa). Contributors include Francoise Hardy, fellow veteran of France's bubblegum scene, duetting on the gorgeously orchestrated teen lament "Surannee"; Brazilian legend Caetano Veloso, providing lazy bossa-tropicalia on "O Leaozinho"; Yosuke Inoue, the 'Japanese Dylan'; Beth Gibbons, whose characteristically spooked and lonely "Strange Melody" sees Birkin's singing become spoken-word, exhaling bruised drama; and Bryan Ferry, who helps remodel "In Every Dream Home A Heartache"?if the notion of duetting on a song about solitary erotomania seems contradictory to the point of perversion, remember: perversion is the point. Here, Ferry's atrophied vocal almost out-creeps the original. Birkin's greatest weapon has always been the exquisite tension aroused by her own perfectly imperfect voice, between cut-glass naivety and emotional candour; how close that fragility can come to breaking. Although occasionally here the voice does break (Alain Chamfort's lachrymose "T'as Pas Le Droit d'Avoir Moins Mal Que Moi" is a little ragged), care has been taken throughout to provide the most complementary frame; the styles are eclectic but always minimalist, never intruding on Birkin's deeply personal space. It's not flawless (Brian "Placebo" Molko's composition of adolescent angst, "Smile", for example, is as subtle as a donkey in a lift), but Rendez-vous amply demonstrates that Birkin retains a passion for adventure that puts divas one-third her age to shame. When she's good, she's very, very good. Still.

Though her former partner has been dead since 1991, Rendez-vous is only the second Birkin album not to consist solely of songs written, produced or arranged (or all three) by Serge Gainsbourg. But it’s impossible to avoid his spirit; indeed, Birkin’s history is the stuff of opener “Je m’appelle Jane”, a superb calling card written with rising French. world-pop alchemist Mickey 3D, which skips like some gypsy-gangsta brag, Mickey’s Sergeish growls answered with innocent mischief by Birkin the breathy choirgirl.

After this caper, wistful melancholy descends, but in other ways its Romany hop sets the pace. While a thoroughly French affair, Rendez-vous, with Birkin calling in collaborators from around the globe, extends the world-tripping of her last recording, Arabesque (which saw her transpose Gainsbourg to north Africa). Contributors include Francoise Hardy, fellow veteran of France’s bubblegum scene, duetting on the gorgeously orchestrated teen lament “Surannee”; Brazilian legend Caetano Veloso, providing lazy bossa-tropicalia on “O Leaozinho”; Yosuke Inoue, the ‘Japanese Dylan’; Beth Gibbons, whose characteristically spooked and lonely “Strange Melody” sees Birkin’s singing become spoken-word, exhaling bruised drama; and Bryan Ferry, who helps remodel “In Every Dream Home A Heartache”?if the notion of duetting on a song about solitary erotomania seems contradictory to the point of perversion, remember: perversion is the point. Here, Ferry’s atrophied vocal almost out-creeps the original.

Birkin’s greatest weapon has always been the exquisite tension aroused by her own perfectly imperfect voice, between cut-glass naivety and emotional candour; how close that fragility can come to breaking. Although occasionally here the voice does break (Alain Chamfort’s lachrymose “T’as Pas Le Droit d’Avoir Moins Mal Que Moi” is a little ragged), care has been taken throughout to provide the most complementary frame; the styles are eclectic but always minimalist, never intruding on Birkin’s deeply personal space.

It’s not flawless (Brian “Placebo” Molko’s composition of adolescent angst, “Smile”, for example, is as subtle as a donkey in a lift), but Rendez-vous amply demonstrates that Birkin retains a passion for adventure that puts divas one-third her age to shame. When she’s good, she’s very, very good. Still.

Barefoot In The Dark

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Now Johnny Cash has gone, it's just her and Dylan. No one else can summon up such visionary, elemental weariness, with a voice that echoes within the deep well of shared human experience. Trampin' balances the concerns of the three previous albums Smith has made since her comeback: the epic outpouring of grief on Gone Again ('96), the more domestic (but no less intense) Peace And Noise ('97), and the broader, more political canvas of Gung Ho (2000). There's grief, sure, but it's mediated in the reflective "Mother Rose" (a lovely, languid strum graced with one of Smith's prettiest melodies, written for Smith's late mother), where transcendence seems altogether a more homely business. Many of the strongest songs here inhabit similar territory: "Cartwheels", "Trespasses", "Peaceable Kingdom"; gentle music deriving substantial gravitas from the woody, infinitely wise timbre of Smith's voice, which just seems to get better and more supple with the years. When Trampin' doesn't work, though, it plods, though never as badly as the worst bits of Gung Ho. "Ghandi" feels strained and worthy, and rhyming 'Ghandi' with 'candy' is spectacularly clunky. While it's perhaps unfair to expect musical innovation at this stage in her career, you wish the band were able to match the panoramic scope of Smith's words (Tom Verlaine contributions are much missed). The otherwise gripping anti-war tirade "Radio Baghdad" builds over 12 minutes, but just as Smith is at her most excoriating (just try to quell the goosebumps as she sings "They're robbing the cradle of civilisation" over and over again at the song's climax) the band run out of steam, with nothing to match such righteous anger but mundane, churning riffage. No wonder Smith sounds exhausted on what follows?"Trampin'" itself, an old gospel song learnt from Marian Anderson, just Smith's voice and her daughter playing piano. It's the perfect way to end this record, as with all her recent records, the testament of a survivor, bloody but unbowed?Smith as Mother Courage, clinging to what's left of her family as the world ends around her. We should be grateful she still feels inspired enough to testify.

Now Johnny Cash has gone, it’s just her and Dylan. No one else can summon up such visionary, elemental weariness, with a voice that echoes within the deep well of shared human experience.

Trampin’ balances the concerns of the three previous albums Smith has made since her comeback: the epic outpouring of grief on Gone Again (’96), the more domestic (but no less intense) Peace And Noise (’97), and the broader, more political canvas of Gung Ho (2000). There’s grief, sure, but it’s mediated in the reflective “Mother Rose” (a lovely, languid strum graced with one of Smith’s prettiest melodies, written for Smith’s late mother), where transcendence seems altogether a more homely business. Many of the strongest songs here inhabit similar territory: “Cartwheels”, “Trespasses”, “Peaceable Kingdom”; gentle music deriving substantial gravitas from the woody, infinitely wise timbre of Smith’s voice, which just seems to get better and more supple with the years.

When Trampin’ doesn’t work, though, it plods, though never as badly as the worst bits of Gung Ho. “Ghandi” feels strained and worthy, and rhyming ‘Ghandi’ with ‘candy’ is spectacularly clunky. While it’s perhaps unfair to expect musical innovation at this stage in her career, you wish the band were able to match the panoramic scope of Smith’s words (Tom Verlaine contributions are much missed). The otherwise gripping anti-war tirade “Radio Baghdad” builds over 12 minutes, but just as Smith is at her most excoriating (just try to quell the goosebumps as she sings “They’re robbing the cradle of civilisation” over and over again at the song’s climax) the band run out of steam, with nothing to match such righteous anger but mundane, churning riffage. No wonder Smith sounds exhausted on what follows?”Trampin'” itself, an old gospel song learnt from Marian Anderson, just Smith’s voice and her daughter playing piano. It’s the perfect way to end this record, as with all her recent records, the testament of a survivor, bloody but unbowed?Smith as Mother Courage, clinging to what’s left of her family as the world ends around her. We should be grateful she still feels inspired enough to testify.

In Todd We Trust

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Who's Todd Rundgren calling a liar? Materialists. Bible-bashers. Dance artists who think they're creating R&B. George Bush. Even former paramour Bebe Buell for writing a book about him (2001's Rebel Heart) in which he's portrayed as the worst serial philanderer this side of Warren Beatty (and she should know). Rundgren's got them all in his sights on Liars, his first new LP proper since 1995's The Individualist and his first to receive proper UK distribution since 1989's Nearly Human. At the age of 55, the Runt has gotten angry. Actually, Toddheads will be familiar with Rundgren as piqued ideologue. After perfecting the art of pop songwriting on his early albums, culminating in 1972's Something/Anything?, he got first political then metaphysical on our ass with his unsurpassed series of mid-'70s records: A Wizard, A True Star, Todd, Todd Rundgren's Utopia and Initiation, all zany melodies and zen mysticism. His mind expanded by psychedelic drugs and with the compassion of a true moralist, he explored the nature of consciousness and bewailed the collapse of ideals. Liars is his finest sustained assault on the corruption of all values since that heyday. "I watch society crumble and I just laugh," he sang on 1974's "Heavy Metal Kids". He's still laughing. On the sleeve Todd's wearing a toy rabbit's ears and nose (although on the Japanese version you get a bisected brain). Why? Because the Easter Bunny, according to Rundgren, is the first myth promulgated by parents. And the lies keep coming. "We are raised to believe things that can't be proven," he told this writer, because at Uncut we can get cult superhero acid visionaries on the phone like that. "People are terrified of the truth." Rundgren sounds energised by the Liars concept, more so than he has for the longest time. The hermit of Hawaii, idol of the young Prince and the musician who has done more than any bar Stevie Wonder to glamorise the idea of the studio monomaniac, performed and produced every note here. With limited resources (those Bat Out Of Hell royalties don't last forever) and employing a "rack of virtual synthesisers", the doyen of DIY runs the gamut of electronic styles. Liars is futuristic machine-beat pop like they?specifically, Horn and Lipson at ZTT?used to make. It's not all '80s techno-flash. Eclipsing Bowie, Rundgren gives good drum'n'bass on "Future" and "Wondering", his knowledge of jungle gleaned from car commercials and Stereolab CDs. "God Said" is mellifluous, blasphemous chill-out. "Mammon" is a blast of symphonic thunder. Todd recaptures his white Philly-boy peak on "Past" and then "Afterlife", etherised synth-soul every bit as luscious as "Can We Still Be Friends". The quinquagenarian wunderkind, in astonishing voice throughout, sounds like Air on the Vocoderised verse and multi-tracked seraphim on the chorus. "Living" is a revelatory six-minute synthburst that finds Rundgren at the edge of the universe, tears metaphorically streaming down his face, daring you to share the experience as he prepares to confront his mortality. Liars climaxes with the apocalyptic electro-funk of "Liar", but it's on "Flaw" that the contrast between heavy lyrics and heavenly music is most striking. "You could be my everything," Todd croons over gorgeous digital doo wop. "So why you gotta be such a lyin'-ass motherfucker?" The consummate pop craftsman, the rock'n'roll messiah, has returned. No one else would make a record as unfashionable and open to ridicule as this. Rundgren's determination to say something meaningful about what the hell we're all meant to be doing on this planet is, in this dismal age, nothing short of revolutionary. Liars is his best LP for over 25 years. Let him refute his existence. You want the truth? Todd is God. Again.

Who’s Todd Rundgren calling a liar? Materialists. Bible-bashers. Dance artists who think they’re creating R&B. George Bush. Even former paramour Bebe Buell for writing a book about him (2001’s Rebel Heart) in which he’s portrayed as the worst serial philanderer this side of Warren Beatty (and she should know). Rundgren’s got them all in his sights on Liars, his first new LP proper since 1995’s The Individualist and his first to receive proper UK distribution since 1989’s Nearly Human. At the age of 55, the Runt has gotten angry.

Actually, Toddheads will be familiar with Rundgren as piqued ideologue. After perfecting the art of pop songwriting on his early albums, culminating in 1972’s Something/Anything?, he got first political then metaphysical on our ass with his unsurpassed series of mid-’70s records: A Wizard, A True Star, Todd, Todd Rundgren’s Utopia and Initiation, all zany melodies and zen mysticism. His mind expanded by psychedelic drugs and with the compassion of a true moralist, he explored the nature of consciousness and bewailed the collapse of ideals. Liars is his finest sustained assault on the corruption of all values since that heyday. “I watch society crumble and I just laugh,” he sang on 1974’s “Heavy Metal Kids”. He’s still laughing.

On the sleeve Todd’s wearing a toy rabbit’s ears and nose (although on the Japanese version you get a bisected brain). Why? Because the Easter Bunny, according to Rundgren, is the first myth promulgated by parents. And the lies keep coming. “We are raised to believe things that can’t be proven,” he told this writer, because at Uncut we can get cult superhero acid visionaries on the phone like that. “People are terrified of the truth.”

Rundgren sounds energised by the Liars concept, more so than he has for the longest time. The hermit of Hawaii, idol of the young Prince and the musician who has done more than any bar Stevie Wonder to glamorise the idea of the studio monomaniac, performed and produced every note here. With limited resources (those Bat Out Of Hell royalties don’t last forever) and employing a “rack of virtual synthesisers”, the doyen of DIY runs the gamut of electronic styles. Liars is futuristic machine-beat pop like they?specifically, Horn and Lipson at ZTT?used to make.

It’s not all ’80s techno-flash. Eclipsing Bowie, Rundgren gives good drum’n’bass on “Future” and “Wondering”, his knowledge of jungle gleaned from car commercials and Stereolab CDs. “God Said” is mellifluous, blasphemous chill-out. “Mammon” is a blast of symphonic thunder. Todd recaptures his white Philly-boy peak on “Past” and then “Afterlife”, etherised synth-soul every bit as luscious as “Can We Still Be Friends”. The quinquagenarian wunderkind, in astonishing voice throughout, sounds like Air on the Vocoderised verse and multi-tracked seraphim on the chorus.

“Living” is a revelatory six-minute synthburst that finds Rundgren at the edge of the universe, tears metaphorically streaming down his face, daring you to share the experience as he prepares to confront his mortality. Liars climaxes with the apocalyptic electro-funk of “Liar”, but it’s on “Flaw” that the contrast between heavy lyrics and heavenly music is most striking. “You could be my everything,” Todd croons over gorgeous digital doo wop. “So why you gotta be such a lyin’-ass motherfucker?”

The consummate pop craftsman, the rock’n’roll messiah, has returned. No one else would make a record as unfashionable and open to ridicule as this. Rundgren’s determination to say something meaningful about what the hell we’re all meant to be doing on this planet is, in this dismal age, nothing short of revolutionary. Liars is his best LP for over 25 years. Let him refute his existence. You want the truth? Todd is God. Again.

Western Skies

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Opening with a blast of discordant brass from the Juarez Bull Ring Band, Tom Russell immediately transports you to the Mexican border that he now calls his home. Suddenly you're saddling up with General Black Jack Pershing for "Tonight We Ride" and hunting down Pancho Villa across a desert "so dry you couldn't spit". Driven by Joel Guzman's Tex-Mex accordion, this is a brilliantly visual narrative that sets the tone for the entire album. Indians Cowboys... is Russell's third album since 1991's Cowboy Real to exclusively explore contemporary Western music. It's by far the most committed, mixing original songs with highly personalised covers to produce a seamless evocation of the real West. No better is this highlighted than on his revision of Marty Robbins' "EI Paso", done as a border corrido. Hardly the clean-cut, pop version, here the gunfighter hero is an unshaven, drunken, lascivious Warren Oates-type figure. The centrepiece of the album is a compelling reading of Dylan's "Lily, Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts", almost Shakespearean in the way it's acted out by Russell and guests Joe Ely and Eliza Gilkyson, the drama underpinned by spooky Dylaneseque Hammond B3 organ. There's a second, more obscure Dylan cover, a sorry tale of injustice, "Seven Curses", typical of Dylan's 1964 output but here re-shoed and with haunting electric guitar from Russell's regular sidekick, Andrew Hardin. Elsewhere, Russell takes Linda Thompson's heart-tugging "No Telling", changes a few words and recasts it as a lament for an old cowpunk. The best of the Russell originals, offset by a Scarlett Rivera-style fiddle part, is an impassioned political broadside on how the New West has raped the old. "The Ballad Of Edward Abbey" is a tribute to the modern-day outlaw who wrote "The Brave Cowboy", which became the Kirk Douglas movie Lonely Are The Brave. This is a wonderful album of inspired writing and fiery performances, depicting a love of the West, its people, traditions and threatened culture. If American music needs an heir to Johnny Cash, Tom Russell might just be the man. He's the real deal.

Opening with a blast of discordant brass from the Juarez Bull Ring Band, Tom Russell immediately transports you to the Mexican border that he now calls his home. Suddenly you’re saddling up with General Black Jack Pershing for “Tonight We Ride” and hunting down Pancho Villa across a desert “so dry you couldn’t spit”. Driven by Joel Guzman’s Tex-Mex accordion, this is a brilliantly visual narrative that sets the tone for the entire album.

Indians Cowboys… is Russell’s third album since 1991’s Cowboy Real to exclusively explore contemporary Western music. It’s by far the most committed, mixing original songs with highly personalised covers to produce a seamless evocation of the real West. No better is this highlighted than on his revision of Marty Robbins’ “EI Paso”, done as a border corrido. Hardly the clean-cut, pop version, here the gunfighter hero is an unshaven, drunken, lascivious Warren Oates-type figure. The centrepiece of the album is a compelling reading of Dylan’s “Lily, Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts”, almost Shakespearean in the way it’s acted out by Russell and guests Joe Ely and Eliza Gilkyson, the drama underpinned by spooky Dylaneseque Hammond B3 organ. There’s a second, more obscure Dylan cover, a sorry tale of injustice, “Seven Curses”, typical of Dylan’s 1964 output but here re-shoed and with haunting electric guitar from Russell’s regular sidekick, Andrew Hardin. Elsewhere, Russell takes Linda Thompson’s heart-tugging “No Telling”, changes a few words and recasts it as a lament for an old cowpunk.

The best of the Russell originals, offset by a Scarlett Rivera-style fiddle part, is an impassioned political broadside on how the New West has raped the old. “The Ballad Of Edward Abbey” is a tribute to the modern-day outlaw who wrote “The Brave Cowboy”, which became the Kirk Douglas movie Lonely Are The Brave.

This is a wonderful album of inspired writing and fiery performances, depicting a love of the West, its people, traditions and threatened culture. If American music needs an heir to Johnny Cash, Tom Russell might just be the man. He’s the real deal.

EZT – Goodbye Little Doll

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Frankly, it'd be more startling if a Bill Callahan-produced debut by a Will Oldham collaborator, featuring Smog vocalist Sarabeth Tucek and Will's bassist brother Paul, didn't sound like this: literate, Papa M-droning meta-folk channelling southern rock through a treacle-and-sulphur mix of creepiness and sweet consolation. The pleasant surprise lies instead in the sheer calibre of vocalist/guitarist Colin Gagnon's homage: "Fingerless Children", a redemptive "Cruxes, Cruxes" and the title track are as elliptical, haunted and affecting as Rain On Lens or Arise Therefore. As an added bonus, Gagnon's cheeky pastiche of Natural Bridge-era Silver Jews in the sly, slouchy wit of "Central Control" is laugh-out-loud perfect. What's not to love, in other words?

Frankly, it’d be more startling if a Bill Callahan-produced debut by a Will Oldham collaborator, featuring Smog vocalist Sarabeth Tucek and Will’s bassist brother Paul, didn’t sound like this: literate, Papa M-droning meta-folk channelling southern rock through a treacle-and-sulphur mix of creepiness and sweet consolation.

The pleasant surprise lies instead in the sheer calibre of vocalist/guitarist Colin Gagnon’s homage: “Fingerless Children”, a redemptive “Cruxes, Cruxes” and the title track are as elliptical, haunted and affecting as Rain On Lens or Arise Therefore. As an added bonus, Gagnon’s cheeky pastiche of Natural Bridge-era Silver Jews in the sly, slouchy wit of “Central Control” is laugh-out-loud perfect. What’s not to love, in other words?

Super Furry Animals – Phantom Phorce

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Rather than simply flirting with techno/electronica, Super Furry Animals have in fact been engaged in a serious, ongoing relationship with it for years, forever tugging at the constraints of poppy psychedelia, pastoral glitch and post-techno noise, while effortlessly charming the chinos off anyone with ears. Released on their own label, Phantom Phorce is an inspired overhaul of selected tracks from 2003's Phantom Power album. Some?like High Llamas' treatment of "Valet Parking"?are sweetly skewed complements of the originals, while others are barely recognisable. Massimo's reworking of "Venus & Serena" is chillingly lean, and Killa Kela replaces the cheery gallop of "Golden Retriever" with an earthy, bass-weighted groove. Fifteen fine Super Furry freak-outs?the force is clearly still with them.

Rather than simply flirting with techno/electronica, Super Furry Animals have in fact been engaged in a serious, ongoing relationship with it for years, forever tugging at the constraints of poppy psychedelia, pastoral glitch and post-techno noise, while effortlessly charming the chinos off anyone with ears.

Released on their own label, Phantom Phorce is an inspired overhaul of selected tracks from 2003’s Phantom Power album. Some?like High Llamas’ treatment of “Valet Parking”?are sweetly skewed complements of the originals, while others are barely recognisable. Massimo’s reworking of “Venus & Serena” is chillingly lean, and Killa Kela replaces the cheery gallop of “Golden Retriever” with an earthy, bass-weighted groove. Fifteen fine Super Furry freak-outs?the force is clearly still with them.

Lonesome Travails

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Fans of a certain kind of orphaned Americana are likely to fall on Post To Wire like apostles on The Grail. By which I mean anyone who's been touched where it hurts by American Music Club, The Replacements, Uncle Tuoelo, Ryan Adams, Dave Alvin or Gram Parsons will soon be entirely enthralled with th...

Fans of a certain kind of orphaned Americana are likely to fall on Post To Wire like apostles on The Grail. By which I mean anyone who’s been touched where it hurts by American Music Club, The Replacements, Uncle Tuoelo, Ryan Adams, Dave Alvin or Gram Parsons will soon be entirely enthralled with this dark and mesmerising masterpiece. Who are Richmond Fontaine? I was just about to ask the same question.

Turns out they’ve been going, to my great surprise, for nigh on a decade, and Post To Wire is their fifth album. They were formed in 1994 when songwriter Willy Vlautin quit his native Reno, where not a lot that was good happened to him, and moved from Nevada to Portland, Oregon, where things started to look up after hemet Dave Harding, a local bass player who shared Willy’s enthusiasm for H

Roger McGuinn – Peace On You

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The only constant fixture in the Byrds' line-up, McGuinn was thus able to satisfy a myriad of musical cravings, which is perhaps why his solo career never produced the kind of intensely personal masterpiece that his ex-bandmates Gene Clark and David Crosby did with No Other and If I Could Only Remember My Name respectively. Nevertheless, his eponymous 1973 debut is intermittently brilliant, not least "My New Woman", a smeared-harmony offcut from that year's ill-fated Byrds reunion (Chris Hillman, Crosby and Clark guest) and the perfectly-feathered "Bag Full Of Money". Elsewhere, Dylan and Bruce Johnston help ring the changes from folk and gospel to space-rock and surf. However, the disappointing 1974 follow-up, Peace On You, suggests a distracted muse.

The only constant fixture in the Byrds’ line-up, McGuinn was thus able to satisfy a myriad of musical cravings, which is perhaps why his solo career never produced the kind of intensely personal masterpiece that his ex-bandmates Gene Clark and David Crosby did with No Other and If I Could Only Remember My Name respectively. Nevertheless, his eponymous 1973 debut is intermittently brilliant, not least “My New Woman”, a smeared-harmony offcut from that year’s ill-fated Byrds reunion (Chris Hillman, Crosby and Clark guest) and the perfectly-feathered “Bag Full Of Money”. Elsewhere, Dylan and Bruce Johnston help ring the changes from folk and gospel to space-rock and surf. However, the disappointing 1974 follow-up, Peace On You, suggests a distracted muse.

Dave Cousins – Two Weeks Last Summer

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In that well of disregard cemented over by critical consensus soon after punk resides the reputation of The Strawbs, a hearty folk-rock act whose albums are now practically forgotten. Up front, the reedy, earnest and distinctive voice a little like Cat Stevens belonged to Dave Cousins. His solo set was a Strawbs album in all but billing?but crucially without the band's pop conscience, rhythm section Hudson and Ford?recorded in a busy year when the unsteady band also released breakthrough album Grave New World and then split acrimoniously. Its ambitious mix of hymnal ballads, portentous suites and solid rockers is overshadowed by the title track, a floaty folk-psych gem. Otherwise, probably best left to Strawbs aficionados.

In that well of disregard cemented over by critical consensus soon after punk resides the reputation of The Strawbs, a hearty folk-rock act whose albums are now practically forgotten. Up front, the reedy, earnest and distinctive voice a little like Cat Stevens belonged to Dave Cousins. His solo set was a Strawbs album in all but billing?but crucially without the band’s pop conscience, rhythm section Hudson and Ford?recorded in a busy year when the unsteady band also released breakthrough album Grave New World and then split acrimoniously. Its ambitious mix of hymnal ballads, portentous suites and solid rockers is overshadowed by the title track, a floaty folk-psych gem. Otherwise, probably best left to Strawbs aficionados.

Tindersticks – Working For The Man: The Island Years

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Elegantly wasted, lugubrious, rain and red wine-sodden-there remains something magically dreary about the Tindersticks' early records. While their dogged exhaustion of a tiny musical remit has made for some fairly average albums in recent years, Working For The Man proves that the sextet's initial attempts to formulate an East Midlands noir are still beguiling. Essentially an extension of 1998's flimsy Donkeys compilation, the first disc features what we'll optimistically call the band's hits, with the tantalisingly incomprehensible ghost story "Marbles" as distrait as ever. The second CD, just as predictably, rounds up plenty of long unavailable singles and B-sides, with low-budget murk and creak maturing better than orchestral largesse. It's hardly surprising these songs have aged so well, given that they were designed to be ravaged and ancient in the first place. Interesting, too, that Stuart Staples' faded croon sounds more droll than depressive in retrospect:if only he and his band had quietly retired at the turn of the century and left this impressive musical heritage undiluted.

Elegantly wasted, lugubrious, rain and red wine-sodden-there remains something magically dreary about the Tindersticks’ early records. While their dogged exhaustion of a tiny musical remit has made for some fairly average albums in recent years, Working For The Man proves that the sextet’s initial attempts to formulate an East Midlands noir are still beguiling. Essentially an extension of 1998’s flimsy Donkeys compilation, the first disc features what we’ll optimistically call the band’s hits, with the tantalisingly incomprehensible ghost story “Marbles” as distrait as ever. The second CD, just as predictably, rounds up plenty of long unavailable singles and B-sides, with low-budget murk and creak maturing better than orchestral largesse. It’s hardly surprising these songs have aged so well, given that they were designed to be ravaged and ancient in the first place.

Interesting, too, that Stuart Staples’ faded croon sounds more droll than depressive in retrospect:if only he and his band had quietly retired at the turn of the century and left this impressive musical heritage undiluted.

Anna Domino

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A further welcome reissue from the LTM label, who have unearthed an improbable number of gems from the crannies of '80s obscurity. Anna Domino was too much of an outsider and rootless internationalist by nature to win popular favour. Although she worked as a maker of furniture, this is not furniture music, despite its smart contours. There are too many cracks running beneath the varnish, evidence of a troubled, foraging soul "searching for the straight line", as she declares with deceptively detached hauteur, but perpetually straying from it. Domino's tainted torch songs are not for placing discreetly in the background but well worth the trouble of engaging with.

A further welcome reissue from the LTM label, who have unearthed an improbable number of gems from the crannies of ’80s obscurity. Anna Domino was too much of an outsider and rootless internationalist by nature to win popular favour. Although she worked as a maker of furniture, this is not furniture music, despite its smart contours. There are too many cracks running beneath the varnish, evidence of a troubled, foraging soul “searching for the straight line”, as she declares with deceptively detached hauteur, but perpetually straying from it. Domino’s tainted torch songs are not for placing discreetly in the background but well worth the trouble of engaging with.

Various Artists – All You Need Is Lisboa

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It's a neat concept, seeing how a particular culture regurgitated Los Beatles. Portugal emerges as a tryer: chap singing through his forehead on "I'll Follow The Sun", "When I'm 64" played on a wasp, a total botch made of "Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da" (which is bollocks anyway, to be fair) and a surprisingly loose grasp of rhythm all round. But, occasionally, Portugal triumphs: an atmospheric "Blackbird", a surfing "I'll Get You" and a delightful fado reading of "Hey Jude" taken at a canter on the pretty Portuguese guitarra. Collectors will also want to hear the two versions of "Penina" (a song Paul McCartney tossed off on the Algarve and sold locally), but maybe not often. Inessential stuff, but fun.

It’s a neat concept, seeing how a particular culture regurgitated Los Beatles. Portugal emerges as a tryer: chap singing through his forehead on “I’ll Follow The Sun”, “When I’m 64” played on a wasp, a total botch made of “Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da” (which is bollocks anyway, to be fair) and a surprisingly loose grasp of rhythm all round. But, occasionally, Portugal triumphs: an atmospheric “Blackbird”, a surfing “I’ll Get You” and a delightful fado reading of “Hey Jude” taken at a canter on the pretty Portuguese guitarra. Collectors will also want to hear the two versions of “Penina” (a song Paul McCartney tossed off on the Algarve and sold locally), but maybe not often. Inessential stuff, but fun.

Merle Haggard – Just Between The Two Of Us (With Bonnie Owens)

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Hag's rep was still rising when he cut second album... Two Of Us with new wife (and the ex-Mrs Buck Owens) in 1966. Largely restrained to counterpoint harmony alongside Bonnie's weaker honky-tonk purr, Merle gets suitably country-tough on superior 1970 live-in-Philly effort Fightin' Side Of Me, rush-released to cash in on the unapologetic jingoism of recent smash "Okie From Muskogee" (also included here). Paying homage to Marty Robbins, Hank Snow, Johnny Cash and Jimmie Rodgers, he's never better than on the latter's extraordinary "TB Blues".

Hag’s rep was still rising when he cut second album… Two Of Us with new wife (and the ex-Mrs Buck Owens) in 1966. Largely restrained to counterpoint harmony alongside Bonnie’s weaker honky-tonk purr, Merle gets suitably country-tough on superior 1970 live-in-Philly effort Fightin’ Side Of Me, rush-released to cash in on the unapologetic jingoism of recent smash “Okie From Muskogee” (also included here). Paying homage to Marty Robbins, Hank Snow, Johnny Cash and Jimmie Rodgers, he’s never better than on the latter’s extraordinary “TB Blues”.

Paul Simon – The Paul Simon Songbook

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What an earnest and downbeat fellow the young Paul Simon was. When he wasn't overstating the weather (the drizzle of the rain, the wind that is both "chilly" and "cold"), he was bemoaning the passage of time (he was 24) and almost glorying in a misunderstood isolation, a precious elevation of his own masochistic locked-upness. And wasn't he good at it? Songs like "I Am A Rock" and "Sounds Of Silence" remain simultaneously ridiculous and magnificent. When he murmurs in that weary, calmly melancholy way of his, he sounds like nothing less than the proverbial prophet quietly writing on the subway walls. But when he raises his voice to match the righteous hyperbole of his text-which he does here and there on this album, usually on the word "free"?the spell is broken, and he just sounds like a short guy trying to be a tall guy. And he knew it; his heart just isn't in some of this stuff he was peddling around the folk clubs of England in 1964/65. As he sings in the conspicuously self-knowing "Kathy's Song", "I don't know why I spend my time/Writing songs I can't believe/With words that tear and strain to rhyme." The anti-racism of "A Church Is Burning" and the anti-war "He Was My Brother" are the worst offenders of that sort of song. Good-hearted, naturally, but strident and uneasy, peripheral to Simon's art which, at its best, is a delicate flower of wisdom. Luckily, even as he bashes through his callow poet-and-a-one-man-band set, there's plenty of that already in place. "Leaves That Are Green" contains a simple, heart-stopping summation of universal transience ("hello" sung four times, then "goodbye" four times). "April Come She Will" sustains its conceit (passing spring and summer months as fickle lovers) with modest brilliance. "The Side Of A Hill" (unrecorded elsewhere, though its theme would reappear as "Scarborough Fair"'s counter-melody) is an anti-war song rather more worthy of this most serenely astute writer. Simon has kept this album under Kubrick-like wraps for years, as if embarrassed. No need. A most peculiar young man for sure, but a fascinating one.

What an earnest and downbeat fellow the young Paul Simon was. When he wasn’t overstating the weather (the drizzle of the rain, the wind that is both “chilly” and “cold”), he was bemoaning the passage of time (he was 24) and almost glorying in a misunderstood isolation, a precious elevation of his own masochistic locked-upness.

And wasn’t he good at it? Songs like “I Am A Rock” and “Sounds Of Silence” remain simultaneously ridiculous and magnificent. When he murmurs in that weary, calmly melancholy way of his, he sounds like nothing less than the proverbial prophet quietly writing on the subway walls. But when he raises his voice to match the righteous hyperbole of his text-which he does here and there on this album, usually on the word “free”?the spell is broken, and he just sounds like a short guy trying to be a tall guy.

And he knew it; his heart just isn’t in some of this stuff he was peddling around the folk clubs of England in 1964/65. As he sings in the conspicuously self-knowing “Kathy’s Song”, “I don’t know why I spend my time/Writing songs I can’t believe/With words that tear and strain to rhyme.” The anti-racism of “A Church Is Burning” and the anti-war “He Was My Brother” are the worst offenders of that sort of song. Good-hearted, naturally, but strident and uneasy, peripheral to Simon’s art which, at its best, is a delicate flower of wisdom.

Luckily, even as he bashes through his callow poet-and-a-one-man-band set, there’s plenty of that already in place. “Leaves That Are Green” contains a simple, heart-stopping summation of universal transience (“hello” sung four times, then “goodbye” four times). “April Come She Will” sustains its conceit (passing spring and summer months as fickle lovers) with modest brilliance. “The Side Of A Hill” (unrecorded elsewhere, though its theme would reappear as “Scarborough Fair”‘s counter-melody) is an anti-war song rather more worthy of this most serenely astute writer.

Simon has kept this album under Kubrick-like wraps for years, as if embarrassed. No need. A most peculiar young man for sure, but a fascinating one.

Ssh! Art In Progress

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What are they, all these ghosts that keep materialising? That's the real legacy of the CD revolution; with everything now available for reissue, our attention is inevitably drawn to music which at the time of its original release was probably only heard by a few people and appreciated by fewer, but which now reappears to offer contemporary music a possible way forward. Last year it was Linda Perhacs' phenomenal Parallelograms, and now Hush by the briefly-existing Sydney-based group Extradition. It is as if they have returned to recall the concept of radical quietness in music back from exile. Extradition were more or less the Australian equivalent of Pentangle; a mixture of musicians from different fields?from the folk scene, guitarist/songwriter Colin Campbell and singer Shayna Karlin, and from the rock/modern jazz crucible, percussionist Robert Lloyd and keyboardist Richard Lockwood?and Hush was their only album. An album so resolute in its quietude that it sounds all the more startling in 2004. How did they sound? Perhaps something like the Incredible String Band in the way that songs like "A Water Song" seem to stop and restart at will, its folky verses punctuated by long percussive interludes but with a devout seriousness replacing the ISB's quirkiness. Indeed, the album's centrepiece, the nine-minute-plus "Dear One", is a hymn to the Indian guru Meher Baba; and how gracefully and profoundly does this song take its time to develop, alternating its vocals between Karlin and Lockwood, and underpinned by a slowly undulating harmonium figure which certainly pre-empts what Eno was to get up to later that decade. Even the extended percussion piece "Original Whim", an attempt to depict the first attempts by cavemen to make music, works in this context. The songs are heartbreaking in their seeming simplicity?the Harpers Bizarre chorus reacting against the high-pitched drone in "A Moonsong", the way in which the gorgeous "A Woman Song" transforms naturally into a raga. Even the record's one moment of near-violence?the apocalyptic "Ice", sung by Graham Lowndes (sounding very much like Roger Waters), which rages to a climax before suddenly being cut off?is balanced by the delicate deification of the concluding "Song For Sunrise". In his sleevenote, writer David Pepperell sadly recalls the hostile reaction which Extradition met from an audience of ignorant students in Melbourne back in 1970. In a 2004 which sees music still dominated by whoever can shout loudest, we can only hope that this extraordinary record may now find kinder and more receptive ears.

What are they, all these ghosts that keep materialising? That’s the real legacy of the CD revolution; with everything now available for reissue, our attention is inevitably drawn to music which at the time of its original release was probably only heard by a few people and appreciated by fewer, but which now reappears to offer contemporary music a possible way forward.

Last year it was Linda Perhacs’ phenomenal Parallelograms, and now Hush by the briefly-existing Sydney-based group Extradition. It is as if they have returned to recall the concept of radical quietness in music back from exile.

Extradition were more or less the Australian equivalent of Pentangle; a mixture of musicians from different fields?from the folk scene, guitarist/songwriter Colin Campbell and singer Shayna Karlin, and from the rock/modern jazz crucible, percussionist Robert Lloyd and keyboardist Richard Lockwood?and Hush was their only album. An album so resolute in its quietude that it sounds all the more startling in 2004. How did they sound? Perhaps something like the Incredible String Band in the way that songs like “A Water Song” seem to stop and restart at will, its folky verses punctuated by long percussive interludes but with a devout seriousness replacing the ISB’s quirkiness. Indeed, the album’s centrepiece, the nine-minute-plus “Dear One”, is a hymn to the Indian guru Meher Baba; and how gracefully and profoundly does this song take its time to develop, alternating its vocals between Karlin and Lockwood, and underpinned by a slowly undulating harmonium figure which certainly pre-empts what Eno was to get up to later that decade. Even the extended percussion piece “Original Whim”, an attempt to depict the first attempts by cavemen to make music, works in this context.

The songs are heartbreaking in their seeming simplicity?the Harpers Bizarre chorus reacting against the high-pitched drone in “A Moonsong”, the way in which the gorgeous “A Woman Song” transforms naturally into a raga.

Even the record’s one moment of near-violence?the apocalyptic “Ice”, sung by Graham Lowndes (sounding very much like Roger Waters), which rages to a climax before suddenly being cut off?is balanced by the delicate deification of the concluding “Song For Sunrise”.

In his sleevenote, writer David Pepperell sadly recalls the hostile reaction which Extradition met from an audience of ignorant students in Melbourne back in 1970. In a 2004 which sees music still dominated by whoever can shout loudest, we can only hope that this extraordinary record may now find kinder and more receptive ears.

Johnny Cash – The Living End

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This belated sequel to 2002's triple-album retrospective Love God Murder features 18 songs that might easily have fitted under one or another of that set's individual headings. Not, perhaps, "Murder"?the only death here is that of the Native American hero of Peter LaFarge's "Ballad Of Ira Hayes", a ...

This belated sequel to 2002’s triple-album retrospective Love God Murder features 18 songs that might easily have fitted under one or another of that set’s individual headings. Not, perhaps, “Murder”?the only death here is that of the Native American hero of Peter LaFarge’s “Ballad Of Ira Hayes”, a war hero allowed to fall into alcoholism and ignominy after he’d helped raise that iconic flag at Iwo Jima?but certainly “Love” and “God”. Such, I suppose, was “Life” for Johnny Cash: a shifting seascape of emotional turmoil in which love and faith provided vital anchorages in which to shelter from the self-destructive urges that tormented him.

Religion is a constant factor here, not just in the overt gospel of “Lead Me Gently Home” and “I Talk To Jesus Every Day” (“no secretary ever tells me He’s been called away”), but also seeping into other, apparently secular songs, like a background watercolour wash. The effect is most pronounced in sentimental celebrations of rural life such as “Country Trash”?which ends with the supposedly comforting prospect of heaven?and the nostalgic “Suppertime”, in which Johnny’s recollection of his mom calling him in at meal-time is crowned with a spoken interlude of jaw-dropping crassness. “But you know, time has woven for me a realisation of a truth that’s even more thrilling,” muses Cash. “That someday we’ll all be called together around the great supper table up there for the greatest suppertime of them all, with our Lord”.

How, you wonder, did he manage to perform this without sniggering? But then, it was 1958, when such profuse expressions of piety were the norm in country circles, and the song’s down-homey, demotic manner?suppertime with God!?vividly illustrates the singer’s grasp of his audience’s working-class attitudes. Those attitudes are themselves celebrated in “These Are My People” and given satisfyingly surly voice in Jim Chesnut’s “Oney”, in which a workman relishes his impending retirement day as an opportunity to even things up with his eponymous foreman: “I’ll be remembered as a working man/That put his point across/With a right hand full of knuckles/’Cause today I show old Oney who’s the boss.”

Less pleasing, from a foreigner’s point of view, is the glutinous patriotism of “Ragged Old Flag”, in which Americans’ perverse regard for a symbolic scrap of fabric is acclaimed in a tendentious setting of military snare and wistful harmonica, building to a grotesque finale of lachrymose strings and heavenly choir. The track dates from 1974, when Cash’s faltering career perhaps led him to pursue a more conservative audience than his own life and career merited.

It’s a far cry indeed from his quasi-liberal 1971 manifesto “Man In Black”, in which the singer explains why he wears black “for the poor and beaten down/For the prisoner who has long paid for his crime”, and for similar unfortunates such as the illiterate and the irreligious. Such vacillations of nobility might strike us as self-defeating, maybe even desperate; but Johnny Cash was always, to use his prot

Tom Rapp – Familiar Songs

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In the late '60s and early '70s, Tom Rapp's band, Pearls Before Swine, perfected a kind of literate, ethereal psych-folk that was as frail as it was entrancing. Elements of that sorcery can be detected on Rapp's solo debut from 1972. Familiar Songs, though, is more notable as a souvenir of muddled record company politicking, being haphazard re-recordings of Pearls Before Swine songs released by Rapp's old label (Reprise) after he had departed for a new one (Blue Thumb). The music's fine enough, if a little sturdier and more countryish than before. The problems come with Rapp, who experiments unsteadily with tone and phrasing. "I hope I was really stoned when I did that," he writes in the rueful new sleevenotes, with some justification. Newcomers, as a result, are better directed to Water's Pearls Before Swine box set, Jewels Were The Stars, and the lovely, unadulterated originals.

In the late ’60s and early ’70s, Tom Rapp’s band, Pearls Before Swine, perfected a kind of literate, ethereal psych-folk that was as frail as it was entrancing. Elements of that sorcery can be detected on Rapp’s solo debut from 1972. Familiar Songs, though, is more notable as a souvenir of muddled record company politicking, being haphazard re-recordings of Pearls Before Swine songs released by Rapp’s old label (Reprise) after he had departed for a new one (Blue Thumb). The music’s fine enough, if a little sturdier and more countryish than before. The problems come with Rapp, who experiments unsteadily with tone and phrasing. “I hope I was really stoned when I did that,” he writes in the rueful new sleevenotes, with some justification. Newcomers, as a result, are better directed to Water’s Pearls Before Swine box set, Jewels Were The Stars, and the lovely, unadulterated originals.

Various Artists – Brel Next

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The monumental songwriting prowess of Jacques Brel has traditionally been far too clever for the non-French-speaking masses to care. Even in English. According to the sophisticated French-speaking masses, the translations are a travesty. Not always so. In the devoted, talented hands of Elvis lyricist Mort Shuman, adaptor of the bulk of the songs on this compilation, they pack a heavyweight lyrical punch rarely experienced in the comparatively feeble 'rock' lexicon. Though Terry Jacks' "Seasons In The Sun" was hands-down the best pop record of the spring of '74, it could have been better still had its translator, the ludicrous Mc-Poet Rod McKuen, had any inkling of the true dark intent of Brel's original, "Le Moribond". But then maybe "We had joy, we had fun" was the only line a snogger needed on Blackpool Pier 30 years ago. Interpretive moths transfixed by Brel's fiery inferno have included the sublime and the ridiculous. Scott Walker, represented here twice, sang Brel so knowingly that he might have been his beautiful blonde emotional doppelganger, while Nina Simone's loony-bin escapee routine on "The Desperate Ones" is pure farce. David Bowie expertly transforms the tough drunken sailor narrator of "Amsterdam" into a sensitive, amphetamine-skinny cabin boy, while on "Next" Alex Harvey's tipsy vicar is too loud. Triumphantly, an impudent newcomer takes first prize. Emiliana Torrini's fragile vocal, inside her brilliant, defiantly modern samples-and-beats arrangement of "If You Go Away", definitively demonstrates that Brel's legacy is truly timeless. A solid introduction; here, even the ridiculous entertains.

The monumental songwriting prowess of Jacques Brel has traditionally been far too clever for the non-French-speaking masses to care. Even in English. According to the sophisticated French-speaking masses, the translations are a travesty. Not always so. In the devoted, talented hands of Elvis lyricist Mort Shuman, adaptor of the bulk of the songs on this compilation, they pack a heavyweight lyrical punch rarely experienced in the comparatively feeble ‘rock’ lexicon. Though Terry Jacks’ “Seasons In The Sun” was hands-down the best pop record of the spring of ’74, it could have been better still had its translator, the ludicrous Mc-Poet Rod McKuen, had any inkling of the true dark intent of Brel’s original, “Le Moribond”. But then maybe “We had joy, we had fun” was the only line a snogger needed on Blackpool Pier 30 years ago.

Interpretive moths transfixed by Brel’s fiery inferno have included the sublime and the ridiculous. Scott Walker, represented here twice, sang Brel so knowingly that he might have been his beautiful blonde emotional doppelganger, while Nina Simone’s loony-bin escapee routine on “The Desperate Ones” is pure farce. David Bowie expertly transforms the tough drunken sailor narrator of “Amsterdam” into a sensitive, amphetamine-skinny cabin boy, while on “Next” Alex Harvey’s tipsy vicar is too loud.

Triumphantly, an impudent newcomer takes first prize. Emiliana Torrini’s fragile vocal, inside her brilliant, defiantly modern samples-and-beats arrangement of “If You Go Away”, definitively demonstrates that Brel’s legacy is truly timeless. A solid introduction; here, even the ridiculous entertains.