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Paul Kelly – Ways & Means

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Dug by both new breed and old (from Horse Stories compatriot Toby Burke to Dylan), Kelly has long been Australia's foremost troubadour since emerging from Melbourne's mid-'70s punk scene with a solo ambition that first flourished on 1985's Post. Produced by Tchad (Tom Waits/American Music Club) Blake, this two-CD follow-up to 2001's Nothing But A Dream is smartly conceived. Disc one rattles and blows like Highway 61 ghost-ridden by Hank Williams, a tumble of bordello piano, pedal-steel and blustery guitars. Disc two is more spare, sort of Time Out Of Mind left out in the rain by Warren Zevon.

Dug by both new breed and old (from Horse Stories compatriot Toby Burke to Dylan), Kelly has long been Australia’s foremost troubadour since emerging from Melbourne’s mid-’70s punk scene with a solo ambition that first flourished on 1985’s Post. Produced by Tchad (Tom Waits/American Music Club) Blake, this two-CD follow-up to 2001’s Nothing But A Dream is smartly conceived. Disc one rattles and blows like Highway 61 ghost-ridden by Hank Williams, a tumble of bordello piano, pedal-steel and blustery guitars. Disc two is more spare, sort of Time Out Of Mind left out in the rain by Warren Zevon.

Po’ Girl

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Alter-ego of The Be Good Tanyas' Trish Klein and Montreal's ex-Fear Of Drinking singer Allison Russell, Po' Girl dish out an invigorating mess of blues-jazz and country grit. There's enough hair in the harmonies and a looser approach to distinguish the duo from the Tanyas' buffed-up chirpiness, plus plenty of silver-spun beauty. Klein's voice sounds folk-mountain fresh throughout, while Russell drizzles the likes of "Wheels Are Taking Me Away" with sleepy clarinet. There's a dash of Cowboy Junkies in its understated approach, a little Norah Jones in its bathtub-soakiness, and more than a little Elizabeth Cotton in the margins.

Alter-ego of The Be Good Tanyas’ Trish Klein and Montreal’s ex-Fear Of Drinking singer Allison Russell, Po’ Girl dish out an invigorating mess of blues-jazz and country grit. There’s enough hair in the harmonies and a looser approach to distinguish the duo from the Tanyas’ buffed-up chirpiness, plus plenty of silver-spun beauty. Klein’s voice sounds folk-mountain fresh throughout, while Russell drizzles the likes of “Wheels Are Taking Me Away” with sleepy clarinet. There’s a dash of Cowboy Junkies in its understated approach, a little Norah Jones in its bathtub-soakiness, and more than a little Elizabeth Cotton in the margins.

Andrew Bird – Weather Systems

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This Chicagoan is unique in being an astonishing violin virtuoso devoting himself almost entirely to pop music. Founding Andrew Bird's Bowl Of Fire in the mid-'90s, his best work (2001's The Swimming Hour) takes in Appalachia, jump-blues and orch-pop in a flash-flood of American tradition. With Mark (Lambchop) Nevers producing, Weather Systems distills that same musical heritage into a new, supple-fresh language of strings, glockenspiel, wurlitzer and tape loops. Densely textured, it's perfectly embodied by an immaculate reimagining of sometime-collaborators The Handsome Family's "Don't Be Scared". Outstanding.

This Chicagoan is unique in being an astonishing violin virtuoso devoting himself almost entirely to pop music. Founding Andrew Bird’s Bowl Of Fire in the mid-’90s, his best work (2001’s The Swimming Hour) takes in Appalachia, jump-blues and orch-pop in a flash-flood of American tradition. With Mark (Lambchop) Nevers producing, Weather Systems distills that same musical heritage into a new, supple-fresh language of strings, glockenspiel, wurlitzer and tape loops. Densely textured, it’s perfectly embodied by an immaculate reimagining of sometime-collaborators The Handsome Family’s “Don’t Be Scared”. Outstanding.

Caramel Jack – Performs Songs From Low Story

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Who'da thought Blighty's most provocative new country stars would be holed up in Brighton? This six-piece have already been hailed in some quarters as natural heirs to Lambchop, but there's much more besides. "Her Friend The Rain" and "Living And Dead Singers" (BJ Cole on lap steel) weld '70s Cali-troubadour strum to Clifford TWard's bedsit folksiness, while "Elephants" dissolves into an acid-carousel waltz that's as unsettling as Johnny Dowd. The diversity is mind-spinning?country-folk to chamber-pop to burlesque with hip hop beats?and singer Joe Doveton a genuine find.

Who’da thought Blighty’s most provocative new country stars would be holed up in Brighton? This six-piece have already been hailed in some quarters as natural heirs to Lambchop, but there’s much more besides. “Her Friend The Rain” and “Living And Dead Singers” (BJ Cole on lap steel) weld ’70s Cali-troubadour strum to Clifford TWard’s bedsit folksiness, while “Elephants” dissolves into an acid-carousel waltz that’s as unsettling as Johnny Dowd. The diversity is mind-spinning?country-folk to chamber-pop to burlesque with hip hop beats?and singer Joe Doveton a genuine find.

Go Wild In The Country

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In May 2003, Will Oldham travelled to Nashville with a subversive plan, even by his standards. Long championed as a dissident country voice, he decided to give a selection of his best songs a glossy Nashville makeover. A vote on his website had selected most of the material, drawn specifically from the period 1993-97 when Oldham traded variously as Palace, Palace Brothers, Palace Song and Palace Music. Now, he and co-producer Mark Nevers (the Lambchop guitarist who also helmed 2003's Bonnie "Prince" Billy album, Master And Everyone) would round up a band of session players?regularly employed as Alan Jackson's studio crew?and recast these odd, uneasy songs as rousing country classics. The resulting album is, perhaps, the most wilfully perverse stunt ever pulled by Oldham, a man for whom wrong-footing his audience has been a modus operandi rather than an occasional indulgence. On Master And Everyone, the arrangements were so determinedly minimal, with supporting players only a faint spectral presence, that it seemed Oldham had emphatically rejected the ornate. To follow it up with a project as contrary as Greatest Palace Music looks like a wicked practical joke, a way of defiling the songs which his audience, if not necessarily Oldham himself, hold most sacred. Yet there's clearly little ironic about Greatest Palace Music, possibly the most straightforwardly enjoyable album Oldham has produced thus far. It's not his best: 1999's/See A Darkness, his debut as Bonnie "Prince" Billy, is still secure in that position. But Oldham's increasing spirit and confidence, the uncomplicated joy he has from hearing his songs played by consummate professionals, is clear and infectious. As one who's spent most of his career adopting roles and obfuscating his true character, surrounding himself with these fantastically slick players appears to have relaxed Oldham. He sounds more human, less theatrical, touchingly direct: the magnificent "Gulf Shores" is sung here with a tenderness which, for all his quavering conceits, he never managed on the 1994 original. Whether by accident or design, the whole operation highlights just how good a songwriter Oldham has always been, as these 15 tunes are rescued from their idiosyncratic lo-fi origins and turned into standards. If Johnny Cash's version of "I See A Darkness" alerted country conservatives to Oldham's existence, then Greatest Palace Songs is Oldham asserting himself before them as a master craftsman. And if his most obvious role model?Bob Dylan?can be assimilated by the establishment, then so can he. Not only is this Oldham's Nashville Skyline, it highlights a similarly irreverent relationship with his own back catalogue, of which these reinventions are only the latest and most conspicuous examples. In fact, a former Dylan collaborator takes the lead on many of the songs. Hargus "Pig" Robbins, the blind pianist who figured on Blonde On Blonde (which Oldham claims not to have heard in a decade), is an elegant presence throughout Greatest Palace Music, turning "Pushkin"into a languid roll, or the plaintive "I Send My Love To You" into a roistering farmyard hoedown. Pointedly keen to debunk his own morose stereotype, Oldham sounds in hog heaven. Not everything quite works. "New Partner" is sullied by a ponderous electric guitar (played by long-time collaborator Matt Sweeney, once of Zwan), and even the most open-minded loyalist will probably wince, at least initially, at the sunny jogs through "Ohio River Boat Song" and "Horses", or the saxophone solo on "Viva Ultra". Their fears that Oldham has become terminally cheerful may be derailed by the simultaneous appearance of his latest soundtrack mini album, Seafarers Music: four long, pensive and unfussy guitar instrumentals reminiscent of his old sparring partner, David Pajo. Critically, though, Greatest Palace Music proves that exuberance and poignancy, professionalism and veracity are not mutually irreconcilable concepts. Oldham is undoubtedly playing with his audience's expectations: on the most audacious track, the formerly anguished "I Am A Cinematographer" is reworked, brilliantly, as western swing. But in doing so, he's cannily showing us his songs are good enough to withstand any treatment or desecration that he, or any other performer, can impose on them. Better still, the prospect of Oldham's preternaturally twisted songs being played on mainstream country radio is as delicious as it was once unimaginable. It all adds up to a frequently uproarious, deeply affectionate record, full of good jokes worth sharing with everyone.

In May 2003, Will Oldham travelled to Nashville with a subversive plan, even by his standards. Long championed as a dissident country voice, he decided to give a selection of his best songs a glossy Nashville makeover. A vote on his website had selected most of the material, drawn specifically from the period 1993-97 when Oldham traded variously as Palace, Palace Brothers, Palace Song and Palace Music. Now, he and co-producer Mark Nevers (the Lambchop guitarist who also helmed 2003’s Bonnie “Prince” Billy album, Master And Everyone) would round up a band of session players?regularly employed as Alan Jackson’s studio crew?and recast these odd, uneasy songs as rousing country classics.

The resulting album is, perhaps, the most wilfully perverse stunt ever pulled by Oldham, a man for whom wrong-footing his audience has been a modus operandi rather than an occasional indulgence. On Master And Everyone, the arrangements were so determinedly minimal, with supporting players only a faint spectral presence, that it seemed Oldham had emphatically rejected the ornate. To follow it up with a project as contrary as Greatest Palace Music looks like a wicked practical joke, a way of defiling the songs which his audience, if not necessarily Oldham himself, hold most sacred.

Yet there’s clearly little ironic about Greatest Palace Music, possibly the most straightforwardly enjoyable album Oldham has produced thus far. It’s not his best: 1999’s/See A Darkness, his debut as Bonnie “Prince” Billy, is still secure in that position. But Oldham’s increasing spirit and confidence, the uncomplicated joy he has from hearing his songs played by consummate professionals, is clear and infectious.

As one who’s spent most of his career adopting roles and obfuscating his true character, surrounding himself with these fantastically slick players appears to have relaxed Oldham. He sounds more human, less theatrical, touchingly direct: the magnificent “Gulf Shores” is sung here with a tenderness which, for all his quavering conceits, he never managed on the 1994 original.

Whether by accident or design, the whole operation highlights just how good a songwriter Oldham has always been, as these 15 tunes are rescued from their idiosyncratic lo-fi origins and turned into standards. If Johnny Cash’s version of “I See A Darkness” alerted country conservatives to Oldham’s existence, then Greatest Palace Songs is Oldham asserting himself before them as a master craftsman. And if his most obvious role model?Bob Dylan?can be assimilated by the establishment, then so can he. Not only is this Oldham’s Nashville Skyline, it highlights a similarly irreverent relationship with his own back catalogue, of which these reinventions are only the latest and most conspicuous examples.

In fact, a former Dylan collaborator takes the lead on many of the songs. Hargus “Pig” Robbins, the blind pianist who figured on Blonde On Blonde (which Oldham claims not to have heard in a decade), is an elegant presence throughout Greatest Palace Music, turning “Pushkin”into a languid roll, or the plaintive “I Send My Love To You” into a roistering farmyard hoedown. Pointedly keen to debunk his own morose stereotype, Oldham sounds in hog heaven.

Not everything quite works. “New Partner” is sullied by a ponderous electric guitar (played by long-time collaborator Matt Sweeney, once of Zwan), and even the most open-minded loyalist will probably wince, at least initially, at the sunny jogs through “Ohio River Boat Song” and “Horses”, or the saxophone solo on “Viva Ultra”. Their fears that Oldham has become terminally cheerful may be derailed by the simultaneous appearance of his latest soundtrack mini album, Seafarers Music: four long, pensive and unfussy guitar instrumentals reminiscent of his old sparring partner, David Pajo.

Critically, though, Greatest Palace Music proves that exuberance and poignancy, professionalism and veracity are not mutually irreconcilable concepts. Oldham is undoubtedly playing with his audience’s expectations: on the most audacious track, the formerly anguished “I Am A Cinematographer” is reworked, brilliantly, as western swing. But in doing so, he’s cannily showing us his songs are good enough to withstand any treatment or desecration that he, or any other performer, can impose on them. Better still, the prospect of Oldham’s preternaturally twisted songs being played on mainstream country radio is as delicious as it was once unimaginable. It all adds up to a frequently uproarious, deeply affectionate record, full of good jokes worth sharing with everyone.

Access All Arias

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Grown Backwards features several striking changes in David Byrne's sound and methods. In the first place, the familiar affection for Brazilian tropicalismo which marked out albums such as Rei Momo has been significantly reduced here, its influence lingering mostly in the marimba and percussion on tracks such as "Glass, Concrete & Stone", which first appeared over the end credits of the 2002 Stephen Frears film Dirty Pretty Things. Instead, the instrumental palette is more wide-ranging in a subtler, more subversive manner, taking in Gallic accordion on "Civilization", countrified pedal-steel guitar on "Astronaut", a vaguely New Orleans-style horn-pocked shuffle-groove on "Dialog Box" and lashings of elegant string arrangements popping up all over the place. The most noticeable change, though, is the inclusion of not one but two operatic pieces, Verdi's "Un Di Felice, Eterea" and Bizet's "Au Fond Du Temple Saint", the latter performed as a duet with Rufus Wainwright. Both beautiful songs, it must be conceded, though Byrne's untrained voice strains to negotiate the high notes adequately. There's also a cover of Lambchop's "The Man Who Loved Beer", which one suspects was less taxing to master. As usual, the lyrical content bristles with idiosyncratic concerns, or common concerns given idiosyncratic twists: things like love and loss, bodily awareness and emotional possessiveness, philosophy and civilisation ("It's all about sex/Having a ball on a padded banquette"). And in a few songs, there are sardonic commentaries on the American government's dubious overseas exploits. In "Empire", Byrne mockingly sings of how "tears fill our eyes/In democratic fever/For national defence," sarcastically demanding that "young artists and writers/Please heed the call/What's good for business is good for us all"; while the reference to disturbing a hornet's nest and getting stung surely makes the protagonist of "Astronaut" an ironic cipher for the Bush administration's complacent incompetence regarding foreign affairs: "I surf the Net and watch TV/There's peace in the Middle East/Feel like I'm an astronaut."

Grown Backwards features several striking changes in David Byrne’s sound and methods. In the first place, the familiar affection for Brazilian tropicalismo which marked out albums such as Rei Momo has been significantly reduced here, its influence lingering mostly in the marimba and percussion on tracks such as “Glass, Concrete & Stone”, which first appeared over the end credits of the 2002 Stephen Frears film Dirty Pretty Things. Instead, the instrumental palette is more wide-ranging in a subtler, more subversive manner, taking in Gallic accordion on “Civilization”, countrified pedal-steel guitar on “Astronaut”, a vaguely New Orleans-style horn-pocked shuffle-groove on “Dialog Box” and lashings of elegant string arrangements popping up all over the place.

The most noticeable change, though, is the inclusion of not one but two operatic pieces, Verdi’s “Un Di Felice, Eterea” and Bizet’s “Au Fond Du Temple Saint”, the latter performed as a duet with Rufus Wainwright. Both beautiful songs, it must be conceded, though Byrne’s untrained voice strains to negotiate the high notes adequately. There’s also a cover of Lambchop’s “The Man Who Loved Beer”, which one suspects was less taxing to master.

As usual, the lyrical content bristles with idiosyncratic concerns, or common concerns given idiosyncratic twists: things like love and loss, bodily awareness and emotional possessiveness, philosophy and civilisation (“It’s all about sex/Having a ball on a padded banquette”). And in a few songs, there are sardonic commentaries on the American government’s dubious overseas exploits. In “Empire”, Byrne mockingly sings of how “tears fill our eyes/In democratic fever/For national defence,” sarcastically demanding that “young artists and writers/Please heed the call/What’s good for business is good for us all”; while the reference to disturbing a hornet’s nest and getting stung surely makes the protagonist of “Astronaut” an ironic cipher for the Bush administration’s complacent incompetence regarding foreign affairs: “I surf the Net and watch TV/There’s peace in the Middle East/Feel like I’m an astronaut.”

Madrugada – Grit

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Powerful, pulsating angst-rock which evokes both Stooges lggy and Bowie lggy, but also shudders with shadows of Leonard Cohen, Tindersticks and good goth. This Norwegian band's third (but first UK) album, recorded in Berlin with producer Head, is yet its own master, its own slave to doomed love. Sivert Hoyem can croon romantically (the single, "Majesty", is velveteen) or snarl bitterly, and the band surge like cheetahs (the aggressive "Lucy One") or slide like a bassline-bejewelled submarine (as on the addictive "Hands Up?I Love You"). Madrugada is the Spanish for "the hour before dawn"?which is around the time when, if you're on the appropriate roll of psychic starvation and physical excess, they sound like one thrilling, compelling rock band. Munch on this.

Powerful, pulsating angst-rock which evokes both Stooges lggy and Bowie lggy, but also shudders with shadows of Leonard Cohen, Tindersticks and good goth. This Norwegian band’s third (but first UK) album, recorded in Berlin with producer Head, is yet its own master, its own slave to doomed love. Sivert Hoyem can croon romantically (the single, “Majesty”, is velveteen) or snarl bitterly, and the band surge like cheetahs (the aggressive “Lucy One”) or slide like a bassline-bejewelled submarine (as on the addictive “Hands Up?I Love You”). Madrugada is the Spanish for “the hour before dawn”?which is around the time when, if you’re on the appropriate roll of psychic starvation and physical excess, they sound like one thrilling, compelling rock band. Munch on this.

Wax Poetic – Nublu Sessions

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When Norah Jones first arrived in New York from Texas in 1998, she gravitated to Nublu, the Lower East Side club run by Ilhan Ersahin. When he heard her sing, he knew he'd found the perfect voice for his band, Wax Poetic. Jones stayed with them for more than a year before launching her solo career. Now, five years and nine Grammies later, she's returned to record her two signature songs from her time in the band on Wax Poetic's debut album. Both tracks have an acid-jazz flavour, and it's fascinating to hear her operate in a funkier style than we're accustomed to hearing. Other guest vocalists include N'Dea Davenport, poet Saul Williams and Jamaican legend U-Roy, all of whom help create an impressively sophisticated postmodern Manhattan cocktail.

When Norah Jones first arrived in New York from Texas in 1998, she gravitated to Nublu, the Lower East Side club run by Ilhan Ersahin. When he heard her sing, he knew he’d found the perfect voice for his band, Wax Poetic. Jones stayed with them for more than a year before launching her solo career. Now, five years and nine Grammies later, she’s returned to record her two signature songs from her time in the band on Wax Poetic’s debut album. Both tracks have an acid-jazz flavour, and it’s fascinating to hear her operate in a funkier style than we’re accustomed to hearing. Other guest vocalists include N’Dea Davenport, poet Saul Williams and Jamaican legend U-Roy, all of whom help create an impressively sophisticated postmodern Manhattan cocktail.

Hidden Cameras – Play The CBC Sessions

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Anyone lucky enough to experience the ramshackle epiphany of Hidden Cameras live last year?complete with dancers in Y-fronts?can testify to their uniqueness. Last year's debut album, The Smell Of Our Own, offered explicit gay sexuality (at last!), DIY baroque arrangements and a delicate, lilting Phil Ochs-ish voice that sounded as if it came out of a mouth in which butter wouldn't melt, even though that clearly wasn't the case. Passing the time until their soon-to-come second album proper are these six session tracks, mostly lovely if, as expected, a little under-realised, and including some previously hard-to-find songs. If you're a convert, you'll want this. If not, head straight to The Smell Of Our Own and be ravished.

Anyone lucky enough to experience the ramshackle epiphany of Hidden Cameras live last year?complete with dancers in Y-fronts?can testify to their uniqueness. Last year’s debut album, The Smell Of Our Own, offered explicit gay sexuality (at last!), DIY baroque arrangements and a delicate, lilting Phil Ochs-ish voice that sounded as if it came out of a mouth in which butter wouldn’t melt, even though that clearly wasn’t the case.

Passing the time until their soon-to-come second album proper are these six session tracks, mostly lovely if, as expected, a little under-realised, and including some previously hard-to-find songs. If you’re a convert, you’ll want this. If not, head straight to The Smell Of Our Own and be ravished.

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Perhaps never given the proper credit for his awesome work on Young Americans and Station To Station (not to mention with Lennon and Jagger), Slick has called back a few favours for his first solo album in 12 years. And far from a middling vanity project, it's taut and tasteful. Bowie's quick to turn up, hollering the enchanting "Isn't It Evening (The Revolutionary)" with cool conviction and a daft title. It could easily be a Heathen outtake. The Cure's Robert Smith shrieks through "Believe", Spacehog's Royston Langdon forgets Liv Tyler long enough to warble the title track with comic Bowie-ness, and Def Leppard's Joe Elliott is, um, here. Sweetest surprise is Martha Davis, once of The Motels, eulogising the East Village on "St Mark's Place". Slick by name...

Perhaps never given the proper credit for his awesome work on Young Americans and Station To Station (not to mention with Lennon and Jagger), Slick has called back a few favours for his first solo album in 12 years. And far from a middling vanity project, it’s taut and tasteful. Bowie’s quick to turn up, hollering the enchanting “Isn’t It Evening (The Revolutionary)” with cool conviction and a daft title. It could easily be a Heathen outtake. The Cure’s Robert Smith shrieks through “Believe”, Spacehog’s Royston Langdon forgets Liv Tyler long enough to warble the title track with comic Bowie-ness, and Def Leppard’s Joe Elliott is, um, here. Sweetest surprise is Martha Davis, once of The Motels, eulogising the East Village on “St Mark’s Place”. Slick by name…

Various Artists – Zen CD:A Ninja Tune

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Long the preserve of web designers who enjoy a spliff at weekends, Coldcut's Ninja Tune label has, in its 12 years, released a lot of old cobblers. Gratifyingly, few stinkers sour this 32-track round-up of their best moments. Champions of the cut'n'pasted funky break, its tasteful acts such as Mr Scruff, Bonobo and Amon Tobin are perennial faves of TV ad directors. Within their catalogue lie fantastic offerings from Luke Vibert, Kid Koala and DJ Food. Buy this and its more attractive sister compilation, Zen Rmx, and you've enough Ninja Tune for life.

Long the preserve of web designers who enjoy a spliff at weekends, Coldcut’s Ninja Tune label has, in its 12 years, released a lot of old cobblers. Gratifyingly, few stinkers sour this 32-track round-up of their best moments. Champions of the cut’n’pasted funky break, its tasteful acts such as Mr Scruff, Bonobo and Amon Tobin are perennial faves of TV ad directors. Within their catalogue lie fantastic offerings from Luke Vibert, Kid Koala and DJ Food. Buy this and its more attractive sister compilation, Zen Rmx, and you’ve enough Ninja Tune for life.

Max Richter – The Blue Notebooks

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"If one pricks up one's ears and listens," Tilda Swinton reads from Kafka at the start of this album, "when everything round about is quiet, one hears, for instance, the rattling of a mirror not quite firmly fastened to the wall." Superficially, Richter's second album consists of benign classical ambience. But following Kafka's imprecation to listen closely, deeper layers of content reveal themselves. Blue Notebooks is full of deceitfully tranquil, borderline supernatural music:string-led and redolent of Michael Nyman, often augmented by the sort of pulses and field recordings favoured by Boards Of Canada. Uneasy and absorbing.

“If one pricks up one’s ears and listens,” Tilda Swinton reads from Kafka at the start of this album, “when everything round about is quiet, one hears, for instance, the rattling of a mirror not quite firmly fastened to the wall.” Superficially, Richter’s second album consists of benign classical ambience. But following Kafka’s imprecation to listen closely, deeper layers of content reveal themselves. Blue Notebooks is full of deceitfully tranquil, borderline supernatural music:string-led and redolent of Michael Nyman, often augmented by the sort of pulses and field recordings favoured by Boards Of Canada. Uneasy and absorbing.

Andy Summers – Earth & Sky

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Whereas just about every other genre of the late '60s and early '70s is now revered, jazz-rock remains deeply unfashionable. That hasn't deterred Summers, who has made a string of albums that combine his love of jazz virtuosity with his appreciation of rock dynamics. Earth & Sky is classy, all-instrumental stuff. But it also displays all the reasons why, Pat Metheny apart, jazz-rock fusion has been in the doldrums since the days of McLaughlin and Hancock. The suspicion of showing-off is never far away as tunes get buried in layers of noodling. Music to admire rather than love.

Whereas just about every other genre of the late ’60s and early ’70s is now revered, jazz-rock remains deeply unfashionable. That hasn’t deterred Summers, who has made a string of albums that combine his love of jazz virtuosity with his appreciation of rock dynamics. Earth & Sky is classy, all-instrumental stuff. But it also displays all the reasons why, Pat Metheny apart, jazz-rock fusion has been in the doldrums since the days of McLaughlin and Hancock. The suspicion of showing-off is never far away as tunes get buried in layers of noodling. Music to admire rather than love.

This Month In Soundtracks

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In Francis Ford Coppola's liner notes to this extended, remastered release of the soundtrack to his 1982 classic, he confesses he told Tom Waits and producer Bones Howe, "What I really want you guys to do is make an album called One From The Heart and then I'll make a movie that goes with it." In the event, both were deliciously melancholy works of art. The film was panned. The music, however, was universally loved from the get-go. It's the best thing Waits has ever done. The horror is that it could so nearly have been Bette Midler, not Crystal Gayle, duetting with Tom. Fortunately Midler had, Coppola reveals, a "conflicting schedule" (phew!), and Waits suggested the then little-known Gayle. Coppola took one look (he says), developed "a respectful little crush" and applauded Waits' musical taste. Her vocal sweetness and Waits' gruffness complement each other blissfully through a series of sublime love songs. Every Waits couplet on "Picking Up After You", "Old Boyfriends" or "Little Boy Blue" is a potential design for living. The title song's a deal-breaker if you're considering investing emotion in someone. Two bonus tracks?"Candy Apple Red" and "Once Upon A Town"?maintain the standard. Beyond all doubt the most integral and affecting soundtrack of the last quarter-century.

In Francis Ford Coppola’s liner notes to this extended, remastered release of the soundtrack to his 1982 classic, he confesses he told Tom Waits and producer Bones Howe, “What I really want you guys to do is make an album called One From The Heart and then I’ll make a movie that goes with it.” In the event, both were deliciously melancholy works of art. The film was panned. The music, however, was universally loved from the get-go. It’s the best thing Waits has ever done.

The horror is that it could so nearly have been Bette Midler, not Crystal Gayle, duetting with Tom. Fortunately Midler had, Coppola reveals, a “conflicting schedule” (phew!), and Waits suggested the then little-known Gayle. Coppola took one look (he says), developed “a respectful little crush” and applauded Waits’ musical taste. Her vocal sweetness and Waits’ gruffness complement each other blissfully through a series of sublime love songs.

Every Waits couplet on “Picking Up After You”, “Old Boyfriends” or “Little Boy Blue” is a potential design for living. The title song’s a deal-breaker if you’re considering investing emotion in someone. Two bonus tracks?”Candy Apple Red” and “Once Upon A Town”?maintain the standard. Beyond all doubt the most integral and affecting soundtrack of the last quarter-century.

Big Fish – Sony Classical

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Danny Elfman looks like winning big awards for Big Fish, his sumptuous score for Tim Burton's best film. His track record?Men In Black, Good Will Hunting, Spider-Man?suggests they might even decide it's his turn for an Oscar. Supporting his work here is a stream of era-evoking pop songs from Elvis ("All Shook Up"), Buddy Holly ("Everyday"), Bing Crosby, The Allman Brothers and Canned Heat. And?perhaps incongruously?a new Pearl Jam track, "Man Of The Hour". Written within days of first viewing the film, it begins: "Tidal waves don't beg forgiveness." Go with the flow.

Danny Elfman looks like winning big awards for Big Fish, his sumptuous score for Tim Burton’s best film. His track record?Men In Black, Good Will Hunting, Spider-Man?suggests they might even decide it’s his turn for an Oscar. Supporting his work here is a stream of era-evoking pop songs from Elvis (“All Shook Up”), Buddy Holly (“Everyday”), Bing Crosby, The Allman Brothers and Canned Heat. And?perhaps incongruously?a new Pearl Jam track, “Man Of The Hour”. Written within days of first viewing the film, it begins: “Tidal waves don’t beg forgiveness.” Go with the flow.

Ennio Morricone: Arena Concerto – East West

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Recorded at shows in Verona, Naples and Rome, this is as close to a Morricone live album as we'll get (given he's in his late seventies). The maestro conducts a 90-piece orchestra and 100 vocalists through a dozen selections from his (over) 400 scores. It's as gorgeous as you'd expect. Beginning with, to this reviewer's ears, his finest work?Once Upon A Time In America?it lopes, veers and swoops through themes and purple passages from, among others, The Good, The Bad And The Ugly, Cinema Paradiso and Once Upon A Time In The West.

Recorded at shows in Verona, Naples and Rome, this is as close to a Morricone live album as we’ll get (given he’s in his late seventies). The maestro conducts a 90-piece orchestra and 100 vocalists through a dozen selections from his (over) 400 scores. It’s as gorgeous as you’d expect. Beginning with, to this reviewer’s ears, his finest work?Once Upon A Time In America?it lopes, veers and swoops through themes and purple passages from, among others, The Good, The Bad And The Ugly, Cinema Paradiso and Once Upon A Time In The West.

Bow Selecta

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Further to the World Of Arthur Russell compilation reviewed in these pages a couple of months back (Uncut 81, February 2004), now comes the album on which Russell worked painstakingly between 1987 and his death from AIDS in 1992. In many ways the record is the epic intimacy of 1986's World Of Echo gone pop, but it is also a record of astounding brilliance, imagination and?despite Russell's failing health?joy and optimism. To a great extent, Calling Out Of Context comes across as reductionism of '80s pop. A song like "Arm Around You" is simultaneously a breath and a galaxy away from being Phil Collins, but instead of Linn drums smacking you around the head like Thatcher's handbag, Russell offers an amiable and genuinely joyous expression of love, and the demo-standard drum machine is set against endlessly inventive asides and figures from Russell's electronically processed cello. And there is a reminder of how sadly Jennifer Warnes' angelic embrace of a voice has been underused elsewhere as she duets with Russell on "That's Us/Wild Combination." Rather than John Martyn, Russell's feather-light, near-androgynous tenor voice is actually far closer to Shuggie Otis?hear how he trembles over the line "Not sure it's OK/We're feeling this good" on "You And Me Both". And throughout the album one recalls the direction AR Kane could have taken following their 1989 i album; songs like "Hop On Down"?with its constant interruptions of violent electronic static?always divert into unexpected territories. The highlight is the hypnotic "The Platform On The Ocean", which develops the aqueous theme of World Of Echo. As Russell's stream-of-consciousness vocals repeatedly split and multiply, the song could almost be a template for what Underworld went on to do. You should put this peerless record on your shopping list ahead of most of the rest of this month's pabulum.

Further to the World Of Arthur Russell compilation reviewed in these pages a couple of months back (Uncut 81, February 2004), now comes the album on which Russell worked painstakingly between 1987 and his death from AIDS in 1992. In many ways the record is the epic intimacy of 1986’s World Of Echo gone pop, but it is also a record of astounding brilliance, imagination and?despite Russell’s failing health?joy and optimism.

To a great extent, Calling Out Of Context comes across as reductionism of ’80s pop. A song like “Arm Around You” is simultaneously a breath and a galaxy away from being Phil Collins, but instead of Linn drums smacking you around the head like Thatcher’s handbag, Russell offers an amiable and genuinely joyous expression of love, and the demo-standard drum machine is set against endlessly inventive asides and figures from Russell’s electronically processed cello. And there is a reminder of how sadly Jennifer Warnes’ angelic embrace of a voice has been underused elsewhere as she duets with Russell on “That’s Us/Wild Combination.”

Rather than John Martyn, Russell’s feather-light, near-androgynous tenor voice is actually far closer to Shuggie Otis?hear how he trembles over the line “Not sure it’s OK/We’re feeling this good” on “You And Me Both”. And throughout the album one recalls the direction AR Kane could have taken following their 1989 i album; songs like “Hop On Down”?with its constant interruptions of violent electronic static?always divert into unexpected territories.

The highlight is the hypnotic “The Platform On The Ocean”, which develops the aqueous theme of World Of Echo. As Russell’s stream-of-consciousness vocals repeatedly split and multiply, the song could almost be a template for what Underworld went on to do. You should put this peerless record on your shopping list ahead of most of the rest of this month’s pabulum.

Cop Suey

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DIRECTED BY Andrew Lau, Alan Mak

DIRECTED BY

Andrew Lau, Alan Mak

Paycheck

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OPENED JANUARY 16, CERT 12A, 118 MINS Ben Affleck is the lantern-jawed, perma-tanned preppie genius Michael Jennings, a "reverse engineer" who regularly has his memory wiped when performing confidential assignments. After completing a job for billionaire Jimmy Rethrick (Aaron Eckhart), Jennings wakes to find three years of his life deleted and a Jiffy bag full of random objects waiting for him, instead of the expected $90m cheque. The FBI and Rethrick's head of security (Colm Feore) appear to want him incarcerated/dead, so our sharp-suited hero is forced to go on the run while trying to figure out what the fuck's going on. It's all a bit North By Northwest meets Total Recall, with the emphasis firmly on teen-friendly action rather than operatic violence. Affleck's okay, the pace never lets up and there's all the usual John Woo motifs: heavily choreographed action, soaring doves and a climactic two-man guns-to-the-throat stand-off. Hardly a work of genius, but it'll do until Woo finds himself a Hollywood project that can match Face/Off.

OPENED JANUARY 16, CERT 12A, 118 MINS

Ben Affleck is the lantern-jawed, perma-tanned preppie genius Michael Jennings, a “reverse engineer” who regularly has his memory wiped when performing confidential assignments.

After completing a job for billionaire Jimmy Rethrick (Aaron Eckhart), Jennings wakes to find three years of his life deleted and a Jiffy bag full of random objects waiting for him, instead of the expected $90m cheque. The FBI and Rethrick’s head of security (Colm Feore) appear to want him incarcerated/dead, so our sharp-suited hero is forced to go on the run while trying to figure out what the fuck’s going on.

It’s all a bit North By Northwest meets Total Recall, with the emphasis firmly on teen-friendly action rather than operatic violence. Affleck’s okay, the pace never lets up and there’s all the usual John Woo motifs: heavily choreographed action, soaring doves and a climactic two-man guns-to-the-throat stand-off. Hardly a work of genius, but it’ll do until Woo finds himself a Hollywood project that can match Face/Off.

Pieces Of April

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OPENS FEBRUARY 20, CERT 15, 81 MINS An overwrought directorial debut from quirky comedy writer Peter Hedges (What's Eating Gilbert Grape, About A Boy). Katie Holmes pseudo-slums it in neo-punk pigtails and goth mascara as the eponymous April Burns, the bad-apple daughter in skidsville Manhattan aiming to appease her stiff suburban family with a Thanksgiving meal. Only problem is... her oven's busted, her effete neighbour kidnaps her turkey, her doughnut-addicted mother is dying of cancer, her brother's a pothead, her sister's hysterical, her granny's senile and her boyfriend just might be a double-dealing gangsta. Which would be pure comedy bonanza if this was a gag-a-minute Ivan Reitman comedy, but here, amid the shaky grey pixels, rough sound and worthy pretensions (a wordless freeze-frame sequence), it all seems a bit fake. Added to which is the ending, crashing unceremoniously into view on 81 minutes, resolving all plot-lines with a syrupy musical montage.

OPENS FEBRUARY 20, CERT 15, 81 MINS

An overwrought directorial debut from quirky comedy writer Peter Hedges (What’s Eating Gilbert Grape, About A Boy). Katie Holmes pseudo-slums it in neo-punk pigtails and goth mascara as the eponymous April Burns, the bad-apple daughter in skidsville Manhattan aiming to appease her stiff suburban family with a Thanksgiving meal. Only problem is… her oven’s busted, her effete neighbour kidnaps her turkey, her doughnut-addicted mother is dying of cancer, her brother’s a pothead, her sister’s hysterical, her granny’s senile and her boyfriend just might be a double-dealing gangsta.

Which would be pure comedy bonanza if this was a gag-a-minute Ivan Reitman comedy, but here, amid the shaky grey pixels, rough sound and worthy pretensions (a wordless freeze-frame sequence), it all seems a bit fake. Added to which is the ending, crashing unceremoniously into view on 81 minutes, resolving all plot-lines with a syrupy musical montage.