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Cabin Fever – La-La Land Records

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Generic horror film, scored by Nathan Barr with contributions from the man who ups the eerie ante for David Lynch Angelo Badalamenti. Also has spooky-in-context songs from The Turtlenecks and Your Mom. Deliberately nerve-jangling: when I wanted to take it off, I couldn't. Most entertaining are Barr's sleevenotes: "After the score was completed I checked myself into the local psychiatric facility for various tests and shock therapy. They released me after a month with an electronic monitoring bracelet. The voices in my head have now turned from shouts to whispers." You don't get quality like that from John Williams, do you?

Generic horror film, scored by Nathan Barr with contributions from the man who ups the eerie ante for David Lynch Angelo Badalamenti. Also has spooky-in-context songs from The Turtlenecks and Your Mom. Deliberately nerve-jangling: when I wanted to take it off, I couldn’t. Most entertaining are Barr’s sleevenotes: “After the score was completed I checked myself into the local psychiatric facility for various tests and shock therapy. They released me after a month with an electronic monitoring bracelet. The voices in my head have now turned from shouts to whispers.” You don’t get quality like that from John Williams, do you?

Honey – Elektra

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This is cooler than cool. Probably a guilty pleasure, as the movie appears to be a thinly-veiled remake of Flashdance starring Jessica Alba, but it swings like a narcissistic cat. Missy Elliott (who cameos in the film) lures us in with "Hurt Sumthin", and it just gets better from there. Tweet's "Thugman" is delicious, Nate Dogg's "Leave Her Alone" is beat-perfect, and Erick Sermon and Redman's "React" causes you to do just that. Best of all is "Closer" by Gospele, which slinks and purrs like nothing since Brandy and Monica's first hit (keep up, kids). The pure R&B answer to 8 Mile, it drips and oozes in all the right crevices. Sweet.

This is cooler than cool. Probably a guilty pleasure, as the movie appears to be a thinly-veiled remake of Flashdance starring Jessica Alba, but it swings like a narcissistic cat. Missy Elliott (who cameos in the film) lures us in with “Hurt Sumthin”, and it just gets better from there. Tweet’s “Thugman” is delicious, Nate Dogg’s “Leave Her Alone” is beat-perfect, and Erick Sermon and Redman’s “React” causes you to do just that. Best of all is “Closer” by Gospele, which slinks and purrs like nothing since Brandy and Monica’s first hit (keep up, kids). The pure R&B answer to 8 Mile, it drips and oozes in all the right crevices. Sweet.

Charalambides – Unknown Spin

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The American underground is currently full of unashamedly cosmic bands, like Sunburned Hand Of The Man and Tower Recordings, who mix folk and psychedelia with an unusually fluent understanding of improvised music. Unfortunately, most of their records are difficult to track down, as they're only released in tiny, elaborately packaged quantities. Thanks to Kranky, then, for reissuing Unknown Spin, previously a limited run of 300 CD-Rs. Charalambides are a Texan trio specialising in a kind of desert drone constructed from guitar, wordless female harmonies and spectral pedal-steel. It's hardly the most immediate music, but over four lengthy tracks what initially appear to be ambient meditations accumulate into something graceful, unpredictable and gripping.

The American underground is currently full of unashamedly cosmic bands, like Sunburned Hand Of The Man and Tower Recordings, who mix folk and psychedelia with an unusually fluent understanding of improvised music. Unfortunately, most of their records are difficult to track down, as they’re only released in tiny, elaborately packaged quantities. Thanks to Kranky, then, for reissuing Unknown Spin, previously a limited run of 300 CD-Rs. Charalambides are a Texan trio specialising in a kind of desert drone constructed from guitar, wordless female harmonies and spectral pedal-steel. It’s hardly the most immediate music, but over four lengthy tracks what initially appear to be ambient meditations accumulate into something graceful, unpredictable and gripping.

Charles Webster – Remixed On The 24th Of July

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Producer Webster remains best known for giving Shara Nelson's post-Massive Attack career a much-needed boost with Presence's "Sense Of Danger" in 1999. The album he released two years later under his own name is an understated classic of gentle, soulful house?without any of the ghastliness that generally ensues when the words "soulful" and "house" are combined. Collaborators seem to have been chosen to subtly beef up the mood without wrecking the overall poise. Webster's own bubbling Presence dub of "Your Life", Brennan Green and Daniel Wang's deliciously old-school-funky "Forget The Past" and the eccentric precision of Herbert's take on "Ready" are highlights on an album whose consistency can't be faulted.

Producer Webster remains best known for giving Shara Nelson’s post-Massive Attack career a much-needed boost with Presence’s “Sense Of Danger” in 1999. The album he released two years later under his own name is an understated classic of gentle, soulful house?without any of the ghastliness that generally ensues when the words “soulful” and “house” are combined. Collaborators seem to have been chosen to subtly beef up the mood without wrecking the overall poise. Webster’s own bubbling Presence dub of “Your Life”, Brennan Green and Daniel Wang’s deliciously old-school-funky “Forget The Past” and the eccentric precision of Herbert’s take on “Ready” are highlights on an album whose consistency can’t be faulted.

Woodstar – Life Sparks

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Dublin five-piece Woodstar are superior Flaming Lips copyists. Singer Fin Chambers does a great Wayne Coyne, while the four players strive, and sometimes achieve, the luscious bombast of Lips instru-mentalists Drozd and Ivins. The credits on Life Sparks are impressive: Stephen Street produced five t...

Dublin five-piece Woodstar are superior Flaming Lips copyists. Singer Fin Chambers does a great Wayne Coyne, while the four players strive, and sometimes achieve, the luscious bombast of Lips instru-mentalists Drozd and Ivins. The credits on Life Sparks are impressive: Stephen Street produced five tracks, while Ben Hillier (of Blur’s Think Tank fame) did the honours on “Time To Bleed”, easily the best thing here, a sm

Voodoo Child – Baby Monkey

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Voodoo Child is the alter ego (one of five, in fact) of Moby, allowing him to make what he describes as "hard, sexy, straightforward dance music". Baby Monkey is his second full-length outing and was apparently designed to remind him of "the best underground clubs that I had been to over the last couple of years". It thus lays no claims to experimentalism and is rather about tapping into the memory of shared euphoria. Its connection to the tough, Detroit techno of Jeff Mills is obvious, but standout tracks "Electronics", "Harpie" and "Strings" rather recall the British post-techno of Orbital and Underworld. An interesting addition to the artist's varied oeuvre, rather than a vital record in its own right.

Voodoo Child is the alter ego (one of five, in fact) of Moby, allowing him to make what he describes as “hard, sexy, straightforward dance music”. Baby Monkey is his second full-length outing and was apparently designed to remind him of “the best underground clubs that I had been to over the last couple of years”. It thus lays no claims to experimentalism and is rather about tapping into the memory of shared euphoria. Its connection to the tough, Detroit techno of Jeff Mills is obvious, but standout tracks “Electronics”, “Harpie” and “Strings” rather recall the British post-techno of Orbital and Underworld. An interesting addition to the artist’s varied oeuvre, rather than a vital record in its own right.

The Afternoons – My Lost City

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Enough to warm the cockles of the bleakest midwinter, My Lost City rubberstamps the promise of debut The Days We Found The Sun with sighing choruses, skyward harmonies and more bounce than a beachball. Irresistibly swoonsome in a Teenage Fanclub vein. "For A Fool" is the Undertones'"Got To Have You Back" for the Thrills crowd; "First And Last" could easily come summer-raining from The Icicle Works'first album; "You Can Change The World" is sweeter than a New Seekers Pepsi ad. Bring me sunshine, indeed.

Enough to warm the cockles of the bleakest midwinter, My Lost City rubberstamps the promise of debut The Days We Found The Sun with sighing choruses, skyward harmonies and more bounce than a beachball. Irresistibly swoonsome in a Teenage Fanclub vein. “For A Fool” is the Undertones'”Got To Have You Back” for the Thrills crowd; “First And Last” could easily come summer-raining from The Icicle Works’first album; “You Can Change The World” is sweeter than a New Seekers Pepsi ad. Bring me sunshine, indeed.

Kid 606 – Kill Sound Before Sound Kills You

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Over the past five years, San Francisco's Miguel "Kid 606" Depedro has provoked, invented and exploited many electro trends, mixing up aggro-techno, drill'n'bass, hip hop bootlegs, plunderphonics, vandalised pop, and anything else that can enhance his reputation as a punky noise entrepreneur. Surprisingly, Kill Sound...is his first proper album for three years. As such, it endeavours to show off his full arsenal of quirks, from brattish, squitting gabba rave-ups ("Ecstasy Motherfucker") and pummelling dancehall mutations ("Buckle Up") to the Eno-esque "Parenthood". It's undeniably entertaining, but perhaps while Depedro has been busy with his flourishing Tigerbeat 6 label, at least one of his roster?the terrific DJ/rupture?may have superseded him.

Over the past five years, San Francisco’s Miguel “Kid 606” Depedro has provoked, invented and exploited many electro trends, mixing up aggro-techno, drill’n’bass, hip hop bootlegs, plunderphonics, vandalised pop, and anything else that can enhance his reputation as a punky noise entrepreneur. Surprisingly, Kill Sound…is his first proper album for three years. As such, it endeavours to show off his full arsenal of quirks, from brattish, squitting gabba rave-ups (“Ecstasy Motherfucker”) and pummelling dancehall mutations (“Buckle Up”) to the Eno-esque “Parenthood”. It’s undeniably entertaining, but perhaps while Depedro has been busy with his flourishing Tigerbeat 6 label, at least one of his roster?the terrific DJ/rupture?may have superseded him.

Camera Obscura – Underachievers Please Try Harder

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How appropriate that this should appear on the Elefant label, for, unlike Elephant, this really does seem to be the sort of record we'd have preferred to emerge from an idealised 1963. Very much in the Belle & Sebastian mode, with three vocalists (two female, one male), this is revitalising indie-pop. Hear your heart break at the Joe Meek soprano who wanders in halfway through "Teenager". Wonder why no Britpoppers could do Northern Soul as effortlessly and brilliantly as "Let Me Go Home". The closing chorus of "I'll keep you safe and warm tonight" on "Knee Deep At The NPL" might be the most touching moment in any pop this year.

How appropriate that this should appear on the Elefant label, for, unlike Elephant, this really does seem to be the sort of record we’d have preferred to emerge from an idealised 1963. Very much in the Belle & Sebastian mode, with three vocalists (two female, one male), this is revitalising indie-pop. Hear your heart break at the Joe Meek soprano who wanders in halfway through “Teenager”. Wonder why no Britpoppers could do Northern Soul as effortlessly and brilliantly as “Let Me Go Home”. The closing chorus of “I’ll keep you safe and warm tonight” on “Knee Deep At The NPL” might be the most touching moment in any pop this year.

Lisa Gerrard With Patrick Cassidy – Immortal Memory

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It's so long since we heard from Dead Can Dance we must assume the pairing of Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry has shuffled off this musical coil. Gerrard now composes soundtracks (Gladiator, MI:2), and on Immortal Memory she teams up with Irish classicist Patrick Cassidy. As background listening, thi...

It’s so long since we heard from Dead Can Dance we must assume the pairing of Lisa Gerrard and Brendan Perry has shuffled off this musical coil. Gerrard now composes soundtracks (Gladiator, MI:2), and on Immortal Memory she teams up with Irish classicist Patrick Cassidy. As background listening, this sounds like high-class Enya, but listen harder and dense textures and nuances lie beneath the surface. As for Gerrard’s voice, it’s hard not to descend into such clich

Robert Wyatt – Solar Flares Burn For You

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There's a great moment in Don't Look Back where Dylan informs a disbelieving reporter that he's as good a singer as Caruso, qualifying the claim by stating he hits all the notes that he wants to hit. Robert Wyatt is of exactly the same mould. That quavery high pitch and childlike annunciation spring from one of contemporary music's most original voices. Much of Solar Flares documents an artist in transition. "Fol De Rol" and "We Got An Arts Council Grant" from a 1972 Peel session capture Wyatt, fussily augmented by Francis Monkman on keyboards, in Portrait Of The Artist As An Undisciplined Pisshead mode. The Pythonesque indulgence hasn't worn well. "God Song" and "Little Child", on the other hand, are inspirational. "Alifib" and "Sea Song" from a 1974 Peel session are stripped-down versions of tracks from Rock Bottom. He once told me that the photographer at an interview session had remarked: "I see you as a wise buddha." "No, I'm not," responded Wyatt. "I'm a punk in a wheelchair!" That restless intellect pulsates through the albums more recent tracks. "Blimey O'Reilly" and "Twas Brillig", two new collaborations with former colleague Hugh Hopper, suggest there's plenty of life left in that partnership. "The Verb", meanwhile, sounds like work in progress. Wyatt's entire creative life does.

There’s a great moment in Don’t Look Back where Dylan informs a disbelieving reporter that he’s as good a singer as Caruso, qualifying the claim by stating he hits all the notes that he wants to hit. Robert Wyatt is of exactly the same mould. That quavery high pitch and childlike annunciation spring from one of contemporary music’s most original voices.

Much of Solar Flares documents an artist in transition. “Fol De Rol” and “We Got An Arts Council Grant” from a 1972 Peel session capture Wyatt, fussily augmented by Francis Monkman on keyboards, in Portrait Of The Artist As An Undisciplined Pisshead mode. The Pythonesque indulgence hasn’t worn well. “God Song” and “Little Child”, on the other hand, are inspirational. “Alifib” and “Sea Song” from a 1974 Peel session are stripped-down versions of tracks from Rock Bottom.

He once told me that the photographer at an interview session had remarked: “I see you as a wise buddha.” “No, I’m not,” responded Wyatt. “I’m a punk in a wheelchair!” That restless intellect pulsates through the albums more recent tracks. “Blimey O’Reilly” and “Twas Brillig”, two new collaborations with former colleague Hugh Hopper, suggest there’s plenty of life left in that partnership. “The Verb”, meanwhile, sounds like work in progress. Wyatt’s entire creative life does.

Fun Boys Three

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It seems as if culture's dowsing rod is forever fixing on some new city or other and declaring it cool: Reykjavik one month and Stockholm the next; a year later Melbourne; then Detroit and, more recently, NYC. Or, specifically, Brooklyn. Lesser talents might argue that they were there first, but such crass proprietary claims are beneath Oneida. Formed as a quartet in 1997 in Williamsburg?then a wasteland of abandoned warehouses and boarded-up basements?they established a vibrant, community-based culture of now-legendary parties that owed more to Warhol's Factory 'happenings' of the '60s than it did to the Manhattan rock club circuit. Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Liars might subsequently have garnered all the acclaim, but it's Oneida's freaky flag that first marked the spot. Now a trio, Oneida peddle a sound so heroically out of temper with the times that they may as well be a barbershop quartet. Theirs is a maniacal mish-mash of seemingly incompatible musical styles?Krautrock, psychedelia, no-wave, prog, synth-pop, '70s stoner rock and punk?wrought from a deeply felt, genre-leaping love of challenge. The anarchic intelligence of Bobby Matador, Hanoi Jane and Kid Millions is the driving force. Inside Oneida's apparent chaos, though, there are throbbing grooves and enough irresistible keyboard riffs to satisfy diehards. Thus, although the energy of "$50 Tea" suggests Suicide dallying with Beefheart and "Caesar's Column" recalls both Neu! and Acid Mothers Temple, "Wild Horses" is as gnarly as anything by Neil Young. "Changes In The City" is the closing, 14-minute-plus instrumental wig-out, its title suggesting that although Brooklyn made Oneida what they are, now, the world beckons.

It seems as if culture’s dowsing rod is forever fixing on some new city or other and declaring it cool: Reykjavik one month and Stockholm the next; a year later Melbourne; then Detroit and, more recently, NYC. Or, specifically, Brooklyn.

Lesser talents might argue that they were there first, but such crass proprietary claims are beneath Oneida. Formed as a quartet in 1997 in Williamsburg?then a wasteland of abandoned warehouses and boarded-up basements?they established a vibrant, community-based culture of now-legendary parties that owed more to Warhol’s Factory ‘happenings’ of the ’60s than it did to the Manhattan rock club circuit. Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Liars might subsequently have garnered all the acclaim, but it’s Oneida’s freaky flag that first marked the spot.

Now a trio, Oneida peddle a sound so heroically out of temper with the times that they may as well be a barbershop quartet. Theirs is a maniacal mish-mash of seemingly incompatible musical styles?Krautrock, psychedelia, no-wave, prog, synth-pop, ’70s stoner rock and punk?wrought from a deeply felt, genre-leaping love of challenge.

The anarchic intelligence of Bobby Matador, Hanoi Jane and Kid Millions is the driving force. Inside Oneida’s apparent chaos, though, there are throbbing grooves and enough irresistible keyboard riffs to satisfy diehards. Thus, although the energy of “$50 Tea” suggests Suicide dallying with Beefheart and “Caesar’s Column” recalls both Neu! and Acid Mothers Temple, “Wild Horses” is as gnarly as anything by Neil Young. “Changes In The City” is the closing, 14-minute-plus instrumental wig-out, its title suggesting that although Brooklyn made Oneida what they are, now, the world beckons.

Spouse Anthems

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K7! Given her wonderfully insolent and vital contributions to Matthew Herbert's previous musical endeavours (most notably on 2001's Bodily Functions), this debut album from singer Dani Siciliano is long overdue. Indeed, the record has taken some three years to come together, Siciliano having invest...

K7!

Given her wonderfully insolent and vital contributions to Matthew Herbert’s previous musical endeavours (most notably on 2001’s Bodily Functions), this debut album from singer Dani Siciliano is long overdue. Indeed, the record has taken some three years to come together, Siciliano having invested in a basic home studio and learnt from scratch how to assemble the 11 performances featured here. And how do they sound? Like a more minimalist yet more generous version of Goldfrapp without the fatal smugness, with a view to deliciously warping R&B and glitch rather than recycling glam rock.

Besides and beneath all the mischief displayed here, though, there is an undertow of melancholy gravity, never better expressed than on the techno fugue of the album’s stunning nine-minute opener, “Same”. Building up from a basic “O Superman”-style one-note loop, Siciliano’s voice emerges from a babble of glitch to state mournfully: “You don’t look the same.”

Other musical elements are added one at a time, and the rhythm very artfully evolves from jazz to samba to deep house and finally to a grieving orchestral climax, Siciliano all the time sounding as though she’s about to be swallowed up by her laptop.

Her radical recasting of Nirvana’s “Come As You Are” is almost worth the price of the album in itself. With only nodding melodic references to the original, Siciliano instead offers a sultry Latin mood, underscored by a lugubrious French horn arrangement and a rhythm which seems to be made from samples of a gun loading (“And I swear I don’t have a gun”). As with Prince, the defining factor in Siciliano’s music is what she leaves out; consider “Walk The Line”, where her emotionally blank vocals (very No Wave) are met by lunging synth belches which seem to have escaped from a 1991 rave. Similarly, songs like “Extra Ordinary” and “Red” are just that crucial spoonfed beat away from being hits for Britney or Xtina, though here Siciliano understands that suggesting a beat is often far sexier than mechanically emphasising it (“I just can’t get by on insincerities”). “Extra Ordinary”, in particular, with its faux-coy vocal and catchy but lethal chorus, could almost be an updated Lynsey De Paul (and that’s meant as a compliment).

“All The Above”, a vocal duet with guitarist O Mugison, updates Grace Jones'”Libertango” for the faceless age (“To forgive is to forget…all the above make love”) while “She Say Clich

Luomo – The Present Lover

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There's so much space to breathe in this immaculate record, which concerns itself with how the difficulties of communication obstruct one's ability to love. From the dislocated meditation on a spent relationship that is "Visitor"?Biosphere does Stockhausen's "Stimmung"?through to the brilliant use of the "Can't Get You Out Of My Head" beat in the splendid isolation of the title track, Luomo's instinctive architecture is breathtaking. The point in "Tessio" in which, at 5:51, choirs of electronica suddenly emerge into view, is comparable with stout Cortez's first sight of the Pacific Ocean. And if the Donna Summer-esque vulnerability of the closing "Shelter" doesn't move your soul to tears, you deserve your Dido records. Music for this most uncertain of winters.

There’s so much space to breathe in this immaculate record, which concerns itself with how the difficulties of communication obstruct one’s ability to love. From the dislocated meditation on a spent relationship that is “Visitor”?Biosphere does Stockhausen’s “Stimmung”?through to the brilliant use of the “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” beat in the splendid isolation of the title track, Luomo’s instinctive architecture is breathtaking. The point in “Tessio” in which, at 5:51, choirs of electronica suddenly emerge into view, is comparable with stout Cortez’s first sight of the Pacific Ocean. And if the Donna Summer-esque vulnerability of the closing “Shelter” doesn’t move your soul to tears, you deserve your Dido records. Music for this most uncertain of winters.

David Kitt – Square 1

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Kitt knows a thing or two about the up and the down, the joy and the pain, the minor chords and the major heartaches. Low-slung beats and bursts of brass and strings wrap themselves around sparse, electro-acoustic melodies. In places, it sounds like it could have been recorded for the Sarah label?but thankfully swaps the debilitating tweeness for a lyrical bite (or at least a nibble) and a winning way with feedback. Experimental and enchanting, equally.

Kitt knows a thing or two about the up and the down, the joy and the pain, the minor chords and the major heartaches. Low-slung beats and bursts of brass and strings wrap themselves around sparse, electro-acoustic melodies.

In places, it sounds like it could have been recorded for the Sarah label?but thankfully swaps the debilitating tweeness for a lyrical bite (or at least a nibble) and a winning way with feedback.

Experimental and enchanting, equally.

Einar Örn – Ghostigital

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Compared to her former Sugarcubes colleague Einar...

Compared to her former Sugarcubes colleague Einar

Show Of Hands – Country Life

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Guesting on Tom Robinson's Radio 6 show recently, he blind-played a Show Of Hands track and invited me to guess its provenance. I hazarded Kentucky. The answer turned out to be Devon. I tried it on friends and nobody had a clue. Yet the West Country acoustic duo have serious form as stalwarts of the English roots scene. Phil Beer has played mandolin for The Rolling Stones (a distinction shared with Ry Cooder) and Steve Knightley was all over Mick Jagger's last solo record. Their latest, Country Life, cleverly mixes English and American influences with pleasing echoes of both Richard Thompson and Steve Earle. A revelation.

Guesting on Tom Robinson’s Radio 6 show recently, he blind-played a Show Of Hands track and invited me to guess its provenance. I hazarded Kentucky. The answer turned out to be Devon. I tried it on friends and nobody had a clue. Yet the West Country acoustic duo have serious form as stalwarts of the English roots scene. Phil Beer has played mandolin for The Rolling Stones (a distinction shared with Ry Cooder) and Steve Knightley was all over Mick Jagger’s last solo record. Their latest, Country Life, cleverly mixes English and American influences with pleasing echoes of both Richard Thompson and Steve Earle. A revelation.

Lesser – Suppressive Acts I-X

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Heavy conceptual avant-noise time again, as Lesser takes a limited bunch of samples to "try to bind a history of metal to a career in electronica". One can only assume that this seasoned prankster is trying to reference both genres' capacity for brutality and outrage, particularly when the 10 pieces have titles like "Ancient Chinese Whack-Off Session". Ironically, the results are rarely as provocative as you'd hope, weirdly boring and restrained next to the chaos of 2001's Gearhound. "The Science Of Pathology" is an entertaining reconstruction of thrash metal, and "Dandy In The Fedora" is a fairly gut-churning hip hop pastiche. But, in general, Lesser's intellectual and musical stuntplay pales next to the marvels generated by his sometime collaborators, Matmos.

Heavy conceptual avant-noise time again, as Lesser takes a limited bunch of samples to “try to bind a history of metal to a career in electronica”. One can only assume that this seasoned prankster is trying to reference both genres’ capacity for brutality and outrage, particularly when the 10 pieces have titles like “Ancient Chinese Whack-Off Session”. Ironically, the results are rarely as provocative as you’d hope, weirdly boring and restrained next to the chaos of 2001’s Gearhound. “The Science Of Pathology” is an entertaining reconstruction of thrash metal, and “Dandy In The Fedora” is a fairly gut-churning hip hop pastiche. But, in general, Lesser’s intellectual and musical stuntplay pales next to the marvels generated by his sometime collaborators, Matmos.

Savath & Savalas – Apropat

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Just as Scott Herren starts getting the acclaim he deserves in his guise as leftfield hip hop producer Prefuse 73, the Atlanta native and Barcelona resident shifts identities. Savath & Savalas were last spotted in 2000 as pensive, decent post-rockers. Now, though, Herren has a new partner?Catalonian singer/songwriter Eva Puyuelo Muns?and a gorgeous new sound. So hazy Latin songs emerge out of discreet electronic flutter, acoustic guitars trace shapes around Muns' and Herren's androgynous harmonies, odd bits of Tortoise go about their business in the background. And the whole thing emerges as an enchanting update of the dreamier end of '70s Brazilian pop?as good a record, in fact, as anything this gifted polymath has ever released.

Just as Scott Herren starts getting the acclaim he deserves in his guise as leftfield hip hop producer Prefuse 73, the Atlanta native and Barcelona resident shifts identities. Savath & Savalas were last spotted in 2000 as pensive, decent post-rockers. Now, though, Herren has a new partner?Catalonian singer/songwriter Eva Puyuelo Muns?and a gorgeous new sound. So hazy Latin songs emerge out of discreet electronic flutter, acoustic guitars trace shapes around Muns’ and Herren’s androgynous harmonies, odd bits of Tortoise go about their business in the background. And the whole thing emerges as an enchanting update of the dreamier end of ’70s Brazilian pop?as good a record, in fact, as anything this gifted polymath has ever released.

The Ladybug – Transistor

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Five albums in, TLT hit paydirt. Swapping their traditional Brooklyn studio for Craig (Calexico) Schumacher's Tucson one, Gary Olson's low-slung croon?a latterday Edwyn Collins?rolls across their most adventurous pop-baroque melodies yet. With Lambchop contributors Paul Niehaus (steel) and Dennis Cronin (trumpet) plumping up the pillowy layers of strings, Staxy horns and chugging organs, it's like Belle & Sebastian slopping sorbet with early Jonathan Richman. Cherry on top is Sasha Bell's delicious turn on "The Places You'll Call Home".

Five albums in, TLT hit paydirt. Swapping their traditional Brooklyn studio for Craig (Calexico) Schumacher’s Tucson one, Gary Olson’s low-slung croon?a latterday Edwyn Collins?rolls across their most adventurous pop-baroque melodies yet. With Lambchop contributors Paul Niehaus (steel) and Dennis Cronin (trumpet) plumping up the pillowy layers of strings, Staxy horns and chugging organs, it’s like Belle & Sebastian slopping sorbet with early Jonathan Richman. Cherry on top is Sasha Bell’s delicious turn on “The Places You’ll Call Home”.