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The Spinners – The Chrome Collection

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Either you can see this three-CD package as a potted history of black American music from doo wop to electro-funk via Motown, Philly and disco?because that's the ground The Spinners cover here?or simply as a showcase for their sublime recordings with Thom Bell, plus a bunch of filler. There's no denying the jejune appeal of 1961's "That's What Girls Are Made Of", nor the infectiousness of the much-sampled "It's A Shame" from 1970, and even later team-ups with the juicy, fruity Mtume are not the dads-go-trendy embarrassments that they might have been. But the crucial stuff remains The Spinners' summit encounters with Burt Blackarach himself, the aforementioned Mr Bell who, after inventing symphonic angst for The Delfonics and The Stylistics, evolved a more mature style for these doyens of Detroit vocal harmony. From 1972's "Could It Be I'm Falling In Love" to 1979's "Are You Ready For Love" (that recent No 1 for Elton John), Bell used flugelhorns, oboes and French horns to enhance Philippe Wynne's gentle tenor voice, providing a rich avant-lush backdrop for these soft paradigms of adult male heartache.

Either you can see this three-CD package as a potted history of black American music from doo wop to electro-funk via Motown, Philly and disco?because that’s the ground The Spinners cover here?or simply as a showcase for their sublime recordings with Thom Bell, plus a bunch of filler. There’s no denying the jejune appeal of 1961’s “That’s What Girls Are Made Of”, nor the infectiousness of the much-sampled “It’s A Shame” from 1970, and even later team-ups with the juicy, fruity Mtume are not the dads-go-trendy embarrassments that they might have been.

But the crucial stuff remains The Spinners’ summit encounters with Burt Blackarach himself, the aforementioned Mr Bell who, after inventing symphonic angst for The Delfonics and The Stylistics, evolved a more mature style for these doyens of Detroit vocal harmony. From 1972’s “Could It Be I’m Falling In Love” to 1979’s “Are You Ready For Love” (that recent No 1 for Elton John), Bell used flugelhorns, oboes and French horns to enhance Philippe Wynne’s gentle tenor voice, providing a rich avant-lush backdrop for these soft paradigms of adult male heartache.

Nude Awakening

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I know what you're thinking. Oh Lord, what's McCartney doing now? What desperate revisionism is he foisting on a Lennon-free world? Now calm down. Far from a repositioning of the historical spotlight that Macca bashers will be so keen to detect, the Let It Be remix is not only a noble, entirely worthwhile exercise which only enhances the reputation of all concerned, it also goes quite a way to putting right an episode which was, in Beatles terms, an historical wrong. Let It Be was The Beatles' penultimate project but the last-released Beatles album; recorded mostly in January 1969, it eventually appeared in May 1970, nine months after their true swan song, Abbey Road. Considered at the time a rather second-rate send-off, the manner of its release?by far the most cobbled-together and compromised of all Beatle albums?has left its reputation well behind most other Fab output. But the intentions were good. After the elaborate 1967 psychedelia of Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour and the individual musical personalities fighting for space on 1968's White Album, McCartney's initial idea was to get the Beatles back to being a band again, singing and playing as a four-piece. The filmed rehearsals?originally intended for a TV documentary that eventually became the Let It Be movie?would climax with an exotically located concert. However, with no one except McCartney really wanting to be there (the cavernous, cold Twickenham film studios), what actually occurred was directionless jamming and increasingly ill-tempered exchanges leading to Harrison temporarily walking out. Lennon later described the period as "the most miserable sessions on earth". Relocating to the studio in the Apple building basement, George invited keyboardist Billy Preston along for the remainder of the project (remembering the Fabs' improved behaviour when Clapton guested on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" on The White Album) and the band ground out an album's worth of material. The climactic concert was downsized to half an hour on the rooftop of the Apple building. With the group barely interested in the music they'd left behind, engineer Glyn Johns had a couple of (widely bootlegged) shots at compiling the so-called Get Back album from the hours of tape left behind but failed to get the band's approval for his efforts, and the project was shelved. (Johns has since been famously reluctant to talk about his experiences with The Beatles.) By early 1970, Lennon?inspired by his erstwhile business manager Allen Klein?was taking care of Beatle business without referring to an estranged McCartney and appointed Phil Spector to prepare the Get Back tapes into a releasable state as an album companion to the imminent movie. For a week or so, Spector hit Abbey Road studios running, abandoned the back-to-basics remit, got Ringo to overdub his drums, smeared lush stuff all over McCartney's ballads, performed some neat edits and produced a respectable record from what Lennon memorably called the "shittiest load of badly recorded shit". Of the significantly retitled Let It Be album, McCartney says now that "I didn't hate it, but I didn't like it, you know." At the time, however, he was so furious to have Beatles product put out without his approval, he cited it as one of the reasons why he wanted to legally dissolve The Beatles' partnership. Fast forward 30-odd years and Apple (mainly McCartney, but approved by Harrison and Starr) commission the Abbey Road team who remixed The Beatles for Yellow Submarine and Anthology for DVD to look once more at the session tapes and make the Let It Be album again, as they saw fit. Ironically, in attempting to better create the spirit of unadorned Beatles, the engineers have used whatever modern editing and processing they needed to achieve the best album they could. The result, however, is worth it. Anyone who knows the sloppy jamming of the film and bootleg albums or who sat through the dreary outtakes that made it to Anthology 3 will be relieved to learn that only tidy.performances of the core material comprise this 35-minute, 11-track album. It's not exactly transformed into a classic?apart from a couple of McCartney's big-hitters, it's the slightest selection of Beatle compositions since 1965's Help!?but the new Let It Be is punchy, full of presence and powerfully involving. What was previously an uneasy mix of medium-grade Beatles treated to glossy overstatement and irreverent editing is now a great little record. Of the main differences, "Don't Let Me Down" is at last on the album it should have been on all along (here, the passionate rooftop version), "The Long And Winding Road" is a later take with slightly different lyrics ("anyway, you've always known...") and there are no rolling toms in the final verse of "Let It Be". The highlight of the record, however, may be the new (corrected speed) mix of "Across The Universe", just Lennon with guitar plus hauntingly processed tamboura and a gorgeous new fade. Of the tiny differences only Beatleheads who know the original like the face of their mother will spot, more of the improvised vocal yelps of Lennon and (especially) McCartney are retained throughout, Preston's keyboard licks are more prominent on "I've Got A Feeling", and Lennon's rhythm guitar and the vocals are more defined generally. In fact, there's an immediacy and muscle to the sound, particularly the rockers ("One After 909", always a good performance, now sounds huge), that gives the impression of everything being louder than everything else. Now that's a good mix. Spector's edits on "Dig A Pony" and "I Me Mine" remain, though some may miss the raucous, always incomplete "Maggie Mae", the saggy improvised jam "Dig It" and Lennon's "Charles Hawtrey and the Deaf-aids" intros. As compensation, there's a 20-minute bonus disc?a mouth-watering taster for the extra footage of the Let It Be DVD, due in 2004?with around 25 items of other informal but fascinating studio flotsam, including Lennon singing McCartney's first ever song, "I Lost My Little Girl", and a snippet of a long lost Ringo song, "A Trip To Carolina". McCartney and Starr are said to be delighted. That makes three of us.

I know what you’re thinking. Oh Lord, what’s McCartney doing now? What desperate revisionism is he foisting on a Lennon-free world? Now calm down. Far from a repositioning of the historical spotlight that Macca bashers will be so keen to detect, the Let It Be remix is not only a noble, entirely worthwhile exercise which only enhances the reputation of all concerned, it also goes quite a way to putting right an episode which was, in Beatles terms, an historical wrong.

Let It Be was The Beatles’ penultimate project but the last-released Beatles album; recorded mostly in January 1969, it eventually appeared in May 1970, nine months after their true swan song, Abbey Road. Considered at the time a rather second-rate send-off, the manner of its release?by far the most cobbled-together and compromised of all Beatle albums?has left its reputation well behind most other Fab output.

But the intentions were good. After the elaborate 1967 psychedelia of Pepper and Magical Mystery Tour and the individual musical personalities fighting for space on 1968’s White Album, McCartney’s initial idea was to get the Beatles back to being a band again, singing and playing as a four-piece. The filmed rehearsals?originally intended for a TV documentary that eventually became the Let It Be movie?would climax with an exotically located concert. However, with no one except McCartney really wanting to be there (the cavernous, cold Twickenham film studios), what actually occurred was directionless jamming and increasingly ill-tempered exchanges leading to Harrison temporarily walking out. Lennon later described the period as “the most miserable sessions on earth”.

Relocating to the studio in the Apple building basement, George invited keyboardist Billy Preston along for the remainder of the project (remembering the Fabs’ improved behaviour when Clapton guested on “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” on The White Album) and the band ground out an album’s worth of material. The climactic concert was downsized to half an hour on the rooftop of the Apple building.

With the group barely interested in the music they’d left behind, engineer Glyn Johns had a couple of (widely bootlegged) shots at compiling the so-called Get Back album from the hours of tape left behind but failed to get the band’s approval for his efforts, and the project was shelved. (Johns has since been famously reluctant to talk about his experiences with The Beatles.) By early 1970, Lennon?inspired by his erstwhile business manager Allen Klein?was taking care of Beatle business without referring to an estranged McCartney and appointed Phil Spector to prepare the Get Back tapes into a releasable state as an album companion to the imminent movie. For a week or so, Spector hit Abbey Road studios running, abandoned the back-to-basics remit, got Ringo to overdub his drums, smeared lush stuff all over McCartney’s ballads, performed some neat edits and produced a respectable record from what Lennon memorably called the “shittiest load of badly recorded shit”. Of the significantly retitled Let It Be album, McCartney says now that “I didn’t hate it, but I didn’t like it, you know.” At the time, however, he was so furious to have Beatles product put out without his approval, he cited it as one of the reasons why he wanted to legally dissolve The Beatles’ partnership.

Fast forward 30-odd years and Apple (mainly McCartney, but approved by Harrison and Starr) commission the Abbey Road team who remixed The Beatles for Yellow Submarine and Anthology for DVD to look once more at the session tapes and make the Let It Be album again, as they saw fit. Ironically, in attempting to better create the spirit of unadorned Beatles, the engineers have used whatever modern editing and processing they needed to achieve the best album they could.

The result, however, is worth it. Anyone who knows the sloppy jamming of the film and bootleg albums or who sat through the dreary outtakes that made it to Anthology 3 will be relieved to learn that only tidy.performances of the core material comprise this 35-minute, 11-track album. It’s not exactly transformed into a classic?apart from a couple of McCartney’s big-hitters, it’s the slightest selection of Beatle compositions since 1965’s Help!?but the new Let It Be is punchy, full of presence and powerfully involving. What was previously an uneasy mix of medium-grade Beatles treated to glossy overstatement and irreverent editing is now a great little record.

Of the main differences, “Don’t Let Me Down” is at last on the album it should have been on all along (here, the passionate rooftop version), “The Long And Winding Road” is a later take with slightly different lyrics (“anyway, you’ve always known…”) and there are no rolling toms in the final verse of “Let It Be”. The highlight of the record, however, may be the new (corrected speed) mix of “Across The Universe”, just Lennon with guitar plus hauntingly processed tamboura and a gorgeous new fade.

Of the tiny differences only Beatleheads who know the original like the face of their mother will spot, more of the improvised vocal yelps of Lennon and (especially) McCartney are retained throughout, Preston’s keyboard licks are more prominent on “I’ve Got A Feeling”, and Lennon’s rhythm guitar and the vocals are more defined generally. In fact, there’s an immediacy and muscle to the sound, particularly the rockers (“One After 909”, always a good performance, now sounds huge), that gives the impression of everything being louder than everything else. Now that’s a good mix.

Spector’s edits on “Dig A Pony” and “I Me Mine” remain, though some may miss the raucous, always incomplete “Maggie Mae”, the saggy improvised jam “Dig It” and Lennon’s “Charles Hawtrey and the Deaf-aids” intros. As compensation, there’s a 20-minute bonus disc?a mouth-watering taster for the extra footage of the Let It Be DVD, due in 2004?with around 25 items of other informal but fascinating studio flotsam, including Lennon singing McCartney’s first ever song, “I Lost My Little Girl”, and a snippet of a long lost Ringo song, “A Trip To Carolina”.

McCartney and Starr are said to be delighted. That makes three of us.

Angel Of Darkness

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Peter Gabriel's career has always been a battle between the head and the heart. He is the egg-headed boffin, one of rock's most intimidating intellectuals who likes to tinker endlessly in the studio and who cloaks his work in artiness. And he's an emotional, impulsive man who knows the value of spontaneity and the importance of following his instincts. When the two are captured in perfectly balanced creative tension, he's capable of breathtakingly taut and powerfully moving music. Hit is not the first compilation of Gabriel's solo material. Shaking The Tree appeared in 1990 and most of the big tracks from that collection are reprised here?"Solsbury Hill", which allegorically described his exit from Genesis; "Biko", which remains a model of how to combine pop and politics with dignity and passion; the glorious duet with Kate Bush, "Don't Give Up", and the mysterious "Red Rain" (both of which are enhanced by Daniel Lanois' ethereal co-production); and the flowering of his world music interests on the duet with Youssou N'Dour which gave its title to that earlier compilation. Then, of course, there's the MTV staple anthem "Sledgehammer", which probably best captures the Gabriel dialectic?cultured and sophisticated but with a slamming beat, a white soul vocal and wonderfully libidinous lyric. Yet 1990 was only halfway through Gabriel's solo career. Although there have only been two regular studio albums since then, Us in 1992 and Up last year, he has hardly been idle, and exactly half of the tracks come from the period after 1990. There are four apiece from those two studio albums. But then there are the tracks that only the collectors will have?"Lovetown" from the film Philadelphia, the heart-rending "Father Son" plus "The Town That Ate People" and "Downside Up" from the Millennium Dome show, the evocative "Cloudless" from his soundtrack to Phillip Noyce's film Rabbit-Proof Fence, and the brilliant "Burn You Up Burn You Down", included on the earliest promo copies of Up but inexplicably omitted from the final version. Head and heart taken together make for a collection that not only confirms him as a unique voice in British popular music, but should also convince you that he's blessed with genius.

Peter Gabriel’s career has always been a battle between the head and the heart. He is the egg-headed boffin, one of rock’s most intimidating intellectuals who likes to tinker endlessly in the studio and who cloaks his work in artiness. And he’s an emotional, impulsive man who knows the value of spontaneity and the importance of following his instincts. When the two are captured in perfectly balanced creative tension, he’s capable of breathtakingly taut and powerfully moving music.

Hit is not the first compilation of Gabriel’s solo material. Shaking The Tree appeared in 1990 and most of the big tracks from that collection are reprised here?”Solsbury Hill”, which allegorically described his exit from Genesis; “Biko”, which remains a model of how to combine pop and politics with dignity and passion; the glorious duet with Kate Bush, “Don’t Give Up”, and the mysterious “Red Rain” (both of which are enhanced by Daniel Lanois’ ethereal co-production); and the flowering of his world music interests on the duet with Youssou N’Dour which gave its title to that earlier compilation. Then, of course, there’s the MTV staple anthem “Sledgehammer”, which probably best captures the Gabriel dialectic?cultured and sophisticated but with a slamming beat, a white soul vocal and wonderfully libidinous lyric.

Yet 1990 was only halfway through Gabriel’s solo career. Although there have only been two regular studio albums since then, Us in 1992 and Up last year, he has hardly been idle, and exactly half of the tracks come from the period after 1990.

There are four apiece from those two studio albums. But then there are the tracks that only the collectors will have?”Lovetown” from the film Philadelphia, the heart-rending “Father Son” plus “The Town That Ate People” and “Downside Up” from the Millennium Dome show, the evocative “Cloudless” from his soundtrack to Phillip Noyce’s film Rabbit-Proof Fence, and the brilliant “Burn You Up Burn You Down”, included on the earliest promo copies of Up but inexplicably omitted from the final version.

Head and heart taken together make for a collection that not only confirms him as a unique voice in British popular music, but should also convince you that he’s blessed with genius.

Nina Simone – Baltimore

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Never the easiest woman to coerce, Nina Simone's single-mindedness meant that for most of the '70s her music went unrecorded. In 1978, however, the CTI label tempted her into a Brussels studio to record the frequently lovely Baltimore. Predictably, she was soon bemoaning her lack of artistic involvement in the album. There are no Simone originals here, while faint reggae touches and a perky cover of Hall & Oates' "Rich Girl" suggest someone had fanciful commercial expectations of this most resilient genius. But ballads like Judy Collins' "My Father", where an imperious, comparatively restrained Simone stares down the oceanic string section, are wonderful. As with so many of her records, a triumph of grace under pressure.

Never the easiest woman to coerce, Nina Simone’s single-mindedness meant that for most of the ’70s her music went unrecorded. In 1978, however, the CTI label tempted her into a Brussels studio to record the frequently lovely Baltimore.

Predictably, she was soon bemoaning her lack of artistic involvement in the album. There are no Simone originals here, while faint reggae touches and a perky cover of Hall & Oates’ “Rich Girl” suggest someone had fanciful commercial expectations of this most resilient genius. But ballads like Judy Collins’ “My Father”, where an imperious, comparatively restrained Simone stares down the oceanic string section, are wonderful. As with so many of her records, a triumph of grace under pressure.

Nirvana

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Mining the same classical chamberpop as contemporaries Procul Harum, Alex Spyropoulos' and Patrick Campbell-Lyons' charges cut... Simon Simopath in 1967, a science-fiction pantomime a-flutter with silken strings and baroque delicacy. Part Greek myth, part L Ron Hubbard. Even better was follow-up A...

Mining the same classical chamberpop as contemporaries Procul Harum, Alex Spyropoulos’ and Patrick Campbell-Lyons’ charges cut… Simon Simopath Rating Star in 1967, a science-fiction pantomime a-flutter with silken strings and baroque delicacy. Part Greek myth, part L Ron Hubbard. Even better was follow-up All Of Us, though?with the exception of “Rainbow Chaser”?it failed to ignite a public weaned on less fragile acid fare. Today, their 30-piece string orchestras?

Alex Harvey – The Soldier On The Wall

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The Soldier On The Wall takes its title from Hadrian's Roman structure which divides Harvey's native Scotland from the Sassenach hordes and the tone and timbre of the late maverick showman is very much concerned with war games. Containing most of the flamboyant elements of Alex's Vertigo period, when raucous hits like "Delilah" brought him a modicum of notoriety, TSOTW is littered with narrative items like "Flowers Mr Florist" and "Snowshoes Thompson". When archaeology becomes the new rock'n'roll, they'll be playing this on the ramparts.

The Soldier On The Wall takes its title from Hadrian’s Roman structure which divides Harvey’s native Scotland from the Sassenach hordes and the tone and timbre of the late maverick showman is very much concerned with war games. Containing most of the flamboyant elements of Alex’s Vertigo period, when raucous hits like “Delilah” brought him a modicum of notoriety, TSOTW is littered with narrative items like “Flowers Mr Florist” and “Snowshoes Thompson”. When archaeology becomes the new rock’n’roll, they’ll be playing this on the ramparts.

Terry Callier – The New Folk Sound Of…

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Recorded in July 1964, Callier's debut finally reached a wider audience after his mid-'90s re-emergence from years in computer programming exile and the patronage of Beth Orton. Now bolstered by three extras (including a breathtaking reading of Judy Collins' "The Golden Apples Of The Sun"), this is unsinkable stuff, Callier purring like a male Nina Simone over spartan arrangements of traditional ditties, spinning folk standards into soulful spirituals. Exploring his love of Coltrane, Callier fingerpicks over the twin basses of Terbour Attenborough and John Tweedle to create a skin-pricking intimacy, not least on "Spin Spin Spin" and the epic "I'm A Drifter".

Recorded in July 1964, Callier’s debut finally reached a wider audience after his mid-’90s re-emergence from years in computer programming exile and the patronage of Beth Orton. Now bolstered by three extras (including a breathtaking reading of Judy Collins’ “The Golden Apples Of The Sun”), this is unsinkable stuff, Callier purring like a male Nina Simone over spartan arrangements of traditional ditties, spinning folk standards into soulful spirituals. Exploring his love of Coltrane, Callier fingerpicks over the twin basses of Terbour Attenborough and John Tweedle to create a skin-pricking intimacy, not least on “Spin Spin Spin” and the epic “I’m A Drifter”.

AC – DC

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How better to escape the glum omnipotence of The Darkness than to curl up with five CDs of AC/DC? Bonfire is a tribute to the randy gifts of original singer Bon Scott. A couple of live CDs from 1979 capture the band's power, the way they evoked abandon with such military precision. Another disc of rarities provides the requisite archaeological factor ("Whole Lotta Rosie" stemmed from a song called "Dirty Eyes"! Who knew?). Better still, an NYC radio session from 1977 is a match for any of the Scott-era studio LPs. A mark docked, though, for the cynical inclusion of the first post-Scott LP, Back In Black, as Disc Five. A rock landmark, for sure, but do the band's devotees need another copy?

How better to escape the glum omnipotence of The Darkness than to curl up with five CDs of AC/DC? Bonfire is a tribute to the randy gifts of original singer Bon Scott. A couple of live CDs from 1979 capture the band’s power, the way they evoked abandon with such military precision. Another disc of rarities provides the requisite archaeological factor (“Whole Lotta Rosie” stemmed from a song called “Dirty Eyes”! Who knew?). Better still, an NYC radio session from 1977 is a match for any of the Scott-era studio LPs. A mark docked, though, for the cynical inclusion of the first post-Scott LP, Back In Black, as Disc Five. A rock landmark, for sure, but do the band’s devotees need another copy?

The Fall – The War Against Intelligence

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Nineteen eighty-nine. Manchester was in the ascendant, indie bands were being collected like trinkets by major labels, and The Fall were the subject of an improbable bidding war. Ever unpredictable, Mark E Smith rewarded the courageous victors, Fontana, with what many would have least expected from him: three albums of The Fall at their most economical and accessible. This month's Fall compilation, The War Against Intelligence, showcases a fine run of agitated almost-hits ("Telephone Thing", "Free Range", the unjustly forgotten "Ed's Babe") and some ballads, notably "Bill Is Dead", where Smith ceases with the surrealist hectoring and reveals a more vulnerable side. A reminder that The Fall can be a great pop group when the mood takes Smith.

Nineteen eighty-nine. Manchester was in the ascendant, indie bands were being collected like trinkets by major labels, and The Fall were the subject of an improbable bidding war. Ever unpredictable, Mark E Smith rewarded the courageous victors, Fontana, with what many would have least expected from him: three albums of The Fall at their most economical and accessible. This month’s Fall compilation, The War Against Intelligence, showcases a fine run of agitated almost-hits (“Telephone Thing”, “Free Range”, the unjustly forgotten “Ed’s Babe”) and some ballads, notably “Bill Is Dead”, where Smith ceases with the surrealist hectoring and reveals a more vulnerable side. A reminder that The Fall can be a great pop group when the mood takes Smith.

Billy Bragg – Must I Paint You A Picture? The Essential Billy Bragg

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In 1983, Bragg's debut Life's A Riot With Spy Versus Spy was the sole radical in a Top 30 stuffed with Eliminators and Fantastics. Politicised by Thatcher, his dodgy-voice-and-guitar assault?a self-styled 'one-man Clash'?captured the disaffection of British youth with an articulate humanity lacking in the punk bands that inspired him. With politics personal and national, girl anthems "A New England" and "A Lover Sings" were as moving as "Between The Wars" and "The World Turned Upside Down" (all included here). After the '87 Red Wedge tours, mid-period Bragg railed against social injustice, while his sound blossomed into fuller textures ("Cindy Of 1,000 Lives"). By the late-'90s Wilco collaborations?"Ingrid Bergman", "Flying Saucer"?he'd injected a soulful maturity into his voice. Of note here, too, is the bonus disc, tearing up Love's "Seven And Seven Is" and topped by brilliant Ted Hawkins duet "Cold And Bitter Tears".

In 1983, Bragg’s debut Life’s A Riot With Spy Versus Spy was the sole radical in a Top 30 stuffed with Eliminators and Fantastics. Politicised by Thatcher, his dodgy-voice-and-guitar assault?a self-styled ‘one-man Clash’?captured the disaffection of British youth with an articulate humanity lacking in the punk bands that inspired him. With politics personal and national, girl anthems “A New England” and “A Lover Sings” were as moving as “Between The Wars” and “The World Turned Upside Down” (all included here). After the ’87 Red Wedge tours, mid-period Bragg railed against social injustice, while his sound blossomed into fuller textures (“Cindy Of 1,000 Lives”). By the late-’90s Wilco collaborations?”Ingrid Bergman”, “Flying Saucer”?he’d injected a soulful maturity into his voice. Of note here, too, is the bonus disc, tearing up Love’s “Seven And Seven Is” and topped by brilliant Ted Hawkins duet “Cold And Bitter Tears”.

Hares Apparent

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Exactly why The Bunnymen never went on to do what their spectacularly gobby, Pre-Raphaelite punk buccaneer of a singer promised (namely: to become the world's biggest band) remains one of modern music's knottiest conundrums, though the answer has always been stark-staring obvious all along; simply, they lost momentum when they most needed to maintain it. They hit the ground running with 1980's Crocodiles which, with its chimerical splice of low-tech psychedelia, Velvets-reminiscent otherness and punk stroppiness, pretty much nailed the post-punk ethos to the mast. A generation on, and its reputation as one of the most remarkable rock debuts is undented. A hard act to follow, for sure, but they trumped it with their undoubted high watermark. Torn between anthemic mysticism and knife-edged irony, between romantic grandeur and scathing Scouse cynicism, Heaven Up Here sounded like a landmark album back then, and time has sapped not a drop of its rare beauty. Number 184 with a bullet in the States, then straight back to oblivion. The Bunnymen were obviously deeply in love with their own mythology, but the rest of the world wasn't so willing to be smitten. Extending the scope of their ambition, 1983's Porcupine contained both their purest pop moment ("The Back Of Love") and their most fabulously self-aggrandising ("My White Devil"). Felt to be a step back at the time of its release, now sounding like a bona fide masterpiece of creative exhaustion. Then the start of the slide. Ocean Rain (1984), despite transcendent turns like "Silver" and "Killing Moon", too resplendently grandiose for its own good, all livid possibilities drowned deep in aquatic strings and over-sheened production. Lamely pursued by their eponymous fifth (the so-called Grey album) which, since the band themselves have practically disowned it, merits little comment. Except to say that, unlike the other four reissues and their entirely needless bonus selections, Echo And The Bunnymen is slightly improved with the inclusion of an acoustic demo of "The Game" and a highly primitive version of "Dancing Horses". Remember them at their best, for their first three enthralling adventures into the otherworldly swamps of Bunnydom, a run of near-flawless albums that was, in its way, as breathtaking as anything heard since The Stones in Bleed-Fingers-Exile form or Bowie circa-Diamond-Americans-Station. Do it clean, know what I mean?

Exactly why The Bunnymen never went on to do what their spectacularly gobby, Pre-Raphaelite punk buccaneer of a singer promised (namely: to become the world’s biggest band) remains one of modern music’s knottiest conundrums, though the answer has always been stark-staring obvious all along; simply, they lost momentum when they most needed to maintain it.

They hit the ground running with 1980’s Crocodiles which, with its chimerical splice of low-tech psychedelia, Velvets-reminiscent otherness and punk stroppiness, pretty much nailed the post-punk ethos to the mast. A generation on, and its reputation as one of the most remarkable rock debuts is undented. A hard act to follow, for sure, but they trumped it with their undoubted high watermark. Torn between anthemic mysticism and knife-edged irony, between romantic grandeur and scathing Scouse cynicism, Heaven Up Here sounded like a landmark album back then, and time has sapped not a drop of its rare beauty. Number 184 with a bullet in the States, then straight back to oblivion. The Bunnymen were obviously deeply in love with their own mythology, but the rest of the world wasn’t so willing to be smitten.

Extending the scope of their ambition, 1983’s Porcupine contained both their purest pop moment (“The Back Of Love”) and their most fabulously self-aggrandising (“My White Devil”). Felt to be a step back at the time of its release, now sounding like a bona fide masterpiece of creative exhaustion.

Then the start of the slide. Ocean Rain (1984), despite transcendent turns like “Silver” and “Killing Moon”, too resplendently grandiose for its own good, all livid possibilities drowned deep in aquatic strings and over-sheened production. Lamely pursued by their eponymous fifth (the so-called Grey album) which, since the band themselves have practically disowned it, merits little comment. Except to say that, unlike the other four reissues and their entirely needless bonus selections, Echo And The Bunnymen is slightly improved with the inclusion of an acoustic demo of “The Game” and a highly primitive version of “Dancing Horses”.

Remember them at their best, for their first three enthralling adventures into the otherworldly swamps of Bunnydom, a run of near-flawless albums that was, in its way, as breathtaking as anything heard since The Stones in Bleed-Fingers-Exile form or Bowie circa-Diamond-Americans-Station. Do it clean, know what I mean?

The Filth Amendment

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The best of compilation: a time to reflect upon a career, including even the early mishaps that eventually shape one's body of work. That's how it should be, anyway. It's telling reflection on the control freakery and uptight nature of Primal Screen that they've chosen, like some pampered footballer or insecure soap star, to relate a sanitised autobiography with Dirty Hits, ignoring their early but substantial first recordings as both fey indie janglers and one-dimensional rockers. It's equally telling that they find this the embarrassing chapter of their career and not, say, the recent ludicrous collaboration with Kate Moss on "Some Velvet Morning" Any artist so governed by self-imposed notions of cool is always going to look a bit of an arse when they get it so wrong. Thus they expinge from Dirty Hits all traces of the two albums they completed before their career-defining "Loaded" single. So be it. We must bow to their vanity. Primal Scream were never an indie band struggling for an identity?they started according to Dirty Hits, with the release of Loaded, a record that seized the ecstatic youthful mood of a generation that had just learnt?with chemical assistance?to dance again as the 1990s dawned invitingly. It was a statement of optimistic intent that they stumbled upon via Andy Weatherall's remixing, but the Scream core of Bobby Gillespie, Robert Young and Andrew Innes have always realised the power of talented allies, drafting in Martin Duffy from Felt, Mani from The Stone Roses and Kevin Shields to swell the ranks and bolster the sound as their career unfolded. This also ensures that their sound has evolved throughout their history, delivering with it a string of brilliant singles?the better part of which, post-"Loaded", are included here. Viewed from a distance, even the long-haired, leather-kecked rocking of their least fondly recalled period, the Give Out, But Don't Give Up album, cuts quite a dash now. The Scream, however reacted spikily to the criticism of their retro period and they've been pushing themselves further from that straight edge towards more experimental plains ever since. Unlike most, their sound has radicalised with age, as evidenced here by the likes of the neo-mod psychedelia of "Burning Wheel" or the ear-bursting white-out of "Accelerator", and it takes a perverse bravery on the band' behalf to trust that their audience won't be shaken free with each sharp new turn. So far, largely ghastly bonus disc of out-dated dance remixes is a away. Concentrate on the main card.

The best of compilation: a time to reflect upon a career, including even the early mishaps that eventually shape one’s body of work. That’s how it should be, anyway. It’s telling reflection on the control freakery and uptight nature of Primal Screen that they’ve chosen, like some pampered footballer or insecure soap star, to relate a sanitised autobiography with Dirty Hits, ignoring their early but substantial first recordings as both fey indie janglers and one-dimensional rockers. It’s equally telling that they find this the embarrassing chapter of their career and not, say, the recent ludicrous collaboration with Kate Moss on “Some Velvet Morning” Any artist so governed by self-imposed notions of cool is always going to look a bit of an arse when they get it so wrong.

Thus they expinge from Dirty Hits all traces of the two albums they completed before their career-defining “Loaded” single. So be it. We must bow to their vanity. Primal Scream were never an indie band struggling for an identity?they started according to Dirty Hits, with the release of Loaded, a record that seized the ecstatic youthful mood of a generation that had just learnt?with chemical assistance?to dance again as the 1990s dawned invitingly. It was a statement of optimistic intent that they stumbled upon via Andy Weatherall’s remixing, but the Scream core of Bobby Gillespie, Robert Young and Andrew Innes have always realised the power of talented allies, drafting in Martin Duffy from Felt, Mani from The Stone Roses and Kevin Shields to swell the ranks and bolster the sound as their career unfolded.

This also ensures that their sound has evolved throughout their history, delivering with it a string of brilliant singles?the better part of which, post-“Loaded”, are included here. Viewed from a distance, even the long-haired, leather-kecked rocking of their least fondly recalled period, the Give Out, But Don’t Give Up album, cuts quite a dash now.

The Scream, however reacted spikily to the criticism of their retro period and they’ve been pushing themselves further from that straight edge towards more experimental plains ever since. Unlike most, their sound has radicalised with age, as evidenced here by the likes of the neo-mod psychedelia of “Burning Wheel” or the ear-bursting white-out of “Accelerator”, and it takes a perverse bravery on the band’ behalf to trust that their audience won’t be shaken free with each sharp new turn. So far, largely ghastly bonus disc of out-dated dance remixes is a away. Concentrate on the main card.

Jefferson Airplane

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Inevitably overshadowed by its successors, Takes Off, with early singer Signe Anderson, remains a shining display of the band's folk-rock and blues origins. The arrival of Grace Slick and the songs "Somebody To Love" and "White Rabbit" (both Top 10 US hits) proved the catalyst for the experimental sounds and lysergic lyrics with which the group would become synonymous, but the sheer virtuosity of tracks like the tender ballad "Today" and the instrumental "Embryonic Journey" have ensured that Surrealistic Pillow remains their most enduring and immediate work. Mirroring their growing live reputation, After Bathing At Baxter's proved bolder still and therefore more erratic, before Crown Of Creation marked the band's psychedelic peak. Stunning sound, excellent sleevenotes by Airplane biographer Jeff Tamarkin and plenty of extra material make these definitive reissues.

Inevitably overshadowed by its successors, Takes Off, with early singer Signe Anderson, remains a shining display of the band’s folk-rock and blues origins. The arrival of Grace Slick and the songs “Somebody To Love” and “White Rabbit” (both Top 10 US hits) proved the catalyst for the experimental sounds and lysergic lyrics with which the group would become synonymous, but the sheer virtuosity of tracks like the tender ballad “Today” and the instrumental “Embryonic Journey” have ensured that Surrealistic Pillow remains their most enduring and immediate work.

Mirroring their growing live reputation, After Bathing At Baxter’s proved bolder still and therefore more erratic, before Crown Of Creation marked the band’s psychedelic peak. Stunning sound, excellent sleevenotes by Airplane biographer Jeff Tamarkin and plenty of extra material make these definitive reissues.

The Troggs – From Nowhere

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"Wild Thing"was reputedly cut in less than 15 minutes?and with Reg Presley's sly delivery and ocarina solo, sounded all the better for it. Although they had four more self-composed Top 10 hits, The Troggs had difficulty being taken seriously before belated recognition as proto-punks. This reissue combines the UK and German releases of their debut album, along with two non-LP singles. Pitching raw guitar anthems like "Lost Girl" and "From Home" alongside the harpsichord pop of "Jingle Jangle" and UK No 1 "With A Girl Like You", the band display both passion and playfulness.

“Wild Thing”was reputedly cut in less than 15 minutes?and with Reg Presley’s sly delivery and ocarina solo, sounded all the better for it. Although they had four more self-composed Top 10 hits, The Troggs had difficulty being taken seriously before belated recognition as proto-punks. This reissue combines the UK and German releases of their debut album, along with two non-LP singles. Pitching raw guitar anthems like “Lost Girl” and “From Home” alongside the harpsichord pop of “Jingle Jangle” and UK No 1 “With A Girl Like You”, the band display both passion and playfulness.

Robert Plant – Sixty Six To Timbuktu

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Chartered accountancy's loss proved to be British rock'n'roll's gain when Robert Plant laid aside his bought ledger and embarked on a career as a singer. As its title suggests, this compilation spans his entire career, from the nascent blue-eyed soul of his Young Rascals cover, "You Better Run", to "Win My Train Fare Home", recorded live this year at the Festival In The Desert, near Timbuktu. Spread over a generous 35 tracks on two discs, this first ever (virtually) solo Plant overview is handily divided between his eight post-Led Zeppelin LPs and a more interesting collector's approach that delivers plenty of rare and previously unavailable material. According to Plant: "The final selection was quite difficult. Avoiding a best-of format which generally relates to chart success was essential. I've tried to mix up '80s techno sounds with the more organic pieces that were developed from 1993 onwards." Cheers, mate. Disc One includes Plant favourites like "Big Log", "Ship Of Fools", "Tie Dye On The Highway" and his stretched-out version of Tim Hardin's "If I Were A Carpenter". A canny ability to pick the right brand of retro means that The Honeydrippers' "Sea Of Love" and the Fate Of Nations alternate cut on "I Believe" still pass muster. Even so, die-hards are going to jump on the second disc first, since it includes a pair of Band Of Joy demos, featuring Plant and John Bonham. These are Summer Of Love nuggets: "Hey Joe" and the Springfield's "For What It's Worth". Elsewhere, "Let's Have A Party", from NME project The Last Temptation Of Elvis, tributes to Arthur Alexander and Skip Spence, and a collaboration with Afro Celt Soundsystem all indicate an artist with fingers in several pies. Plant's interpretative skills are matched by his fan-like enthusiasms. The globe-trotting rock star will enjoy further exposure in a year when Led Zeppelin become a name to drop again.

Chartered accountancy’s loss proved to be British rock’n’roll’s gain when Robert Plant laid aside his bought ledger and embarked on a career as a singer. As its title suggests, this compilation spans his entire career, from the nascent blue-eyed soul of his Young Rascals cover, “You Better Run”, to “Win My Train Fare Home”, recorded live this year at the Festival In The Desert, near Timbuktu.

Spread over a generous 35 tracks on two discs, this first ever (virtually) solo Plant overview is handily divided between his eight post-Led Zeppelin LPs and a more interesting collector’s approach that delivers plenty of rare and previously unavailable material. According to Plant: “The final selection was quite difficult. Avoiding a best-of format which generally relates to chart success was essential. I’ve tried to mix up ’80s techno sounds with the more organic pieces that were developed from 1993 onwards.” Cheers, mate.

Disc One includes Plant favourites like “Big Log”, “Ship Of Fools”, “Tie Dye On The Highway” and his stretched-out version of Tim Hardin’s “If I Were A Carpenter”. A canny ability to pick the right brand of retro means that The Honeydrippers’ “Sea Of Love” and the Fate Of Nations alternate cut on “I Believe” still pass muster.

Even so, die-hards are going to jump on the second disc first, since it includes a pair of Band Of Joy demos, featuring Plant and John Bonham. These are Summer Of Love nuggets: “Hey Joe” and the Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth”. Elsewhere, “Let’s Have A Party”, from NME project The Last Temptation Of Elvis, tributes to Arthur Alexander and Skip Spence, and a collaboration with Afro Celt Soundsystem all indicate an artist with fingers in several pies.

Plant’s interpretative skills are matched by his fan-like enthusiasms. The globe-trotting rock star will enjoy further exposure in a year when Led Zeppelin become a name to drop again.

The Runaways

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Quick to spot the potential of an all-girl metal combo, Hollywood hustler Kim Fowley nurtured The Runaways (average age 16). Taking their cues from Aerosmith and The Sweet, the five-piece injected glitter-glam with punk loco, typified by "Cherry Bomb" and "American Nights" from their '76 debut. By 77's Queens Of Noise, their loud'n'leery approach?led by Joan Jett and Cherie Currie?peaked into bratty brilliance, but was still largely dismissed Stateside. Faring better elsewhere, Live In Japan proved they could cut it in the flesh, but by that same year's Waitin' For The Night, both Currie and bassist Jackie Fox had quit. Ignored for years, they're recognised now as pivotal by rock chicks from Hole and L7 to The Donnas and Bikini Kill.

Quick to spot the potential of an all-girl metal combo, Hollywood hustler Kim Fowley nurtured The Runaways (average age 16). Taking their cues from Aerosmith and The Sweet, the five-piece injected glitter-glam with punk loco, typified by “Cherry Bomb” and “American Nights” from their ’76 debut. By 77’s Queens Of Noise, their loud’n’leery approach?led by Joan Jett and Cherie Currie?peaked into bratty brilliance, but was still largely dismissed Stateside. Faring better elsewhere, Live In Japan proved they could cut it in the flesh, but by that same year’s Waitin’ For The Night, both Currie and bassist Jackie Fox had quit. Ignored for years, they’re recognised now as pivotal by rock chicks from Hole and L7 to The Donnas and Bikini Kill.

Duke Ellington – New Orleans Suite

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The death, midway through the sessions, of legendary Ellington altoist Johnny Hodges (who wails his swan song here on "Blues For New Orleans") didn't halt this 1970 tribute to the Crescent City and its sons from being a highlight of Duke's sixth decade as a bandleader/composer. Harold Ashby (tenor) and Cootie Williams (trumpet) shine on "Thanks For The Beautiful Land Of The Delta" and "Portrait Of Louis Armstrong" respectively, while Bill Davis offers a successful organ vignette. Duke's writing was never indifferent but here he achieves something particularly fulsome, rich and swinging, even by his standards.

The death, midway through the sessions, of legendary Ellington altoist Johnny Hodges (who wails his swan song here on “Blues For New Orleans”) didn’t halt this 1970 tribute to the Crescent City and its sons from being a highlight of Duke’s sixth decade as a bandleader/composer. Harold Ashby (tenor) and Cootie Williams (trumpet) shine on “Thanks For The Beautiful Land Of The Delta” and “Portrait Of Louis Armstrong” respectively, while Bill Davis offers a successful organ vignette. Duke’s writing was never indifferent but here he achieves something particularly fulsome, rich and swinging, even by his standards.

Shack – The Fable Sessions

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Shack continue to strive for recognition beyond the converted, hence this glorified re-release of 1999's HMS Fable. This is a re-sequenced, remixed version of the original album with B-sides and outtakes from an era in which the fraternal Heads, Mick and John, came closer than ever to commercial success. But their aching psychedelia?think Love play Burt Bacharach, lyrics by Alan Bleasdale?failed to truly impact. The Fable Sessions eloquently poses the question once more: why?

Shack continue to strive for recognition beyond the converted, hence this glorified re-release of 1999’s HMS Fable. This is a re-sequenced, remixed version of the original album with B-sides and outtakes from an era in which the fraternal Heads, Mick and John, came closer than ever to commercial success. But their aching psychedelia?think Love play Burt Bacharach, lyrics by Alan Bleasdale?failed to truly impact. The Fable Sessions eloquently poses the question once more: why?

The Smithereens – Green Thoughts

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As the alt.rock scene began seeping overground in mid-'80s America, The Smithereens were almost alone in championing the beat-pop of The Kinks, Nick Lowe and Elvis Costello, and their crisp melodic punch seemed almost sedate alongside H...

As the alt.rock scene began seeping overground in mid-’80s America, The Smithereens were almost alone in championing the beat-pop of The Kinks, Nick Lowe and Elvis Costello, and their crisp melodic punch seemed almost sedate alongside H

Thelonious Monk – Criss Cross

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Today's avant-garde is tomorrow's mainstream?as was the case with Monk. When widespread success finally arrived, there was this nagging suspicion he didn't quite know how to deal with it. Columbia made much of his 'eccentricities'?the hats, etc?and the truly bizarre cover of Underground (1968) aimed him squarely at acid-rock fans into 'weird'. The acclaim may have been more, but it didn't herald a creative quantum leap. No abundance of fresh material or any noticeable new direction. Monk just carried on as before repeatedly picking over the innovative repertoire he'd previously created on Blue Note, Prestige and Riverside?always the first place to begin. But Monk wasn't the first to strip down and reconstruct his past work. Neither did he overly concern himself with recording technicalities. Often, the listener gets the feeling of eavesdropping on him working out ideas, mainly with his quartet. But for those prepared to forage, there can be moments of genuine revelation.

Today’s avant-garde is tomorrow’s mainstream?as was the case with Monk. When widespread success finally arrived, there was this nagging suspicion he didn’t quite know how to deal with it. Columbia made much of his ‘eccentricities’?the hats, etc?and the truly bizarre cover of Underground (1968) aimed him squarely at acid-rock fans into ‘weird’.

The acclaim may have been more, but it didn’t herald a creative quantum leap. No abundance of fresh material or any noticeable new direction. Monk just carried on as before repeatedly picking over the innovative repertoire he’d previously created on Blue Note, Prestige and Riverside?always the first place to begin.

But Monk wasn’t the first to strip down and reconstruct his past work. Neither did he overly concern himself with recording technicalities. Often, the listener gets the feeling of eavesdropping on him working out ideas, mainly with his quartet. But for those prepared to forage, there can be moments of genuine revelation.