Home Blog Page 1180

Rio Bravo

There are moments, watching City Of God, when it seems the next thing that's going to happen will involve the screen simply exploding?there's just so much going on here in every frame, a boiling chaos of images, a teeming, kinetic overload that makes Natural Born Killers look like something from the...

There are moments, watching City Of God, when it seems the next thing that’s going to happen will involve the screen simply exploding?there’s just so much going on here in every frame, a boiling chaos of images, a teeming, kinetic overload that makes Natural Born Killers look like something from the Merchant-Ivory school of polite restraint and impeccable cinematic table manners.

City Of God is a beast of a film, a roaring wild thing. Famously shot in the sprawling Rio De Janeiro housing projects from which it takes its name, with a cast drawn from its streets in the manner of Bu

Less Than Zero

Time has been kind to Less Than Zero. This kitschy expos...

Time has been kind to Less Than Zero. This kitschy expos

The Color Purple

Lengthy adaptation of Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about poor black folk in Georgia during the first half of the 20th century was Spielberg's first 'serious' film. The territory is admittedly dark (incest, domestic violence) and, despite its faults, it succeeds thanks to visual skill and a sterling cast led by Whoopi Goldberg.

Lengthy adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about poor black folk in Georgia during the first half of the 20th century was Spielberg’s first ‘serious’ film. The territory is admittedly dark (incest, domestic violence) and, despite its faults, it succeeds thanks to visual skill and a sterling cast led by Whoopi Goldberg.

This Boy’s Life

A career highpoint for director Michael Caton-Jones, This Boy's Life also provides one of Robert De Niro's most memorably mannered performances as the parochial bullying stepdad to Leonardo DiCaprio's teen protagonist. With his seething Fargo accent and petty pronouncements ("I know a thing or two about a thing or two!"), he's always fascinating, even when the movie isn't.

A career highpoint for director Michael Caton-Jones, This Boy’s Life also provides one of Robert De Niro’s most memorably mannered performances as the parochial bullying stepdad to Leonardo DiCaprio’s teen protagonist. With his seething Fargo accent and petty pronouncements (“I know a thing or two about a thing or two!”), he’s always fascinating, even when the movie isn’t.

Narc

Following a frenetic opening, Joe Carnahan's Detroit cop movie settles into an edgy two-hander as Jason Patric's alienated undercover man returns to the streets to investigate a cop killing with the dead officer's explosive partner, Ray Liotta. It skirts clich...

Following a frenetic opening, Joe Carnahan’s Detroit cop movie settles into an edgy two-hander as Jason Patric’s alienated undercover man returns to the streets to investigate a cop killing with the dead officer’s explosive partner, Ray Liotta. It skirts clich

Finger On The Trigger

0
Patti Smith SHEPHERD'S BUSH EMPIRE, LONDON Monday August 11, 2003 It all starts so politely, you could never guess the raw shock that's coming. When Patti Smith saunters on like a collision between the 17th century and 1976, urchin-shabby in an ill-fitting frock coat, it's a comforting sight?like...

Patti Smith

SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE, LONDON

Monday August 11, 2003

It all starts so politely, you could never guess the raw shock that’s coming. When Patti Smith saunters on like a collision between the 17th century and 1976, urchin-shabby in an ill-fitting frock coat, it’s a comforting sight?like we’re with a welcome friend from the old days, an ex-rabble rouser, too sophisticated now to start any more fires.

The first thing that strikes you, in fact, is how much the 56-year-old Smith is a child of the ’50s, bowing to an older bohemian church than any other punk-era performer. “We are all children of Jackson Pollock,” she reads from her folder of poems, before taking patricidal credit for putting the oil-spill on the road that sent Pollock’s car into its fatal spin, an iconic moment lost to history that still burns for her. She also speaks the words of William Blake and what sounds like the Book of Common Prayer, and remains the only rock’n’roller who can legitimately read poems, as if this is still the Beat era. The point is, when Patti starts rolling, we are in a wider historical moment than modern media and music normally admits, a long, rich, dirty post-war drama or dream which hasn’t yet been ended or resolved.

She’s open to everything, too, riffing on Charlotte Bront

The Blasters – Dingwalls, London

0

Tonight, Dave Alvin looks like a man out to settle an old score. With his gunslinger necktie and low-slung guitar, he fires off endless streams of ballistic invective, mostly aimed at Phil, his big barrel-shaped brother and Blasters frontman. The fabled legend of Dave and Phil Alvin and the band they formed in Downey, California is straight out of the sibling rivalry rock'n'roll handbook that stretches from Don and Phil Everly all the way up to Noel and Liam Gallagher. It is a mere 17 years since Dave and Phil Alvin put aside their differences and took to the London stage. In the intervening years, Phil has studied mathematics rather than the intricacies of bar band boogie and atomic blues. Dave, meanwhile, has raced ahead?his solo albums have mapped out the hinterland of roots rock Americana in a way that The Blasters never could. But it takes little more than the opening salvo of "Red Rose" to hear what brought the Alvins back together. Something bigger than brotherly love, that's for sure. Something like the combined mind-boggling beauty of howling-at-the-moon blues and hell-for-leather rocking glory. The years may have gone by but the dynamic charge of the original Blasters?take a bow, please, drummer Bill Bateman, bassist John Bazz and veteran pianist Gene Taylor-has not diminished. Songs like "Long White Cadillac" and "Dark Night" may be rooted in the Cold War cultural terror of '50s America, but they made perfect sense in the '80s punk era when The Blasters came of age, and there's been nothing that's happened since to render them out of time. Phil's ability to summon the ghosts of such departed holy terrors as Sonny Burgess, Big Joe Turner and Howlin' Wolf remains undimmed. But alongside the lightning-strikes telepathic jams there is a cold-hearted ruthlessness. The recent live comeback album Trouble Bound has old favourites, played better than ever but nowhere left to go. Like a bunch of hired killers they came in cleaned out/up the town and just as quickly as they arrived they were gone. At close, Dave delivered a warning to those awaiting their return. "It's 17 years since we last played here and after tomorrow night it will be another 17 years until we play here again." Now you know.

Tonight, Dave Alvin looks like a man out to settle an old score. With his gunslinger necktie and low-slung guitar, he fires off endless streams of ballistic invective, mostly aimed at Phil, his big barrel-shaped brother and Blasters frontman.

The fabled legend of Dave and Phil Alvin and the band they formed in Downey, California is straight out of the sibling rivalry rock’n’roll handbook that stretches from Don and Phil Everly all the way up to Noel and Liam Gallagher. It is a mere 17 years since Dave and Phil Alvin put aside their differences and took to the London stage.

In the intervening years, Phil has studied mathematics rather than the intricacies of bar band boogie and atomic blues. Dave, meanwhile, has raced ahead?his solo albums have mapped out the hinterland of roots rock Americana in a way that The Blasters never could. But it takes little more than the opening salvo of “Red Rose” to hear what brought the Alvins back together. Something bigger than brotherly love, that’s for sure. Something like the combined mind-boggling beauty of howling-at-the-moon blues and hell-for-leather rocking glory.

The years may have gone by but the dynamic charge of the original Blasters?take a bow, please, drummer Bill Bateman, bassist John Bazz and veteran pianist Gene Taylor-has not diminished. Songs like “Long White Cadillac” and “Dark Night” may be rooted in the Cold War cultural terror of ’50s America, but they made perfect sense in the ’80s punk era when The Blasters came of age, and there’s been nothing that’s happened since to render them out of time.

Phil’s ability to summon the ghosts of such departed holy terrors as Sonny Burgess, Big Joe Turner and Howlin’ Wolf remains undimmed. But alongside the lightning-strikes telepathic jams there is a cold-hearted ruthlessness.

The recent live comeback album Trouble Bound has old favourites, played better than ever but nowhere left to go. Like a bunch of hired killers they came in cleaned out/up the town and just as quickly as they arrived they were gone. At close, Dave delivered a warning to those awaiting their return. “It’s 17 years since we last played here and after tomorrow night it will be another 17 years until we play here again.” Now you know.

The Undertones – Get What You Need

0

Paul McLoone is the man with the least enviable job in power punk history. For many, the idea of The Undertones without Feargal Sharkey's chiselled features and inimitable larynx is simply untenable. But the fact is, with his Sharkey-like vibrato, McLoone has re-energised the band, giving them urgency and hunger. Droll new classic "Everything But You", the blackly humorous "The Cruellest Thing" and the mesmerising "Winter Sun" (as weirdly off-kilter as anything they've ever recorded) inhabit the same ageless corner of garage band heaven as earlier classics. Peerless riffs, brilliantly skewed harmonies and dynamic splendour?a group this good doesn't deserve to be left on the shelf. Rest assured, McLoone has done their legacy proud.

Paul McLoone is the man with the least enviable job in power punk history. For many, the idea of The Undertones without Feargal Sharkey’s chiselled features and inimitable larynx is simply untenable. But the fact is, with his Sharkey-like vibrato, McLoone has re-energised the band, giving them urgency and hunger. Droll new classic “Everything But You”, the blackly humorous “The Cruellest Thing” and the mesmerising “Winter Sun” (as weirdly off-kilter as anything they’ve ever recorded) inhabit the same ageless corner of garage band heaven as earlier classics. Peerless riffs, brilliantly skewed harmonies and dynamic splendour?a group this good doesn’t deserve to be left on the shelf. Rest assured, McLoone has done their legacy proud.

The Proclaimers – Born Innocent

0

Seemingly unfashionable for wearing glasses, Craig and Charlie Reid's total withdrawal from the music industry in the late '90s, to look after their dying father and numerous children, suggests bullshitless values worth more than hipness. Collins emphasises their raw, unembarrassed emotion, allowing speaker-shredding vocals on punk-folk-soul anthems to wounded people like "Should Have Been Loved". Southern soul, country, even Merseybeat also enter the mix, reminiscent of mid-period Elvis Costello. Only a shortage of really top-notch songs lets them down this time around.

Seemingly unfashionable for wearing glasses, Craig and Charlie Reid’s total withdrawal from the music industry in the late ’90s, to look after their dying father and numerous children, suggests bullshitless values worth more than hipness.

Collins emphasises their raw, unembarrassed emotion, allowing speaker-shredding vocals on punk-folk-soul anthems to wounded people like “Should Have Been Loved”. Southern soul, country, even Merseybeat also enter the mix, reminiscent of mid-period Elvis Costello.

Only a shortage of really top-notch songs lets them down this time around.

Stephen Duffy & The Lilac Time – Keep Going

0

Like Lloyd Cole, Stephen Duffy has been stripped of his '80s hopes of pop success, and now pursues his English visions at a hand-crafted level. This is folk music for the far-flung community whose values were forged by '80s pop culture, picking through the wreckage of the late 20th century, from Blood On The Tracks to the Berlin Wall. Subtly lush, echoing production brings Sun Studios into the equation. "Bank Holiday Monday", meanwhile, is a small classic of longing for England and escape from it. Too media-saturated to cut to the soul, Duffy has still carved himself a resonant niche.

Like Lloyd Cole, Stephen Duffy has been stripped of his ’80s hopes of pop success, and now pursues his English visions at a hand-crafted level. This is folk music for the far-flung community whose values were forged by ’80s pop culture, picking through the wreckage of the late 20th century, from Blood On The Tracks to the Berlin Wall. Subtly lush, echoing production brings Sun Studios into the equation. “Bank Holiday Monday”, meanwhile, is a small classic of longing for England and escape from it. Too media-saturated to cut to the soul, Duffy has still carved himself a resonant niche.

Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci – Sleep

0

The first British band to fully embrace the mushrooms'n'mildew aesthetic of The Incredible String Band in the mid-'80s, Gorky's have watched a deluge of like-minded souls pile through the paddock in recent years. Happily, though subsequent albums have ironed out many of the quirks, their wonky folk-baroque remains very much alive. More akin to 2000's mini album The Blue Trees than the beachy bounce of last album How I Long To Feel That Summer In My Heart, this is mostly acoustic guitars lovingly plucked, drums delicately brushed, fiddles softly sawn. Childs' delivery is still a sideways treat, tottering like Robert Wyatt throughout. Black sheep of the bunch is "Mow The Lawn", a bucolic glam-slam through Roxy Music's "Editions Of You".

The first British band to fully embrace the mushrooms’n’mildew aesthetic of The Incredible String Band in the mid-’80s, Gorky’s have watched a deluge of like-minded souls pile through the paddock in recent years. Happily, though subsequent albums have ironed out many of the quirks, their wonky folk-baroque remains very much alive. More akin to 2000’s mini album The Blue Trees than the beachy bounce of last album How I Long To Feel That Summer In My Heart, this is mostly acoustic guitars lovingly plucked, drums delicately brushed, fiddles softly sawn. Childs’ delivery is still a sideways treat, tottering like Robert Wyatt throughout. Black sheep of the bunch is “Mow The Lawn”, a bucolic glam-slam through Roxy Music’s “Editions Of You”.

Muse – Absolution

0

Matt Bellamy's voice aside, Muse have finally absorbed their Radiohead influences. Now they've taken Yes as a new template, whether knowingly or not. It's a natural development for the classical music-loving Bellamy, especially on "Blackout", where swiftly fluttering guitars and massed orchestral strings interbreed for a few seconds in one of the few fruitful rock-classical hybrids, and the "Paranoid Android"-scale "Stockholm Syndrome". Exactly what Jon Anderson and co were shooting for 30 years back, only inevitably a certain muddiness of purpose and melody hamper them. And please, no Tales From Topographic Oceans.

Matt Bellamy’s voice aside, Muse have finally absorbed their Radiohead influences. Now they’ve taken Yes as a new template, whether knowingly or not. It’s a natural development for the classical music-loving Bellamy, especially on “Blackout”, where swiftly fluttering guitars and massed orchestral strings interbreed for a few seconds in one of the few fruitful rock-classical hybrids, and the “Paranoid Android”-scale “Stockholm Syndrome”. Exactly what Jon Anderson and co were shooting for 30 years back, only inevitably a certain muddiness of purpose and melody hamper them. And please, no Tales From Topographic Oceans.

Jah Wobble & Deep Space – Five Beat

0

Ho-hum. New album by Wobble. Ambient. World music. Dub. Yawn? Well, no. Except that like most of Britrock's lost souls whose genius is now a perennial cottage industry (of Bill Nelson), Wobble never fails to stimulate or excite even when you think, as here, he might just be going through the motions. Listening to Wobble is like hearing fragments of the national anthems of ideal music-based states filtering and warping back through space to us. The lyrically grumbling simmer of "Just Me And Phil" defies you to know what instrument Wobble is playing, or what plane he's on. A post-punk Olias Of Sunhillow, anyone?

Ho-hum. New album by Wobble. Ambient. World music. Dub. Yawn? Well, no. Except that like most of Britrock’s lost souls whose genius is now a perennial cottage industry (of Bill Nelson), Wobble never fails to stimulate or excite even when you think, as here, he might just be going through the motions. Listening to Wobble is like hearing fragments of the national anthems of ideal music-based states filtering and warping back through space to us. The lyrically grumbling simmer of “Just Me And Phil” defies you to know what instrument Wobble is playing, or what plane he’s on. A post-punk Olias Of Sunhillow, anyone?

White Hassle – The Death Of Song

0

Curious beast, this. Starts off on a Misunderstood/Stooges tip ("She's Dead") before the choppy chug of Ron Asheton-like guitar morphs into a brief Strokes flurry ("Health Food Store") and sets up camp in mutated doo-wop, surf and '50s rock'n'roll. Singer Marcellus Hall?who, along with drummer Dave Varenka, was previously in indie heroes Railroad Jerk?sounds all Bobby Darin one moment, Gordon Gano the next. An unlikely cover of The Hollies' "The Air That I Breathe" only heightens the wonder that it all bleeds together so well. All done in little over a half-hour, it even touches on the anti-folk scuffle of Major Matt Mason with the 'hidden' title track.

Curious beast, this. Starts off on a Misunderstood/Stooges tip (“She’s Dead”) before the choppy chug of Ron Asheton-like guitar morphs into a brief Strokes flurry (“Health Food Store”) and sets up camp in mutated doo-wop, surf and ’50s rock’n’roll. Singer Marcellus Hall?who, along with drummer Dave Varenka, was previously in indie heroes Railroad Jerk?sounds all Bobby Darin one moment, Gordon Gano the next. An unlikely cover of The Hollies’ “The Air That I Breathe” only heightens the wonder that it all bleeds together so well. All done in little over a half-hour, it even touches on the anti-folk scuffle of Major Matt Mason with the ‘hidden’ title track.

Prefuse 73 – Extinguished

0

Since releasing his awesome Vocal Studies + Uprock Narratives at the beginning of 2001, Scott Herren has headlined Japan's Fuji festival, recorded a new folk album under his Savath + Savalas alias and remixed everyone from Beans to Martina Topley-Bird. The thing he's most proud of, however, is this gorgeous collection of outtakes from his recent One Word Extinguisher album. Familiar beats are surrounded by new layers of drums, piano, Rhodes and percussion while other tracks are stripped down to just a reverberating bass line and witty vocal snippet. Probably one of the richest down-tempo albums since Shadow's Endtroducing.

Since releasing his awesome Vocal Studies + Uprock Narratives at the beginning of 2001, Scott Herren has headlined Japan’s Fuji festival, recorded a new folk album under his Savath + Savalas alias and remixed everyone from Beans to Martina Topley-Bird. The thing he’s most proud of, however, is this gorgeous collection of outtakes from his recent One Word Extinguisher album. Familiar beats are surrounded by new layers of drums, piano, Rhodes and percussion while other tracks are stripped down to just a reverberating bass line and witty vocal snippet. Probably one of the richest down-tempo albums since Shadow’s Endtroducing.

This Month In Americana

0

A cursory glance at the guest list alone is enough. Creaming together a fantasy league of Dave Alvin, Kurt Wagner, Mark Eitzel, Otis Clay, Chris Mills, Alejandro Escovedo, Kevin Coyne and others is some feat, but it's both a mark of the admiration afforded Jon Langford within the industry as it is devotion to the cause. Alongside Steve Earle, ex-Mekon/current Waco Brother Langford is the most vehement opponent of his adopted America's death laws within the musical field. Hoping to achieve a similar result to last year's Vol 1 (Governor George Ryan soon waived Illinois' incumbent Death Rowers after its $40,000 success), Vols 2 & 3?benefits go to both the Illinois and national coalitions to abolish corporal punishment?land at once due to the number of names eager to contribute. The greatest moments, however, aren't all where you'd expect. The Meat Purveyors' trembling mandolin-fest "John Hardy" is narrowly edged out as Vol 3's highlight by Coyne's snarling "Saviour", while over on the first CD, Wagner's reading of Tom Waits'"The Fall Of Troy" is almost unbearably heartbreaking. Next to Diane Izzo's take on ultimate anti-racism anthem "Strange Fruit", it's the most extraordinary song on this collection.

A cursory glance at the guest list alone is enough. Creaming together a fantasy league of Dave Alvin, Kurt Wagner, Mark Eitzel, Otis Clay, Chris Mills, Alejandro Escovedo, Kevin Coyne and others is some feat, but it’s both a mark of the admiration afforded Jon Langford within the industry as it is devotion to the cause. Alongside Steve Earle, ex-Mekon/current Waco Brother Langford is the most vehement opponent of his adopted America’s death laws within the musical field. Hoping to achieve a similar result to last year’s Vol 1 (Governor George Ryan soon waived Illinois’ incumbent Death Rowers after its $40,000 success), Vols 2 & 3?benefits go to both the Illinois and national coalitions to abolish corporal punishment?land at once due to the number of names eager to contribute. The greatest moments, however, aren’t all where you’d expect. The Meat Purveyors’ trembling mandolin-fest “John Hardy” is narrowly edged out as Vol 3’s highlight by Coyne’s snarling “Saviour”, while over on the first CD, Wagner’s reading of Tom Waits'”The Fall Of Troy” is almost unbearably heartbreaking. Next to Diane Izzo’s take on ultimate anti-racism anthem “Strange Fruit”, it’s the most extraordinary song on this collection.

Lowlights

0

Raised in rural New Mexico, Dameon Lee?aka Lowlights?gravitated first towards power pop with Albuquerque combo Scared Of Chaka. In 1999, six albums later, he set about beating a more sepulchral trail of his own. Co-produced by Dustin (Rocketship) Reske, this painterly debut is a sad-slow delight. Nothing maudlin about it either. Lee's voice has an autumn-leaf warmth, carried on swirls of organ noise, understated pedal-steel and shadowed by the faint harmonies of Angela Brown. On "Dim Stars" and "Travelogue" he sounds rather like a young Leonard Cohen stumbling into some roach-bitten outpost in a Sergio Leone flick.

Raised in rural New Mexico, Dameon Lee?aka Lowlights?gravitated first towards power pop with Albuquerque combo Scared Of Chaka. In 1999, six albums later, he set about beating a more sepulchral trail of his own. Co-produced by Dustin (Rocketship) Reske, this painterly debut is a sad-slow delight. Nothing maudlin about it either. Lee’s voice has an autumn-leaf warmth, carried on swirls of organ noise, understated pedal-steel and shadowed by the faint harmonies of Angela Brown. On “Dim Stars” and “Travelogue” he sounds rather like a young Leonard Cohen stumbling into some roach-bitten outpost in a Sergio Leone flick.

Stacey Earle And Mark Stuart – Never Gonna Let You Go

0

Since big brother Steve first recruited her to sing backing on 1991's The Hard Way, Stacey Earle's gradual career curve has included two unadorned solo albums (1999's Simple Gearle and 2000's Dancin' With Them That Brung Me) before finally sharing centre stage with 'im indoors, Mark Stuart, on 2001's Must Be Live. This new offering is simply the best thing either have ever done. Stuart's classic country voice meshes with Earle's honeyed purr superbly, but it's the bold instrumentation that truly glows. "Spread Your Wings" is a gleeful ragtime jaunt; "If You Want My Love" and "Cry Night After Night" mint-fresh excursions into classic Western swing.

Since big brother Steve first recruited her to sing backing on 1991’s The Hard Way, Stacey Earle’s gradual career curve has included two unadorned solo albums (1999’s Simple Gearle and 2000’s Dancin’ With Them That Brung Me) before finally sharing centre stage with ‘im indoors, Mark Stuart, on 2001’s Must Be Live. This new offering is simply the best thing either have ever done. Stuart’s classic country voice meshes with Earle’s honeyed purr superbly, but it’s the bold instrumentation that truly glows. “Spread Your Wings” is a gleeful ragtime jaunt; “If You Want My Love” and “Cry Night After Night” mint-fresh excursions into classic Western swing.

Blast From The Past

0

Rouse's last album Under Cold Blue Stars was a concept of sorts, set in '50s America and based around a fictitious couple and their struggle to come to terms with a fast-changing world and its shifting values. Musically, its rootsy brand of Americana ploughed a similar singer-songwriterly furrow to Rouse's first two solo albums and Chester, the collaborative record he made with Kurt Wagner. So in the light of what has gone before, 1972 comes as something of a surprise, if not a total shock, as Rouse goes back to roots of a rather different kind. Taking its cue from the year in which he was born, 1972 embarks on an affectionate 10-track tour around the music of that period. The mood is sunny and upbeat and the world is clearly a child-like place seen through a pair of rose-tinted spectacles. But, hey, he was only eight years old when the decade ended and the harsh reality of the '80s dawned. The tone is set by the opening title track, with "It's Too Late"-style piano chords and a lyric which finds Rouse "grooving to a Carole King tune" on an endless summer afternoon, before it moves into something more gossamer-like with one of those elusively floating melodies of the kind Wagner might have written for the last Lambchop album, Is A Woman. Songs such as "Love Vibration" and "Sunshine" are every bit as retro as their titles suggest?mild but soothing '70s West Coast pop in the tradition of "Me And You And A Dog Named Boo" and "It Never Rains (In Southern California)", or perhaps Captain And Tennille, rather than the jangling folk-rock that influenced The Thrills' equally California-fixated debut album. "James" is funkier but still mellifluous with a magical bass line, like Ace's "How Long" meets Bill Withers'"Use Me". There are other '70s soul influences, and you can hear Rouse and producer Brad Jones making nods towards Stevie Wonder, the jazz-funk of Herbie Mann, Van McCoy's "The Hustle" and even Barry White's Love Unlimited in the arrangements. But it's still filtered through his inescapable troubadour tendencies so that the soul is essentially of the softest, blue-eyed variety. "Come Back (Light Therapy)", for example, would have made a perfect follow-up single to Boz Scaggs'"Lowdown". It's hard to think of anyone apart from that other master of pop pastiche, Nick Lowe, who could have made a record quite like this. Yet it's all done with such obvious love and affection and literate craft, that Rouse has gone and made one of the albums of the year. Even if the year is 1972.

Rouse’s last album Under Cold Blue Stars was a concept of sorts, set in ’50s America and based around a fictitious couple and their struggle to come to terms with a fast-changing world and its shifting values. Musically, its rootsy brand of Americana ploughed a similar singer-songwriterly furrow to Rouse’s first two solo albums and Chester, the collaborative record he made with Kurt Wagner.

So in the light of what has gone before, 1972 comes as something of a surprise, if not a total shock, as Rouse goes back to roots of a rather different kind. Taking its cue from the year in which he was born, 1972 embarks on an affectionate 10-track tour around the music of that period. The mood is sunny and upbeat and the world is clearly a child-like place seen through a pair of rose-tinted spectacles. But, hey, he was only eight years old when the decade ended and the harsh reality of the ’80s dawned.

The tone is set by the opening title track, with “It’s Too Late”-style piano chords and a lyric which finds Rouse “grooving to a Carole King tune” on an endless summer afternoon, before it moves into something more gossamer-like with one of those elusively floating melodies of the kind Wagner might have written for the last Lambchop album, Is A Woman. Songs such as “Love Vibration” and “Sunshine” are every bit as retro as their titles suggest?mild but soothing ’70s West Coast pop in the tradition of “Me And You And A Dog Named Boo” and “It Never Rains (In Southern California)”, or perhaps Captain And Tennille, rather than the jangling folk-rock that influenced The Thrills’ equally California-fixated debut album.

“James” is funkier but still mellifluous with a magical bass line, like Ace’s “How Long” meets Bill Withers'”Use Me”. There are other ’70s soul influences, and you can hear Rouse and producer Brad Jones making nods towards Stevie Wonder, the jazz-funk of Herbie Mann, Van McCoy’s “The Hustle” and even Barry White’s Love Unlimited in the arrangements. But it’s still filtered through his inescapable troubadour tendencies so that the soul is essentially of the softest, blue-eyed variety. “Come Back (Light Therapy)”, for example, would have made a perfect follow-up single to Boz Scaggs'”Lowdown”.

It’s hard to think of anyone apart from that other master of pop pastiche, Nick Lowe, who could have made a record quite like this. Yet it’s all done with such obvious love and affection and literate craft, that Rouse has gone and made one of the albums of the year. Even if the year is 1972.

Jewel – 0304

0

You really want to hate this album. There's Jewel on the cover looking like she's auditioning for Atomic Kitten. The songs include collaborations with Guy Chambers (Robbie Williams) and Lester Mendez (Shakira). Folk-poetess earth mother turns pop diva. What could be more offensive? Except the tunes are stunning, her voice has never sounded better and she makes serious points few others would dare in a pop context. When did you last hear Christina Aguilera or Mariah Carey singing about US foreign policy? An album to reclaim pop music's lost soul.

You really want to hate this album. There’s Jewel on the cover looking like she’s auditioning for Atomic Kitten. The songs include collaborations with Guy Chambers (Robbie Williams) and Lester Mendez (Shakira). Folk-poetess earth mother turns pop diva. What could be more offensive? Except the tunes are stunning, her voice has never sounded better and she makes serious points few others would dare in a pop context. When did you last hear Christina Aguilera or Mariah Carey singing about US foreign policy? An album to reclaim pop music’s lost soul.