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Them – Now—And “Them”

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Them were a band whose membership had been in a state of flux since their formation in 1963, so it came as no surprise that, even after Van Morrison's exit in '66, the band soldiered on. Working with producer Roy Ruff in California augmented their raucous R'n'B sound with garage psychedelia and chart-oriented pop. A mixture of self-penned material and covers (including two Goffin and King songs, "You're Just What I Was Looking For Today" and "I Happen To Love You"), this album sits nicely between the extended guitar fantasies of the Grateful Dead and the expansive jangle pop of The Byrds.

Them were a band whose membership had been in a state of flux since their formation in 1963, so it came as no surprise that, even after Van Morrison’s exit in ’66, the band soldiered on. Working with producer Roy Ruff in California augmented their raucous R’n’B sound with garage psychedelia and chart-oriented pop. A mixture of self-penned material and covers (including two Goffin and King songs, “You’re Just What I Was Looking For Today” and “I Happen To Love You”), this album sits nicely between the extended guitar fantasies of the Grateful Dead and the expansive jangle pop of The Byrds.

Morcheeba – Parts Of The Process

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With their mellow backbeats, groove-based orchestration and vocalist Skye's creamily soulful tones, Morcheeba described themselves perfectly in the title of their second album, Big Calm. Their sound?one step removed from trip hop?is coolly understated but ultimately unaffecting, as this compilation proves. There's some magic in hits like "Trigger Hippie", while Kurt Wagner's hoarse-voiced charm is a perfect foil for Skye on "What New York Couples Fight About", and new track "What's Your Name?" (featuring Big Daddy Kane) borrows from UK garage, but overall it's too soporific. Calming as the sound of waves washing on a deserted shore is, you soon long for a big, bad-assed storm to shake things up.

With their mellow backbeats, groove-based orchestration and vocalist Skye’s creamily soulful tones, Morcheeba described themselves perfectly in the title of their second album, Big Calm. Their sound?one step removed from trip hop?is coolly understated but ultimately unaffecting, as this compilation proves. There’s some magic in hits like “Trigger Hippie”, while Kurt Wagner’s hoarse-voiced charm is a perfect foil for Skye on “What New York Couples Fight About”, and new track “What’s Your Name?” (featuring Big Daddy Kane) borrows from UK garage, but overall it’s too soporific. Calming as the sound of waves washing on a deserted shore is, you soon long for a big, bad-assed storm to shake things up.

Various Artists – Magnum Opus 3

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For some people, Donna Summer's unedited 17-minute "Love To Love You Baby" was equal to "White Riot", and rightly takes pride of place on this lovely two-CD set of dance classics. "I Found Lovin'", "Funkin' For Jamaica", "Hangin' On A String" and "Glow Of Love" are all present in their inalienable wonder, as are Cher's original version of Sophie Ellis-Bextor's "Take Me Home", lesser known jewels like Dee Dee Sharp's "Easy Money", and Machine's glorious August Darnell-written masterpiece of socialist Hi-NRG, "There But For The Grace Of God Go I". Wonderful, imperishable music.

For some people, Donna Summer’s unedited 17-minute “Love To Love You Baby” was equal to “White Riot”, and rightly takes pride of place on this lovely two-CD set of dance classics. “I Found Lovin'”, “Funkin’ For Jamaica”, “Hangin’ On A String” and “Glow Of Love” are all present in their inalienable wonder, as are Cher’s original version of Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s “Take Me Home”, lesser known jewels like Dee Dee Sharp’s “Easy Money”, and Machine’s glorious August Darnell-written masterpiece of socialist Hi-NRG, “There But For The Grace Of God Go I”. Wonderful, imperishable music.

Nico – Femme Fatale: The Aura Anthology

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Christa "Nico" Paffgen's career after The Velvet Underground revealed a bleak, mandrax-and heroin-addicted proto-gothic personality that resonated with the post-punk audience. Disc one Drama Of Exile...Plus features the decidedly rockist 1981 album with eight additional tracks. Drawing on David Bowie's Scary Monsters guitar sound, the album features covers of his "Heroes" and the Velvets' "I'm Waiting For The Man". Disc two?the 14-track Live At Chelsea Town Hall 9.8.85?captures Nico's doom-laden vocals overlaying her trademark harmonium, and includes an extended version of her former lover Jim Morrison's "The End".

Christa “Nico” Paffgen’s career after The Velvet Underground revealed a bleak, mandrax-and heroin-addicted proto-gothic personality that resonated with the post-punk audience. Disc one Drama Of Exile…Plus features the decidedly rockist 1981 album with eight additional tracks. Drawing on David Bowie’s Scary Monsters guitar sound, the album features covers of his “Heroes” and the Velvets’ “I’m Waiting For The Man”. Disc two?the 14-track Live At Chelsea Town Hall 9.8.85?captures Nico’s doom-laden vocals overlaying her trademark harmonium, and includes an extended version of her former lover Jim Morrison’s “The End”.

Generation X – Anthology

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Originally intended as a bonus-tracked compilation, this collection grew to epic proportions following a trawl through the Abbey Road vaults. Generation X's main claim to fame rests with a series of incendiary singles released during 1977 when the band filled the gig-circuit void left by the nationwide banning of The Sex Pistols and the rapid escalation of The Clash to much larger venues. Unlike their higher-profile big brothers, Idol and pals had no inhibitions about flaunting their love of '60s iconography, as evinced on their call-to-arms single "Ready Steady Go" and debut "Your Generation", a not-too-subtle response to Pete Townshend's similarly titled anthem of a decade earlier. Hardcore fans will be delighted with a tidied-up version of the unreleased but much bootlegged 1979 Sweet Revenge album, and a superior full-length 1978 live recording from Osaka.

Originally intended as a bonus-tracked compilation, this collection grew to epic proportions following a trawl through the Abbey Road vaults. Generation X’s main claim to fame rests with a series of incendiary singles released during 1977 when the band filled the gig-circuit void left by the nationwide banning of The Sex Pistols and the rapid escalation of The Clash to much larger venues.

Unlike their higher-profile big brothers, Idol and pals had no inhibitions about flaunting their love of ’60s iconography, as evinced on their call-to-arms single “Ready Steady Go” and debut “Your Generation”, a not-too-subtle response to Pete Townshend’s similarly titled anthem of a decade earlier.

Hardcore fans will be delighted with a tidied-up version of the unreleased but much bootlegged 1979 Sweet Revenge album, and a superior full-length 1978 live recording from Osaka.

Bummer In The City

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Various Artists NEW YORK NOISE: DANCE MUSIC FROM THE NEW YORK UNDERGROUND SOUL JAZZ Rating Star Various Artists ROUGH TRADE SHOPS: POST PUNK 01 MUTE Rating Star Ah, Manhattan, so much to answer for?and so in vogue as a rock metropolis after decades as a hip hop Mecca. Yes New York is the perfect title for an anthology of contemporary Gotham noise, a timely riposte to Brian Eno's notorious No New York compilation of post-punk "No Wave" acts released back in 1979. It's the new bands on Yes New York, starting with The Strokes and taking in Radio 4 and The Rapture, that have returned NYC to pole position in today's neo-post-punk world. But it's the bands on ultra-hip Soul Jazz's New York Noise (ESG, DNA, Liquid Liquid, James White & The Blacks, etc) that exert such an influence on those acts. If you'd told me, as I watched the sulky Bush Tetras play some forgotten East Village dive back in '81, that 22 years later the Yeah Yeah Yeahs would be playing essentially the same music, I'd have laughed. But one listen to the Tetras' "Can't Be Funky" on New York Noise, or to their bilious "Too Many Creeps" on Rough Trade Shops: Post Punk 01, should make it clear you're listening to Karen O's spiritual aunties. How much of this music?and of the UK post-punk on the Rough Trade shops album?have I actually come back to in the intervening decades? Precious little, to be honest. The vast majority of it still sounds like what it was: cerebral, bloodless 'dance' music for junkies, the kind of posturing Gotham tripe we used to describe as "atonal" and "angular". The Dance, The Bloods, even ESG and James White: you can keep it, frankly. But you can also keep a lot of the UK piffle on Post Punk 01, too?even if the great Simon Reynolds is writing a book about it. Pigbag, the Pop Group, Gang Of Four?white and scratchy and just as devoid o'funk as their Rotten Apple equivalents. Hearing 23 Skidoo's "Last Words" or Scritti Politti's "Skank Bloc Bologna" again is like burying your snout in a mildewed copy of NME or New York Rocker circa 1980. How affirmative can one be about Yes New York? The Strokes are what they are?1969 Velvets/Stooges via Blondie and Richard Hell; I dig 'em despite the record-collection references. But aside from the fabulously intense, lan Curtis-via-Blue Nile Interpol, the Yes groups (The Fever, The Walkmen, The Natural History) sound just as narrow and constricted as their scuzzy East Village forebears. All attitude and no trousers, today's New York Rockers?like so many of yesterday's?prompt in me the single word 'NO'.

Various Artists

NEW YORK NOISE: DANCE MUSIC FROM THE NEW YORK UNDERGROUND

SOUL JAZZ

Rating Star

Various Artists

ROUGH TRADE SHOPS: POST PUNK 01

MUTE

Rating Star

Ah, Manhattan, so much to answer for?and so in vogue as a rock metropolis after decades as a hip hop Mecca. Yes New York is the perfect title for an anthology of contemporary Gotham noise, a timely riposte to Brian Eno’s notorious No New York compilation of post-punk “No Wave” acts released back in 1979.

It’s the new bands on Yes New York, starting with The Strokes and taking in Radio 4 and The Rapture, that have returned NYC to pole position in today’s neo-post-punk world. But it’s the bands on ultra-hip Soul Jazz’s New York Noise (ESG, DNA, Liquid Liquid, James White & The Blacks, etc) that exert such an influence on those acts.

If you’d told me, as I watched the sulky Bush Tetras play some forgotten East Village dive back in ’81, that 22 years later the Yeah Yeah Yeahs would be playing essentially the same music, I’d have laughed. But one listen to the Tetras’ “Can’t Be Funky” on New York Noise, or to their bilious “Too Many Creeps” on Rough Trade Shops: Post Punk 01, should make it clear you’re listening to Karen O’s spiritual aunties.

How much of this music?and of the UK post-punk on the Rough Trade shops album?have I actually come back to in the intervening decades? Precious little, to be honest. The vast majority of it still sounds like what it was: cerebral, bloodless ‘dance’ music for junkies, the kind of posturing Gotham tripe we used to describe as “atonal” and “angular”. The Dance, The Bloods, even ESG and James White: you can keep it, frankly.

But you can also keep a lot of the UK piffle on Post Punk 01, too?even if the great Simon Reynolds is writing a book about it. Pigbag, the Pop Group, Gang Of Four?white and scratchy and just as devoid o’funk as their Rotten Apple equivalents. Hearing 23 Skidoo’s “Last Words” or Scritti Politti’s “Skank Bloc Bologna” again is like burying your snout in a mildewed copy of NME or New York Rocker circa 1980.

How affirmative can one be about Yes New York? The Strokes are what they are?1969 Velvets/Stooges via Blondie and Richard Hell; I dig ’em despite the record-collection references. But aside from the fabulously intense, lan Curtis-via-Blue Nile Interpol, the Yes groups (The Fever, The Walkmen, The Natural History) sound just as narrow and constricted as their scuzzy East Village forebears. All attitude and no trousers, today’s New York Rockers?like so many of yesterday’s?prompt in me the single word ‘NO’.

Jeff Beck – Shapes Of Things

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While never quite achieving the fame of Eric Clapton or Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck has been a durable guitar pioneer. Hugely influential, he's displayed an open-minded approach to technical innovation, not to mention a healthy dose of irreverent humour. This compilation opens with Beck's Joe Meek-produced sessions for Screaming Lord Sutch, and peaks with his collaborations with The Yardbirds, Jimmy Page, Paul Jones and Donovan. The collection also includes?of course?Beck's 1967 chart hit "Hi Ho Silver Lining" and the surging "Beck's Bolero".

While never quite achieving the fame of Eric Clapton or Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck has been a durable guitar pioneer. Hugely influential, he’s displayed an open-minded approach to technical innovation, not to mention a healthy dose of irreverent humour. This compilation opens with Beck’s Joe Meek-produced sessions for Screaming Lord Sutch, and peaks with his collaborations with The Yardbirds, Jimmy Page, Paul Jones and Donovan. The collection also includes?of course?Beck’s 1967 chart hit “Hi Ho Silver Lining” and the surging “Beck’s Bolero”.

Blue Cheer – Vincebus Eruptum

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Alongside Black Sabbath, Cream and The Groundhogs, Californian power trio Blue Cheer are justly revered for their part in inventing the genre currently known as stoner rock. The influence of their thick, viscous riffing and bastardised blues wailing on Kyuss, Mudhoney and Fu Manchu is undeniable, and this reissue of the first two Cheer albums comes as a timely reminder of their proto-metal pioneer status. Opening with a feedback-ridden cover of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues", Vincebus Eruptum is apocalyptic amp-damage all the way, rumbling, overdriven blues for the end of the world. Outside In is more refined, but every bit as brain-blisteringly heavy, adding psychedelic hi-jinks to the band's monolithic density. At their best, Blue Cheer thundered like an overweight Stooges. Monumental.

Alongside Black Sabbath, Cream and The Groundhogs, Californian power trio Blue Cheer are justly revered for their part in inventing the genre currently known as stoner rock. The influence of their thick, viscous riffing and bastardised blues wailing on Kyuss, Mudhoney and Fu Manchu is undeniable, and this reissue of the first two Cheer albums comes as a timely reminder of their proto-metal pioneer status. Opening with a feedback-ridden cover of Eddie Cochran’s “Summertime Blues”, Vincebus Eruptum is apocalyptic amp-damage all the way, rumbling, overdriven blues for the end of the world. Outside In is more refined, but every bit as brain-blisteringly heavy, adding psychedelic hi-jinks to the band’s monolithic density. At their best, Blue Cheer thundered like an overweight Stooges. Monumental.

A Place In The Sun

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This legendary album, the centrepiece of the so-called "Doom Trilogy", has waited nearly 30 years to be issued on CD, such has been its author's reputed disenchantment with it. Over that time, On The Beach has become a sort of Holy Grail to Neil Young CD buyers, its continuing unavailability adding to a notoriety which began with the first round of reviews the album received in summer 1974. Early reaction to On The Beach was almost entirely negative and it was only after a certain amount of hindsight had set in that it was accorded any respect, let alone admiration. Now, at last, it's with us again, and we have another chance to evaluate what many feel to be one of the outstanding achievements of Young's career. Made in spring 1974, On The Beach was chronologically the last of the Doom Trilogy, following 1973's Time Fades Away and Tonight's The Night, recorded in August 1973 but unreleased until June 1975. As such, the bleak, inward-looking, semi-exhausted On The Beach, while sounding like the eye of the storm, was actually the aftermath of a dark exorcism carried through in the previous two albums. The context of this period of Young's life was a desperate one. On the rebound from the Roman excesses of being on the road with CSNY, Young was disillusioned with the compromised idealism of the late-'60s counterculture and disgusted with the bloated complacency of the American music scene of the early '70s. More sharply, he felt painful grief for the deaths by heroin of two close friends: Danny Whitten, guitarist with his backing band Crazy Horse, and Bruce Berry, guitar roadie for CSNY. In particular, Young was haunted by remorse and horror at the death of Whitten, who had OD'd after being sacked from sessions for Young's second solo album. The Time Fades Away tour, from which the 1973 live album of the same name was drawn, chronicles Young's dire mood in the aftermath of this personal disaster. Everything that was oppressing Young in 1973 came together in the dark howl of Tonight's The Night, a record described by Uncut editor Allan Jones as "the sound of calamity, a rock'n'roll Golgotha, a place of death and skulls". So oppressive and deranged was the accompanying tour that many expected Young to expire as an artist by the end of it; indeed, there was a rumour, made semi-official by a wire-service news story from Paris at the end of the tour, that Young had died from a heroin overdose. He hadn't, of course, and somewhere between then and the spring of the following year he managed to assemble On The Beach. The album features a mixed roster of musicians, including appearances by David Crosby and Graham Nash from CSNY. The basic rhythm unit is that of Crazy Horse: Bill Talbot on bass and Ralph Molina on drums. Alternative rhythm players include The Band's drummer Levon Helm and bassist Tim Drummond. Auxiliary guitar duties are divided between Ben Keith (slide, steel and dobro), Rusty Kershaw (slide and fiddle) and George Whitsell. Young himself plays guitar, banjo, piano and harmonica. While the primary mood of On The Beach is introspective and philosophical, it contains some savage sentiments, especially on "Revolution Blues", which blackly commemorates the Manson gang as a means of exorcising Young's own revulsion at the intemperance of the West Coast rock'n'roll lifestyle: "I see bloody fountains/And 10 million dune buggies comin' down the mountains/I hear that Laurel Canyon is full of famous stars/But I hate them worse than lepers and I'll kill them in their cars." Often couching its expression in blues form or variants thereof, On The Beach is a stark, slow examination of Young's personal aesthetic in the wake of a period in which he had deliberately turned his back on the commercial success of After The Gold Rush and Harvest. The album unfolds at a measured to plodding pace, the playing (which sounds mostly like first takes) skeletal and sometimes fumbling. Young's approach to his material is audibly tired and close to throwaway-yet the listener is almost always gripped by the sensation that what's being expressed is the threadbare truth. On The Beach is bookended by two expressions of wistful nostalgia for "the old folkie days" in Toronto?"the good old days" when comrades in music stayed up all night long, singing for the sheer buzz of it, earning little in the way of money but gaining much in terms of soul satisfaction and learning all the time. The album's finale, "Ambulance Blues" (musically a cousin of Bert Jansch's heroin threnody, "Needle Of Death"), puts this nostalgia into perspective: "It's easy to get buried in the past/When you try to make a good thing last." A melancholy song, it's also the final working-out of the dilemma central to On The Beach: how to regain and maintain authenticity when the pressure is on to present a false facade and when life itself is almost too awfully real to allow any space for creativity. How, then, does On The Beach stand up after 29 years? The answer: like a classic. There's only one slightly weak track ("Vampire Blues"). The rest remains as nakedly convincing and confessional as it did when it first appeared. It's easy to see why Young has doubts about it. On the one hand, the album is altogether too close to home; on the other, its almost improvisational realisation is, at times, equally close to complete collapse. There's a fragile vulnerability about songs like "See The Sky About To Rain", "For The Turnstiles" and "Motion Pictures" that's almost translucent. The approach, in other words, is perilously near to self-pity here, although that lapse is never actually allowed. As a document of a despairing personal low, On The Beach would be a kind of masterpiece by any standard. Yet it's the album's inner strength, its refusal to die or evade the issue, its ultimate squaring up to a regenerated future which make it such a moving experience. Rock music rarely comes as close to closedown as it does here, but the ultimate truth is that On The Beach is a positive experience, a catharsis. It's good to have it back at last.

This legendary album, the centrepiece of the so-called “Doom Trilogy”, has waited nearly 30 years to be issued on CD, such has been its author’s reputed disenchantment with it. Over that time, On The Beach has become a sort of Holy Grail to Neil Young CD buyers, its continuing unavailability adding to a notoriety which began with the first round of reviews the album received in summer 1974. Early reaction to On The Beach was almost entirely negative and it was only after a certain amount of hindsight had set in that it was accorded any respect, let alone admiration. Now, at last, it’s with us again, and we have another chance to evaluate what many feel to be one of the outstanding achievements of Young’s career.

Made in spring 1974, On The Beach was chronologically the last of the Doom Trilogy, following 1973’s Time Fades Away and Tonight’s The Night, recorded in August 1973 but unreleased until June 1975. As such, the bleak, inward-looking, semi-exhausted On The Beach, while sounding like the eye of the storm, was actually the aftermath of a dark exorcism carried through in the previous two albums.

The context of this period of Young’s life was a desperate one. On the rebound from the Roman excesses of being on the road with CSNY, Young was disillusioned with the compromised idealism of the late-’60s counterculture and disgusted with the bloated complacency of the American music scene of the early ’70s. More sharply, he felt painful grief for the deaths by heroin of two close friends: Danny Whitten, guitarist with his backing band Crazy Horse, and Bruce Berry, guitar roadie for CSNY. In particular, Young was haunted by remorse and horror at the death of Whitten, who had OD’d after being sacked from sessions for Young’s second solo album. The Time Fades Away tour, from which the 1973 live album of the same name was drawn, chronicles Young’s dire mood in the aftermath of this personal disaster.

Everything that was oppressing Young in 1973 came together in the dark howl of Tonight’s The Night, a record described by Uncut editor Allan Jones as “the sound of calamity, a rock’n’roll Golgotha, a place of death and skulls”. So oppressive and deranged was the accompanying tour that many expected Young to expire as an artist by the end of it; indeed, there was a rumour, made semi-official by a wire-service news story from Paris at the end of the tour, that Young had died from a heroin overdose. He hadn’t, of course, and somewhere between then and the spring of the following year he managed to assemble On The Beach.

The album features a mixed roster of musicians, including appearances by David Crosby and Graham Nash from CSNY. The basic rhythm unit is that of Crazy Horse: Bill Talbot on bass and Ralph Molina on drums. Alternative rhythm players include The Band’s drummer Levon Helm and bassist Tim Drummond. Auxiliary guitar duties are divided between Ben Keith (slide, steel and dobro), Rusty Kershaw (slide and fiddle) and George Whitsell. Young himself plays guitar, banjo, piano and harmonica. While the primary mood of On The Beach is introspective and philosophical, it contains some savage sentiments, especially on “Revolution Blues”, which blackly commemorates the Manson gang as a means of exorcising Young’s own revulsion at the intemperance of the West Coast rock’n’roll lifestyle: “I see bloody fountains/And 10 million dune buggies comin’ down the mountains/I hear that Laurel Canyon is full of famous stars/But I hate them worse than lepers and I’ll kill them in their cars.”

Often couching its expression in blues form or variants thereof, On The Beach is a stark, slow examination of Young’s personal aesthetic in the wake of a period in which he had deliberately turned his back on the commercial success of After The Gold Rush and Harvest.

The album unfolds at a measured to plodding pace, the playing (which sounds mostly like first takes) skeletal and sometimes fumbling. Young’s approach to his material is audibly tired and close to throwaway-yet the listener is almost always gripped by the sensation that what’s being expressed is the threadbare truth.

On The Beach is bookended by two expressions of wistful nostalgia for “the old folkie days” in Toronto?”the good old days” when comrades in music stayed up all night long, singing for the sheer buzz of it, earning little in the way of money but gaining much in terms of soul satisfaction and learning all the time. The album’s finale, “Ambulance Blues” (musically a cousin of Bert Jansch’s heroin threnody, “Needle Of Death”), puts this nostalgia into perspective: “It’s easy to get buried in the past/When you try to make a good thing last.” A melancholy song, it’s also the final working-out of the dilemma central to On The Beach: how to regain and maintain authenticity when the pressure is on to present a false facade and when life itself is almost too awfully real to allow any space for creativity.

How, then, does On The Beach stand up after 29 years? The answer: like a classic. There’s only one slightly weak track (“Vampire Blues”). The rest remains as nakedly convincing and confessional as it did when it first appeared. It’s easy to see why Young has doubts about it. On the one hand, the album is altogether too close to home; on the other, its almost improvisational realisation is, at times, equally close to complete collapse. There’s a fragile vulnerability about songs like “See The Sky About To Rain”, “For The Turnstiles” and “Motion Pictures” that’s almost translucent. The approach, in other words, is perilously near to self-pity here, although that lapse is never actually allowed.

As a document of a despairing personal low, On The Beach would be a kind of masterpiece by any standard. Yet it’s the album’s inner strength, its refusal to die or evade the issue, its ultimate squaring up to a regenerated future which make it such a moving experience. Rock music rarely comes as close to closedown as it does here, but the ultimate truth is that On The Beach is a positive experience, a catharsis. It’s good to have it back at last.

Various Artists – Byrd Parts 2

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Byrds completists will trip towards these Aussie compilations, which specialise in filling in the gaps around Jim McGuinn, Gene Clark and David Crosby from 1962 onwards. The band's incarnation as The Jet Set is represented by Gene's Beatlesy "You Movin'" while Jim's banjo days illuminate his work with Hoyt Axton on "Brisbane Ladies"?still no match for the God-like "Greenback Dollar". Crosby's cache takes over during his stint as a folkie wannabe with Les Baxter's Balladeers and some pretty rare solo proto-blues rock tasters like "Get Together", written by Dino "Quicksilver" Valenti. Clark's "Why Can't I Have Her Back Again?" plus his duet with Chip Douglas on "If I Hang Around" and Peter Fonda's version of Gram Parsons' "November Nights" are the really sublime and ridiculous items. A marvellous addition to this essential LA lore. Keep 'em coming.

Byrds completists will trip towards these Aussie compilations, which specialise in filling in the gaps around Jim McGuinn, Gene Clark and David Crosby from 1962 onwards. The band’s incarnation as The Jet Set is represented by Gene’s Beatlesy “You Movin'” while Jim’s banjo days illuminate his work with Hoyt Axton on “Brisbane Ladies”?still no match for the God-like “Greenback Dollar”.

Crosby’s cache takes over during his stint as a folkie wannabe with Les Baxter’s Balladeers and some pretty rare solo proto-blues rock tasters like “Get Together”, written by Dino “Quicksilver” Valenti.

Clark’s “Why Can’t I Have Her Back Again?” plus his duet with Chip Douglas on “If I Hang Around” and Peter Fonda’s version of Gram Parsons’ “November Nights” are the really sublime and ridiculous items.

A marvellous addition to this essential LA lore. Keep ’em coming.

The Drifters – The Definitive Drifters

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Between 1959 and 1964, The Drifters had 16 American hits, many written by top teams from New York's Brill Building, notably including "Save The Last Dance For Me", "Up On The Roof", "On Broadway" and "Under The Boardwalk". These are all-time classics by any measure and any collection featuring them is worth having. On this two-disc set, a great deal else from the group's extensive catalogue appears, not always to much effect. In the absence of something more selective, this is worth considering.

Between 1959 and 1964, The Drifters had 16 American hits, many written by top teams from New York’s Brill Building, notably including “Save The Last Dance For Me”, “Up On The Roof”, “On Broadway” and “Under The Boardwalk”. These are all-time classics by any measure and any collection featuring them is worth having. On this two-disc set, a great deal else from the group’s extensive catalogue appears, not always to much effect. In the absence of something more selective, this is worth considering.

Doug Dillard – The Banjo Album

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Before embarking on his Fantastic Adventure with Gene Clark, The Dillards' founder member issued this statement of intent?a sweet fusion of traditional folk tunes, Ralph Stanley-flavoured bluegrass and white-boy US blues. All the ingredients are in place?Jim Dickson production, Bernie Leadon's guitar, John Hartford's fiddle and Gene (on harmonica) among the crew, all providing a taste of that new '60s baroque which lends this style its longevity and charm.

Before embarking on his Fantastic Adventure with Gene Clark, The Dillards’ founder member issued this statement of intent?a sweet fusion of traditional folk tunes, Ralph Stanley-flavoured bluegrass and white-boy US blues.

All the ingredients are in place?Jim Dickson production, Bernie Leadon’s guitar, John Hartford’s fiddle and Gene (on harmonica) among the crew, all providing a taste of that new ’60s baroque which lends this style its longevity and charm.

Captain Sensible – The Collection

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To some, the Captain's 1982 No 1 romp through Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Happy Talk" was the ultimate punk sell-out. Silly beggars! It was, of course, a hilarious act of screwball subversion. Either way, its Goonish novelty was unrepresentative of the two albums that followed. As the best bits collated here show, solo Sensible traded in the same satirical Englishness as The Kinks and Madness ("Croydon", "A Nice Cup Of Tea"). His lovable "Rapper's Delight" pastiche "Wot" still raises a smile, but did 1984's touching "There's More Snakes Than Ladders" really only reach No 57? He was robbed.

To some, the Captain’s 1982 No 1 romp through Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “Happy Talk” was the ultimate punk sell-out. Silly beggars! It was, of course, a hilarious act of screwball subversion.

Either way, its Goonish novelty was unrepresentative of the two albums that followed. As the best bits collated here show, solo Sensible traded in the same satirical Englishness as The Kinks and Madness (“Croydon”, “A Nice Cup Of Tea”). His lovable “Rapper’s Delight” pastiche “Wot” still raises a smile, but did 1984’s touching “There’s More Snakes Than Ladders” really only reach No 57? He was robbed.

Alternative TV – Action Time Vision: The ATV Anthology

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After instigating punk's Xerox bible, fanzine mogul Perry decided to "have a go myself" (as he explains in his enlightening liner notes), thus forming ATV. His earliest efforts remain his best, notably the reggae-tinged confession of impotence, "Love Lies Limp" (apparently a chide against the libido of journalist Caroline Coon, the then-girlfriend of The Clash's Paul Simonon) and 77's shrewd dismissal of punk bandwagon jumpers "How Much Longer". This double CD also traces his perseverance thereafter, from dub to jangling '80s indie. A mixed bag musically, though consistently entertaining in Perry's lyrical outlook.

After instigating punk’s Xerox bible, fanzine mogul Perry decided to “have a go myself” (as he explains in his enlightening liner notes), thus forming ATV. His earliest efforts remain his best, notably the reggae-tinged confession of impotence, “Love Lies Limp” (apparently a chide against the libido of journalist Caroline Coon, the then-girlfriend of The Clash’s Paul Simonon) and 77’s shrewd dismissal of punk bandwagon jumpers “How Much Longer”. This double CD also traces his perseverance thereafter, from dub to jangling ’80s indie. A mixed bag musically, though consistently entertaining in Perry’s lyrical outlook.

Ten Benson – Danger Of Deaf

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London-based quartet Ten Benson have been plugging their hard rock have been pluggiffs and caustic humour around the UK underground for the best part of a decade without ever troubling the mainstream. Danger Of Deaf is half best-of and half live album, featuring tracks culled from their two previous LPs (2000's Hiss and last year's Satan Kidney Pie) and re-recorded in one take to recreate the full Benson live experience. Overblown at the best of times, their AC/DC-aping rawk now begs comparison with Spinal Tap. The full catalogue of rock histrionics are employed here: distorted vocals from frontman Chris Teckkam, copious amounts of feedback and pitch-black lyrics. Novelty Christmas single "Black Snow" and the guitar riff on "Nobody's Wife" are superb. Impossible to take seriously, so just turn it up to 11.

London-based quartet Ten Benson have been plugging their hard rock have been pluggiffs and caustic humour around the UK underground for the best part of a decade without ever troubling the mainstream. Danger Of Deaf is half best-of and half live album, featuring tracks culled from their two previous LPs (2000’s Hiss and last year’s Satan Kidney Pie) and re-recorded in one take to recreate the full Benson live experience. Overblown at the best of times, their AC/DC-aping rawk now begs comparison with Spinal Tap. The full catalogue of rock histrionics are employed here: distorted vocals from frontman Chris Teckkam, copious amounts of feedback and pitch-black lyrics. Novelty Christmas single “Black Snow” and the guitar riff on “Nobody’s Wife” are superb.

Impossible to take seriously, so just turn it up to 11.

Roger Waters – The Wall Live In Berlin

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It would be hard to improve on the description of The Wall offered by the editor of Uncut recently in his "Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before" column. "An impossibly miserable psychodrama, four sides of groaning self-pity, morbid pessimism and relentless musical hogwash, "Allan Jones wrote in d...

It would be hard to improve on the description of The Wall offered by the editor of Uncut recently in his “Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before” column. “An impossibly miserable psychodrama, four sides of groaning self-pity, morbid pessimism and relentless musical hogwash, “Allan Jones wrote in describing Pink Floyd’s original 1979 studio recording. And nothing had improved when Waters performed the work live at the Berlin Wall on July 21, 1990. Even the galaxy of estimable guest singers, including Van Morrison, Sin

Various Artists – The American Song-Poem Anthology

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Older readers may recall those ads in US mags of the '60s and '70s which, for a sum of cash, offered to set your lyrics to music. Many responded, and this CD collects 28 of the best, and worst, examples, including the most notorious?John Trubee's "Blind Man's Penis"?and much genuine strangeness, featuring love songs to carpet bugs, Richard Nixon, masturbation and green fingernails. The most prominent figure is one Rodd Keith, whose "Heartbroken Pain" was later covered by Yo La Tengo. Intriguing stuff.

Older readers may recall those ads in US mags of the ’60s and ’70s which, for a sum of cash, offered to set your lyrics to music. Many responded, and this CD collects 28 of the best, and worst, examples, including the most notorious?John Trubee’s “Blind Man’s Penis”?and much genuine strangeness, featuring love songs to carpet bugs, Richard Nixon, masturbation and green fingernails. The most prominent figure is one Rodd Keith, whose “Heartbroken Pain” was later covered by Yo La Tengo.

Intriguing stuff.

Hollywood Mondo

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Kim Fowley's hoss is impossible to tether. Six-and-a-half-feet tall, resembling the worst nightmare in The Phantom Of The Paradise, too ugly for the agency, Fowley was born on the day Hitler invaded Poland. He grew up in the last Babylonian days of Tarnished Hollywood. His dad played Doc Holliday in the TV series, Wyatt Earp, and sent young Kim to finishing school, where he shared an inkwell with Nancy Sinatra. Fuelled on Elvis, Frankie Lymon and that whole American Graffiti drive-in fumble, Fowley befriended fellow freak Phil Spector before embarking on his quest to justify girlfriend Candice Bergen's assertion that he would make "dog crap rock and roll records". Kim's throwaway cult status is given a drastic makeover here, as the 32 tracks break all the rules of pop normalcy. His accidental legend does him a great disservice, too, since these gory gems are a full-fat rave, bringing to mind the vile gag?"Where's the party?" "It's in your mouth, and everyone's coming." Flitting between sultry LA, Swinging London (he stood in the audience at the Richmond Athletic Club with Eric Clapton watching the Stones, worked with Cat Stevens and PJ Proby's hairdresser Spider) and the black country rock of pre-Slade incarnation the N'Betweens, Fowley was there. His million sellers like "Alley-Oop" and B.Bumble & The Stingers' "Nut Rocker" are the jukebox gems on a depraved string of pearls. Never keen to cast his shadow in any one place, Kim rubbed alongside The Seeds, Them, The Soft Machine and The Rivingtons?whose "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow" bookends this fantastically weird collection. Even a solo Kim was worth his salt. Imagine Ted Nugent fronting the Velvets with Mars Bonfire on guitar and you've got "Animal Man". He broke all the moulds and he didn't take non-prescription drugs. The teenage crippled Lord Byron will finally have his day.

Kim Fowley’s hoss is impossible to tether. Six-and-a-half-feet tall, resembling the worst nightmare in The Phantom Of The Paradise, too ugly for the agency, Fowley was born on the day Hitler invaded Poland. He grew up in the last Babylonian days of Tarnished Hollywood. His dad played Doc Holliday in the TV series, Wyatt Earp, and sent young Kim to finishing school, where he shared an inkwell with Nancy Sinatra.

Fuelled on Elvis, Frankie Lymon and that whole American Graffiti drive-in fumble, Fowley befriended fellow freak Phil Spector before embarking on his quest to justify girlfriend Candice Bergen’s assertion that he would make “dog crap rock and roll records”.

Kim’s throwaway cult status is given a drastic makeover here, as the 32 tracks break all the rules of pop normalcy. His accidental legend does him a great disservice, too, since these gory gems are a full-fat rave, bringing to mind the vile gag?”Where’s the party?” “It’s in your mouth, and everyone’s coming.”

Flitting between sultry LA, Swinging London (he stood in the audience at the Richmond Athletic Club with Eric Clapton watching the Stones, worked with Cat Stevens and PJ Proby’s hairdresser Spider) and the black country rock of pre-Slade incarnation the N’Betweens, Fowley was there. His million sellers like “Alley-Oop” and B.Bumble & The Stingers’ “Nut Rocker” are the jukebox gems on a depraved string of pearls.

Never keen to cast his shadow in any one place, Kim rubbed alongside The Seeds, Them, The Soft Machine and The Rivingtons?whose “Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow” bookends this fantastically weird collection. Even a solo Kim was worth his salt. Imagine Ted Nugent fronting the Velvets with Mars Bonfire on guitar and you’ve got “Animal Man”. He broke all the moulds and he didn’t take non-prescription drugs. The teenage crippled Lord Byron will finally have his day.

Steve Marriott – Signed Sealed

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Marriott's career after The Small Faces initially centred on the group he formed with Peter Frampton, Humble Pie. After six years of touring in the US, Marriott left Humble Pie and attempted to reignite The Small Faces, but when this failed, he fell back on returns to Humble Pie and stints in Europe with Packet Of Three, releasing two solo albums before his death in '91. This patchy compilation gives an idea of the music he made in his later years, but offers nothing by way of documentation.

Marriott’s career after The Small Faces initially centred on the group he formed with Peter Frampton, Humble Pie. After six years of touring in the US, Marriott left Humble Pie and attempted to reignite The Small Faces, but when this failed, he fell back on returns to Humble Pie and stints in Europe with Packet Of Three, releasing two solo albums before his death in ’91. This patchy compilation gives an idea of the music he made in his later years, but offers nothing by way of documentation.

Emmylou Harris – Producer’s Cut

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Collectors will want this compilation of Emmylou's early work for the inclusion of a duet with Johnny Cash on "Old Rugged Cross". Techno-buffs will want it for the crystalline 5:1 surround sound, remixed for DVD-A format by Brian Ahern, who produced 11 albums for Harris between 1975 and '83. The rest of us can simply enjoy a fine selection that places such classics as "Boulder To Birmingham" and "Pancho And Lefty" alongside less celebrated gems like "The Last Cheater's Waltz".

Collectors will want this compilation of Emmylou’s early work for the inclusion of a duet with Johnny Cash on “Old Rugged Cross”. Techno-buffs will want it for the crystalline 5:1 surround sound, remixed for DVD-A format by Brian Ahern, who produced 11 albums for Harris between 1975 and ’83. The rest of us can simply enjoy a fine selection that places such classics as “Boulder To Birmingham” and “Pancho And Lefty” alongside less celebrated gems like “The Last Cheater’s Waltz”.