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Insomnia

Stylish Norwegian thriller, remade last year by Christopher Nolan, whose version is almost eerily faithful to the original. Nolan had the powerhouse cast?Pacino, Robin Williams, Hilary Swank?but this probably has the sharper atmospheric edge, and director Erik Skjoldbj...

Stylish Norwegian thriller, remade last year by Christopher Nolan, whose version is almost eerily faithful to the original. Nolan had the powerhouse cast?Pacino, Robin Williams, Hilary Swank?but this probably has the sharper atmospheric edge, and director Erik Skjoldbj

He Loves Me, He Loves He Not

Audrey Tautou's wide-eyed, innocent expressions are subverted cleverly in this Gallic romance-mystery. Hints of Hitchcock, but a mention of Memento's inevitable, as we see the story first through her eyes, then through those of the object of her amour fou, Samuel Le Bihan. Doesn't soar, but studded with scenes both picturesque and psychologically taut.

Audrey Tautou’s wide-eyed, innocent expressions are subverted cleverly in this Gallic romance-mystery. Hints of Hitchcock, but a mention of Memento’s inevitable, as we see the story first through her eyes, then through those of the object of her amour fou, Samuel Le Bihan. Doesn’t soar, but studded with scenes both picturesque and psychologically taut.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Special Edition

If Easy Rider spelled the end of the hippie dream, then Chainsaw provided the full-blown nightmare. A camper van full of paisley-shirted, astrology-obsessed kids pulls up in rural Texas only to discover Leatherface and his family only too willing to show them some local hospitality. The opening half-hour still remains the most unnerving in horror history.

If Easy Rider spelled the end of the hippie dream, then Chainsaw provided the full-blown nightmare. A camper van full of paisley-shirted, astrology-obsessed kids pulls up in rural Texas only to discover Leatherface and his family only too willing to show them some local hospitality. The opening half-hour still remains the most unnerving in horror history.

Will Penny

Magisterial, tough-hearted 1967 western from writer/director Tom Gries. Charlton Heston is a revelation as the eponymous ageing cowhand, a lonesome, unemployed illiterate, bushwhacked by deranged preacher Donald Pleasence and his boys. While recovering, he encounters Joan Hackett, who, although travelling through the wilderness to join her husband, offers the chance of a life he's never known.

Magisterial, tough-hearted 1967 western from writer/director Tom Gries. Charlton Heston is a revelation as the eponymous ageing cowhand, a lonesome, unemployed illiterate, bushwhacked by deranged preacher Donald Pleasence and his boys. While recovering, he encounters Joan Hackett, who, although travelling through the wilderness to join her husband, offers the chance of a life he’s never known.

Strange Journey

An episodic, typically eccentric Jim Jarmusch film from 1989, loosely focusing on Elvis-mania, with an ensemble cast including Steve Buscemi, Screamin' Jay Hawkins and Joe Strummer. There are three chief strands, juggled with customary minimalism by the auteur. A hymn to Memphis and its music, it hangs out coolly with two Presley fanatics, a woman who sees Elvis' ghost, and at least one would-be lookalike. As this was the first American production to be independently financed by a Japanese corporate (JVC), it's understandable that Jarmusch seems preoccupied with how America looks to Japanese eyes, though the first tale, starring two bewildered Japanese teenagers, is the least gripping. The third, as Brit-punk Strummer goes drinking with Buscemi and shoots a liquor-store worker before inadvertently getting his new buddy wounded too, is mesmeric. Not because Strummer was a great actor (be honest, he wasn't) but because Jarmusch is at his most languidly inspired. Worth the journey.

An episodic, typically eccentric Jim Jarmusch film from 1989, loosely focusing on Elvis-mania, with an ensemble cast including Steve Buscemi, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and Joe Strummer. There are three chief strands, juggled with customary minimalism by the auteur. A hymn to Memphis and its music, it hangs out coolly with two Presley fanatics, a woman who sees Elvis’ ghost, and at least one would-be lookalike.

As this was the first American production to be independently financed by a Japanese corporate (JVC), it’s understandable that Jarmusch seems preoccupied with how America looks to Japanese eyes, though the first tale, starring two bewildered Japanese teenagers, is the least gripping. The third, as Brit-punk Strummer goes drinking with Buscemi and shoots a liquor-store worker before inadvertently getting his new buddy wounded too, is mesmeric. Not because Strummer was a great actor (be honest, he wasn’t) but because Jarmusch is at his most languidly inspired.

Worth the journey.

X-Men 1.5

Bryan Singer's faithful take on Marvel's merry mutants is probably the best superhero movie to date, due primarily to Hugh Jackman's grumpy Wolverine, Anna Paquin's fragile Rogue, a couple of class-act Shakespearean luvvies (Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen), some great SFX and David Hayter's fine script. Roll on the sequel!

Bryan Singer’s faithful take on Marvel’s merry mutants is probably the best superhero movie to date, due primarily to Hugh Jackman’s grumpy Wolverine, Anna Paquin’s fragile Rogue, a couple of class-act Shakespearean luvvies (Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen), some great SFX and David Hayter’s fine script. Roll on the sequel!

Shakti—The Power

Run-of-the-mill contemporary Bollywood fare?a riot of colour, violence, heavy-duty tearjerking and song. But its tale of a beautiful young girl, Nandini (Karishma Kapoor), whose marriage sees her uprooted from a comfortable life in Canada back to the poverty of India, is a cut above. There she confronts her tyrannical father-in-law, striking as feminist a blow as Bollywood allows.

Run-of-the-mill contemporary Bollywood fare?a riot of colour, violence, heavy-duty tearjerking and song. But its tale of a beautiful young girl, Nandini (Karishma Kapoor), whose marriage sees her uprooted from a comfortable life in Canada back to the poverty of India, is a cut above. There she confronts her tyrannical father-in-law, striking as feminist a blow as Bollywood allows.

Nostalgia

Oblique, arcane and infuriatingly sluggish, even by Tarkovsky's standards (makes Andrei Rublyov look like Moulin Rouge), Nostalgia is the litmus test for arthouse cinephiles. The 'story' of a Russian poet locked in existential agony while researching an obscure 18th-century composer is brimful of breathtaking tableaux, portentous dialogue and primal symbolism (flickering flame as human soul). But is it enough?

Oblique, arcane and infuriatingly sluggish, even by Tarkovsky’s standards (makes Andrei Rublyov look like Moulin Rouge), Nostalgia is the litmus test for arthouse cinephiles. The ‘story’ of a Russian poet locked in existential agony while researching an obscure 18th-century composer is brimful of breathtaking tableaux, portentous dialogue and primal symbolism (flickering flame as human soul). But is it enough?

Alligator – Alligator II

John Sayles scripted this Jaws-onland rip-off, with Robert Forster as the cop chasing a giant man-eating monster down in the sewers. Forster's dogged, and some of the set pieces are pretty nifty, but the plot's farcical, and this isn't strong on intellectual content despite its obligatory eco-message. The sequel is a made-for-TV retread, of practically zero interest.

John Sayles scripted this Jaws-onland rip-off, with Robert Forster as the cop chasing a giant man-eating monster down in the sewers. Forster’s dogged, and some of the set pieces are pretty nifty, but the plot’s farcical, and this isn’t strong on intellectual content despite its obligatory eco-message. The sequel is a made-for-TV retread, of practically zero interest.

Motor Boys Motor

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The MC5 and Friends The 100 Club, London THURSDAY MARCH 13, 2003 When the motorbike police started lining up ready to charge, in Chicago, 1968, The MC5 finished "Kick Out The Jams" before they ran. They came together in a time that, it seems, can't be got back, when street politics, guitar-playing and a punk attitude could be a rock band's inseparable parts. If he'd been asked, and been alive, Joe Strummer would surely have been first on stage singing with their remnants tonight. As it is, the whispered substitutes for legendarily Afro-ed singer Rob Tyner and co-guitarist Fred "Sonic" Smith, both dead before the last century was done, never show. There'll be other surprises, good and bad, before this night is over. But all that ever really matters is the three men who take the stage first, unexpectedly together after 30 years, because, in the way of things, Levi's Jeans are promoting an MC5 T-shirt. Michael Davis, bass, still runs in deeper waters than that. The oldest MC, crew-cut and leathery, like a B-movie veteran in a Tarantino film, he alone here takes every second seriously, and in his stride. Drummer Dennis "Machine Gun" Thompson stays invisible behind a pillar. Wayne Kramer, guitar, in black-rimmed glasses and suit, is tight, clinical, the all-business pro. "From De-troit, Michigan!" he introduces the band, before acknowledging why they can never be The MC5, and won't try. "We're here to celebrate Fred Smith, and the work of Brother Rob Tyner. They're here right now in our hearts, and they're here in this music." Brother Davis is asked to add a word. "I don't know what I'm gonna say," he rumbles, awkward. "So let's play." First guest up is Nick Royale of Swedish rockers The Hellacopters, baseball-capped and adequate. Next is some kind of bizarre Bono impersonator, with a jet-black, piled quiff and shades. It's The Damned's Dave Vanian, it transpires, a more reasonable guest for the punk godfathers than Ian Astbury, who takes time off from "The Doors" to lend his one-size-fits-all rent-a-rock-roar, unfortunately, to "Kick Out The Jams". Only when Lemmy unexpectedly stalks past me, looking almost nervous, does a man who understands the shoes he's filling seize the stage. "How ya doin'?" comes a voice scraped raw by cigarettes, or straight razors. "Well, we'll soon fix that..." Coal-black eyes somehow flash, it's like Bill The Butcher's up there savaging "Sister X", and then "Born In The USA.", a near-half-century-old Chuck Berry song that somehow still tips the MC3 into a loose, rebel roll, and the crowd into rapture. That's when the night stops being a museum piece, the music's breathing on its own now. "Vision getting crossed...," I scrawl in my notes. Meanwhile, the MCs just play the tunes, bending and shaking with the simple gut-squall of "The American Ruse" (a nailed lie that just gets bigger), "Shakin' Street", "Tonight". Kramer sings sometimes, no nearer than anyone else to rolling back the years and making this music of insurrection, music that gave you five seconds to choose sides, for life. His attempt at Sun Ra cosmic consciousness-raising, in an impromptu encore of free jazz squonks?Davis: "We didn't rehearse one more motherfuckin' song"?doesn't lift off, either. But the grace with which these three men who started so much grasp their old roles again, sneaking smiles at each other as it slots into place and one more crowd sweats and leaps in a basement at midnight, is something to see. The Motor City didn't make many better; and they have some juice in them yet.

The MC5 and Friends

The 100 Club, London

THURSDAY MARCH 13, 2003

When the motorbike police started lining up ready to charge, in Chicago, 1968, The MC5 finished “Kick Out The Jams” before they ran. They came together in a time that, it seems, can’t be got back, when street politics, guitar-playing and a punk attitude could be a rock band’s inseparable parts. If he’d been asked, and been alive, Joe Strummer would surely have been first on stage singing with their remnants tonight. As it is, the whispered substitutes for legendarily Afro-ed singer Rob Tyner and co-guitarist Fred “Sonic” Smith, both dead before the last century was done, never show. There’ll be other surprises, good and bad, before this night is over. But all that ever really matters is the three men who take the stage first, unexpectedly together after 30 years, because, in the way of things, Levi’s Jeans are promoting an MC5 T-shirt.

Michael Davis, bass, still runs in deeper waters than that. The oldest MC, crew-cut and leathery, like a B-movie veteran in a Tarantino film, he alone here takes every second seriously, and in his stride. Drummer Dennis “Machine Gun” Thompson stays invisible behind a pillar. Wayne Kramer, guitar, in black-rimmed glasses and suit, is tight, clinical, the all-business pro. “From De-troit, Michigan!” he introduces the band, before acknowledging why they can never be The MC5, and won’t try. “We’re here to celebrate Fred Smith, and the work of Brother Rob Tyner. They’re here right now in our hearts, and they’re here in this music.” Brother Davis is asked to add a word. “I don’t know what I’m gonna say,” he rumbles, awkward. “So let’s play.”

First guest up is Nick Royale of Swedish rockers The Hellacopters, baseball-capped and adequate. Next is some kind of bizarre Bono impersonator, with a jet-black, piled quiff and shades. It’s The Damned’s Dave Vanian, it transpires, a more reasonable guest for the punk godfathers than Ian Astbury, who takes time off from “The Doors” to lend his one-size-fits-all rent-a-rock-roar, unfortunately, to “Kick Out The Jams”. Only when Lemmy unexpectedly stalks past me, looking almost nervous, does a man who understands the shoes he’s filling seize the stage. “How ya doin’?” comes a voice scraped raw by cigarettes, or straight razors. “Well, we’ll soon fix that…” Coal-black eyes somehow flash, it’s like Bill The Butcher’s up there savaging “Sister X”, and then “Born In The USA.”, a near-half-century-old Chuck Berry song that somehow still tips the MC3 into a loose, rebel roll, and the crowd into rapture. That’s when the night stops being a museum piece, the music’s breathing on its own now. “Vision getting crossed…,” I scrawl in my notes.

Meanwhile, the MCs just play the tunes, bending and shaking with the simple gut-squall of “The American Ruse” (a nailed lie that just gets bigger), “Shakin’ Street”, “Tonight”. Kramer sings sometimes, no nearer than anyone else to rolling back the years and making this music of insurrection, music that gave you five seconds to choose sides, for life. His attempt at Sun Ra cosmic consciousness-raising, in an impromptu encore of free jazz squonks?Davis: “We didn’t rehearse one more motherfuckin’ song”?doesn’t lift off, either. But the grace with which these three men who started so much grasp their old roles again, sneaking smiles at each other as it slots into place and one more crowd sweats and leaps in a basement at midnight, is something to see. The Motor City didn’t make many better; and they have some juice in them yet.

Manchester Reunited

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Badly Drawn Boy THE COMEDY STORE, MANCHESTER SUNDAY MARCH 9, 2003 The first time Uncut saw Damon Gough, he was an unknown artist opening for a stage-shy Smog in an eccentric Manchester pub. Since then, he's collaborated with Charlotte Gainsbourg, won the Mercury Music Prize, scored the soundtrack for a Nick Hornby adaptation, released three albums and established himself as a sensitive and enigmatic songwriter capable of writing brilliant and beguiling pop songs. Lest we forget, he's also become a legendary live performer, known to baffle, bemuse, frustrate and hypnotise his audiences with long sets and peculiar onstage banter. As a result, nobody's quite sure what to expect from tonight's seated solo set?billed as his only UK show this year. Visibly emotional, Gough shuffles onto the tiny stage an hour before midnight, observes the 500 diehard fans in the audience, friends and family packed into the intimate venue, and immediately confesses he's feeling "incredibly humble and nervous". He lights a cigarette, takes a swing of beer and thanks label mates Aidan Smith and Jane Weaver for their captivating sets before launching into an exhilarating version of Bewilderbeast opener "The Shining". It's followed closely by passionate renditions of "The Golden Days" and "Once Around The Block", which are stripped down to their basic melodies as he switches between acoustic guitar and grand piano. A self-confessed Springsteen obsessive, he then dedicates a version of the raw, heartfelt cover of "Thunder Road"?originally recorded for last month's Uncut tribute CD?to his mum, a trembling smile on his face. It's one of many endearing moments and as he sings "It's a town full of losers and I'm pulling out of here to win", you can almost hear his heart pounding with pride and fear. The rest of the two-and-a-half-hour set comprises early rarities ("Rollercoaster", "Road Movie", "I Love You All"), live favourites ("40 Days, 40 Fights", "All Possibilities", "Something To Talk About", "Donna And Blitzen") and selected tracks from his critically acclaimed debut ("Pissing In The Wind", "Rockslide", "Disillusion"). Some are kept deceptively simple pop songs with killer hooks, others are completely reinvented, with new arrangements and improvised lyrics. Intriguingly, he only plays a handful of songs from his Uncut album of the month, Have You Fed The Fish?, preferring to entertain us with sketches of works-in-progress and poignant covers of "Let The Sun Shine In" and The Smiths' "Oscillate Wildly", the latter dedicated to Andy Rourke, a full time member of his backing band since early 2002. Treated to a well-deserved, standing ovation, Gough returns for an encore that includes life-affirming renditions of "How?" and "Magic In The Air". A good friend of the late Clash singer, he tells an hilarious story about meeting the pioneers of punk ("Joe Strummer was a gentleman, John Lydon was a fucking knobhead") before closing the set with a triumphant "I Was Wrong, You Were Right"?changing the chorus to "And I remember doing nothing the night Joe Strummer died." The response is instant and overwhelming. You've come a long way, baby.

Badly Drawn Boy

THE COMEDY STORE, MANCHESTER

SUNDAY MARCH 9, 2003

The first time Uncut saw Damon Gough, he was an unknown artist opening for a stage-shy Smog in an eccentric Manchester pub. Since then, he’s collaborated with Charlotte Gainsbourg, won the Mercury Music Prize, scored the soundtrack for a Nick Hornby adaptation, released three albums and established himself as a sensitive and enigmatic songwriter capable of writing brilliant and beguiling pop songs. Lest we forget, he’s also become a legendary live performer, known to baffle, bemuse, frustrate and hypnotise his audiences with long sets and peculiar onstage banter. As a result, nobody’s quite sure what to expect from tonight’s seated solo set?billed as his only UK show this year.

Visibly emotional, Gough shuffles onto the tiny stage an hour before midnight, observes the 500 diehard fans in the audience, friends and family packed into the intimate venue, and immediately confesses he’s feeling “incredibly humble and nervous”. He lights a cigarette, takes a swing of beer and thanks label mates Aidan Smith and Jane Weaver for their captivating sets before launching into an exhilarating version of Bewilderbeast opener “The Shining”. It’s followed closely by passionate renditions of “The Golden Days” and “Once Around The Block”, which are stripped down to their basic melodies as he switches between acoustic guitar and grand piano.

A self-confessed Springsteen obsessive, he then dedicates a version of the raw, heartfelt cover of “Thunder Road”?originally recorded for last month’s Uncut tribute CD?to his mum, a trembling smile on his face. It’s one of many endearing moments and as he sings “It’s a town full of losers and I’m pulling out of here to win”, you can almost hear his heart pounding with pride and fear.

The rest of the two-and-a-half-hour set comprises early rarities (“Rollercoaster”, “Road Movie”, “I Love You All”), live favourites (“40 Days, 40 Fights”, “All Possibilities”, “Something To Talk About”, “Donna And Blitzen”) and selected tracks from his critically acclaimed debut (“Pissing In The Wind”, “Rockslide”, “Disillusion”).

Some are kept deceptively simple pop songs with killer hooks, others are completely reinvented, with new arrangements and improvised lyrics. Intriguingly, he only plays a handful of songs from his Uncut album of the month, Have You Fed The Fish?, preferring to entertain us with sketches of works-in-progress and poignant covers of “Let The Sun Shine In” and The Smiths’ “Oscillate Wildly”, the latter dedicated to Andy Rourke, a full time member of his backing band since early 2002.

Treated to a well-deserved, standing ovation, Gough returns for an encore that includes life-affirming renditions of “How?” and “Magic In The Air”. A good friend of the late Clash singer, he tells an hilarious story about meeting the pioneers of punk (“Joe Strummer was a gentleman, John Lydon was a fucking knobhead”) before closing the set with a triumphant “I Was Wrong, You Were Right”?changing the chorus to “And I remember doing nothing the night Joe Strummer died.” The response is instant and overwhelming. You’ve come a long way, baby.

Jackie Leven – The Borderline, London

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One of the oddest gigs I've seen in a long time. The weathered Leven sings mournful songs of loss and regret in a rich, soulful voice. He's a big poetry man, quoting Pablo Neruda on his new album Shining Brother Shining Sister. Yet, more often than he's being a melancholic, working-class minstrel, he's being a man of the people in an entirely different manner. For at least half his time onstage, he tells bawdy shaggy dog stories. If he wasn't sitting on a stool, he'd be a great stand-up. Most of his tales are filthy; one explores the similarity between cheap dog food and human faeces, at interminable length. He's a natural, and his fiftysomething followers are in fits of laughter, but it means any mood evoked by the songs is chucked out with the bathwater. You come expecting Johnny Cash; you leave having witnessed Johnny Vegas. You'd say he's in the wrong line of work, except he's a lifer. An authentic folk-hero, Leven was once in post-punk enigmas Doll By Doll, but has for decades toured as a broody balladeer. He'll sing anytime, anywhere. He's survived a troubled personal life of various addictions and crashes, but clearly relishes the role of wiser, wizened, antipretty spokesman for his fans?most of whom seem to share his Scottish/Irish connections and his age group. One imagines that to Leven-ites the word "strokes" conjures up medical histories rather than some hot young band. Flanked by two colleagues, ironically named his "Sex Trio", Leven lilts through his sorrowful songs. You think of L S Lowry?noble stooping northerners and all that. "Another Man In The Old Arcade" and "Classic Northern Diversions" are splendid examples of his new material. But mostly, you're still thinking of Johnny Vegas' jowls. The scatological anecdotes stretch on forever. He's either shooting himself in the foot or, after a life fully lived, displaying cavalier career apathy. We learn that on a train recently Leven engaged in a surreal conversation with a(nother) drunk. That in Cardiff, he stared at "an enormous human shite" on the pavement. And that his girlfriend, through a series of what must be called "comic misunderstandings", thinks he's got trouble with his bowels. It's funny at the time?well, for some of the time. Leven's supporting Richard Thompson in Europe, then touring the UK. One hopes his inner Roy Orbison turns up, not his inner Roy Chubby Brown.

One of the oddest gigs I’ve seen in a long time. The weathered Leven sings mournful songs of loss and regret in a rich, soulful voice. He’s a big poetry man, quoting Pablo Neruda on his new album Shining Brother Shining Sister. Yet, more often than he’s being a melancholic, working-class minstrel, he’s being a man of the people in an entirely different manner. For at least half his time onstage, he tells bawdy shaggy dog stories. If he wasn’t sitting on a stool, he’d be a great stand-up.

Most of his tales are filthy; one explores the similarity between cheap dog food and human faeces, at interminable length. He’s a natural, and his fiftysomething followers are in fits of laughter, but it means any mood evoked by the songs is chucked out with the bathwater. You come expecting Johnny Cash; you leave having witnessed Johnny Vegas.

You’d say he’s in the wrong line of work, except he’s a lifer. An authentic folk-hero, Leven was once in post-punk enigmas Doll By Doll, but has for decades toured as a broody balladeer. He’ll sing anytime, anywhere. He’s survived a troubled personal life of various addictions and crashes, but clearly relishes the role of wiser, wizened, antipretty spokesman for his fans?most of whom seem to share his Scottish/Irish connections and his age group. One imagines that to Leven-ites the word “strokes” conjures up medical histories rather than some hot young band.

Flanked by two colleagues, ironically named his “Sex Trio”, Leven lilts through his sorrowful songs. You think of L S Lowry?noble stooping northerners and all that. “Another Man In The Old Arcade” and “Classic Northern Diversions” are splendid examples of his new material. But mostly, you’re still thinking of Johnny Vegas’ jowls. The scatological anecdotes stretch on forever. He’s either shooting himself in the foot or, after a life fully lived, displaying cavalier career apathy.

We learn that on a train recently Leven engaged in a surreal conversation with a(nother) drunk. That in Cardiff, he stared at “an enormous human shite” on the pavement. And that his girlfriend, through a series of what must be called “comic misunderstandings”, thinks he’s got trouble with his bowels. It’s funny at the time?well, for some of the time. Leven’s supporting Richard Thompson in Europe, then touring the UK. One hopes his inner Roy Orbison turns up, not his inner Roy Chubby Brown.

Grand Popo – Football Club Shampoo Victims

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This is an early contender for 2003 summer album. More or less halfway between Air and Daft Punk, Wizman and Errera provide us with glorious, single-length house anthems like the Moroder-sampling "Each Finger Has An Attitude" and "Men Are Not Nice Guys" as well as ingeniously arranged tunes like "Sl...

This is an early contender for 2003 summer album. More or less halfway between Air and Daft Punk, Wizman and Errera provide us with glorious, single-length house anthems like the Moroder-sampling “Each Finger Has An Attitude” and “Men Are Not Nice Guys” as well as ingeniously arranged tunes like “Slap Bass” with its manic tubular bells and decelerating middle section. Ron and Russell Mael from Sparks drop by to lend a hand to two tracks: the touching “La Nuit Est La” (the techno ballad 10cc might have written) and the berserk “Yo Quiero M

Simply Red – Home

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"Fake cool image should be over," Mick Hucknall sings on the opening title track. Were he really going back home, this would be an album of frantic Beefheartian indie in the style of his first band, the Frantic Elevators. Sadly, even the modest adventure of his previous album Love And The Russian Winter is absent on this routine collection of by-the-book white-loaf soul. "Sunrise" makes less interesting use of its Hall & Oates/"I Can't Go For That" sample than De La Soul did on "Say No Go", while his version of The Stylistics' "You Make Me Feel Brand New" does grave injustice to Thom Bell's gorgeous original arrangement.

“Fake cool image should be over,” Mick Hucknall sings on the opening title track. Were he really going back home, this would be an album of frantic Beefheartian indie in the style of his first band, the Frantic Elevators. Sadly, even the modest adventure of his previous album Love And The Russian Winter is absent on this routine collection of by-the-book white-loaf soul. “Sunrise” makes less interesting use of its Hall & Oates/”I Can’t Go For That” sample than De La Soul did on “Say No Go”, while his version of The Stylistics’ “You Make Me Feel Brand New” does grave injustice to Thom Bell’s gorgeous original arrangement.

Venus Ray – The World Woke Up Without Me

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In title alone this is much more downcast than their 2001 debut Chuck Berry Vs IBM, and with good reason. The death of Venus Ray drummer Steve Smith midway through recording turned this otherwise confident successor into an involuntary epitaph. Maybe it's coincidence but there's definitely something hauntingly melancholic about the Pavement-ish opener "Melody" or the gentle, soporific "Sunglasses". At least Smith went out rocking, drumming up a storm on "Hurricane", typical of their Big Star-meets-Joe Meek soundclash.

In title alone this is much more downcast than their 2001 debut Chuck Berry Vs IBM, and with good reason. The death of Venus Ray drummer Steve Smith midway through recording turned this otherwise confident successor into an involuntary epitaph. Maybe it’s coincidence but there’s definitely something hauntingly melancholic about the Pavement-ish opener “Melody” or the gentle, soporific “Sunglasses”. At least Smith went out rocking, drumming up a storm on “Hurricane”, typical of their Big Star-meets-Joe Meek soundclash.

Gold Chains – Young Miss America

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A faintly preposterous man, much of Topher "Gold Chains" LaFata's music concerns the international pursuit of well-dressed booty. In a way, he's a classic hip hop reinvention: a computer geek rebranded as globe-straddling love-magnet who raps, a touch emphysemically, like Tone Loc. Nothing on Young Miss America quite matches GC's superb first two EPs. Nevertheless, he and producer Kit Clayton still filter R&B, techno, Bollywood, electro and much else through their laptops, and the elaborate raps?more serious than they first appear?make for an inventive debut.

A faintly preposterous man, much of Topher “Gold Chains” LaFata’s music concerns the international pursuit of well-dressed booty. In a way, he’s a classic hip hop reinvention: a computer geek rebranded as globe-straddling love-magnet who raps, a touch emphysemically, like Tone Loc. Nothing on Young Miss America quite matches GC’s superb first two EPs. Nevertheless, he and producer Kit Clayton still filter R&B, techno, Bollywood, electro and much else through their laptops, and the elaborate raps?more serious than they first appear?make for an inventive debut.

MJ Cole – Cut To The Chase

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This follow-up to 2000's Mercury-nominated Sincere once more sees classically-trained producer MJ Cole (Matt Coleman) calling on special guests to help produce a UK garage album that people too old for Ayia Napa can buy. The finest contribution is from Jill Scott on the soulful "Perfect Pitch", although clearly-barking dancehall star Elephant Man is great on "Madman". Unfortunately, Cole's production is so smooth that the album does occasionally slip off the coffee table and into wallpaper territory.

This follow-up to 2000’s Mercury-nominated Sincere once more sees classically-trained producer MJ Cole (Matt Coleman) calling on special guests to help produce a UK garage album that people too old for Ayia Napa can buy. The finest contribution is from Jill Scott on the soulful “Perfect Pitch”, although clearly-barking dancehall star Elephant Man is great on “Madman”. Unfortunately, Cole’s production is so smooth that the album does occasionally slip off the coffee table and into wallpaper territory.

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"Excuse me while I go insane," pleads D'Arby on "Drivin' Me Crazy", but sadly he hasn't gone insane here?TTD was always at his best when he gave free rein to his manias. He may now call himself Sananda Maitreya, but the name D'Arby is printed large on the cover, indicating a crisis of confidence. There are infuriatingly large numbers of interesting ideas on this album, particularly on tracks like "Girl" and "My Dark Places" which touch on idyllic avant-psychedelia, but repeatedly his rasping 'soul' voice brings the project crashing back to earth. "O Divina" and the Bond-like "Shadows" may be potential hit singles, but what the album really needs is a Trevor Horn or a Neptune to elevate D'Arby beyond the status of Prince-lite to the realms of the satisfyingly peculiar or truly strange.

“Excuse me while I go insane,” pleads D’Arby on “Drivin’ Me Crazy”, but sadly he hasn’t gone insane here?TTD was always at his best when he gave free rein to his manias. He may now call himself Sananda Maitreya, but the name D’Arby is printed large on the cover, indicating a crisis of confidence.

There are infuriatingly large numbers of interesting ideas on this album, particularly on tracks like “Girl” and “My Dark Places” which touch on idyllic avant-psychedelia, but repeatedly his rasping ‘soul’ voice brings the project crashing back to earth. “O Divina” and the Bond-like “Shadows” may be potential hit singles, but what the album really needs is a Trevor Horn or a Neptune to elevate D’Arby beyond the status of Prince-lite to the realms of the satisfyingly peculiar or truly strange.

The Screamin’ Stukas – ‘Lotta Rhythm

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Finnish bands: always a good idea. They like their rock'n'roll, but they're also a bit mad. Excitedly celebrating their record collections, the Stukas hit the ground running with a vigorous mix of Cochran and Holly, '60s pop, '70s Sweet, 12-bar a-go-go and a closing epic dressed in Suede. Realistically, there's little need for the preposterous whistling solos, the sudden falsettos, the bursts of strings, the howling dogs and the maniacal laughter that arise throughout this likeable kicking-up of heels, but it comes with the turf. The Screamin' Stukas are fun, and funny, and, naturally, "everything's all right". So that's OK, then.

Finnish bands: always a good idea. They like their rock’n’roll, but they’re also a bit mad. Excitedly celebrating their record collections, the Stukas hit the ground running with a vigorous mix of Cochran and Holly, ’60s pop, ’70s Sweet, 12-bar a-go-go and a closing epic dressed in Suede. Realistically, there’s little need for the preposterous whistling solos, the sudden falsettos, the bursts of strings, the howling dogs and the maniacal laughter that arise throughout this likeable kicking-up of heels, but it comes with the turf. The Screamin’ Stukas are fun, and funny, and, naturally, “everything’s all right”. So that’s OK, then.

This Month In Americana

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Formed from the ashes of bluesy experimentalists Red Red Meat, Califone's earliest incarnation saw singer Tim Rutili knocking out ditties on an Apple Mac. After a couple of self-titled EPs, their first full-lengther?2001's Roomsound?was built around the sequenced beats, found sounds and fuggy rock dynamic of Rutili, Ben Massarella and Brian Deck, along with a revolving door of like-minded cohorts from Tortoise, Eleventh Dream Day and Fruitbats. Quicksand/Cradlesnakes, again recorded at their own Clava Studios, raises further the tension between Roomsound's old-time American folk and high-tech sleight of hand. At the heart of Califone's sound is Massarella's wildly inventive percussion, teasing improvised studio tics, hisses of static and arcane blips of noise into slowly rolling rhythms. Amid the weird loops and bowed bass thrumming like giant elastic bands, Rutili's voice sounds dredged from the same rustic creek as Will Oldham. There are brushes with conventionality (a deep-bottomed swamp riff on the Delta bluesy "Mean Little Seed"; the strange back-porch mutation of "Stepdaughter"), but even these are thrillingly opaque. There's plenty of beauty, too. The transfixing acoustic throb of "(Red)" and "Michigan Girls", for instance, or the way "Horoscopic.Amputation. Honey" twists pinpricks of noise into lovely patterns. The addition of multi-instrumentalist and walking country-folk oracle Jim Becker on mandolin, banjo and fiddle adds authenticity, particularly on the rakish "Million Dollar Funeral". Good luck decoding Rutili's elliptical imagery ("Early minor Japanese pitcher sidearm slow tic/A wolfish mouth/On a mouse-ish face lady from Shanghai third man/Shot wild in the house of mirrors" is one of the clearer passages), but hell, just sit back and admire titles like "When Leon Spinks Moved Into Town" and "Your Golden Ass". This is one glorious murk.

Formed from the ashes of bluesy experimentalists Red Red Meat, Califone’s earliest incarnation saw singer Tim Rutili knocking out ditties on an Apple Mac. After a couple of self-titled EPs, their first full-lengther?2001’s Roomsound?was built around the sequenced beats, found sounds and fuggy rock dynamic of Rutili, Ben Massarella and Brian Deck, along with a revolving door of like-minded cohorts from Tortoise, Eleventh Dream Day and Fruitbats.

Quicksand/Cradlesnakes, again recorded at their own Clava Studios, raises further the tension between Roomsound’s old-time American folk and high-tech sleight of hand. At the heart of Califone’s sound is Massarella’s wildly inventive percussion, teasing improvised studio tics, hisses of static and arcane blips of noise into slowly rolling rhythms. Amid the weird loops and bowed bass thrumming like giant elastic bands, Rutili’s voice sounds dredged from the same rustic creek as Will Oldham. There are brushes with conventionality (a deep-bottomed swamp riff on the Delta bluesy “Mean Little Seed”; the strange back-porch mutation of “Stepdaughter”), but even these are thrillingly opaque. There’s plenty of beauty, too. The transfixing acoustic throb of “(Red)” and “Michigan Girls”, for instance, or the way “Horoscopic.Amputation. Honey” twists pinpricks of noise into lovely patterns.

The addition of multi-instrumentalist and walking country-folk oracle Jim Becker on mandolin, banjo and fiddle adds authenticity, particularly on the rakish “Million Dollar Funeral”. Good luck decoding Rutili’s elliptical imagery (“Early minor Japanese pitcher sidearm slow tic/A wolfish mouth/On a mouse-ish face lady from Shanghai third man/Shot wild in the house of mirrors” is one of the clearer passages), but hell, just sit back and admire titles like “When Leon Spinks Moved Into Town” and “Your Golden Ass”. This is one glorious murk.