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Replacements

Storm And Static

Timely reassessment of Portland, Oregon quartet's pre-Post To Wire output

Tommy Stinson – Village Gorilla Head

Former Replacement's tired of waiting

Marah – 20,000 Streets Under The Sky

Welcome return to form from Philadelphian roots rockers

Magic Bus Pass

The 'Orrible 'Oo back in action with patchy but promising opener for a week-long series of Teenage Cancer Trust benefit concerts

Lonesome Travails

Exquisitely bittersweet, pain-blasted country-rock from America's West Coast

Deadstring Brothers

Emerging in 2001, these Detroit brothers lash the hard-livin' loucheness to traditional country ache. Frontman/songwriter Kurt Marschke's wail is Jaggeresque and there's lonesome balladry aplenty ("27 Hours", "Such A Crime") plus enough "Happy"-like fretwork to suggest what might have been had Gram'n'Keef really got it on. "Entitled" pits the sideways chug of The Breeders' "Cannonball" against early Replacements sneer, and dobro/pedal steel player Peter Ballard tints the big skies with a yearning airiness. Seriously impressive.

It’s All About Love

Laughably misguided sci-fi romance

Rock’n’Roll Suicide

Deeply disappointing follow-up to Gold, Uncut's 2001 album of the year

You Am I – No, After You Sir: An Introduction To You Am I

Long overdue retrospective of cult Aussie combo led by Tim Rogers

The Scruffs – Teenage Gurls

Memphis power pop is such an ever-expanding genre that Big Star's Alex Chilton, the godfather of the scene, must wish he'd taken out copyright. The Scruffs are one of several pre-Replacements acts who tapped into that antsy girls-on-my-mind mood and pursued the blend of melancholia with added rock'n'roll rush to a logical conclusion. Fronted by Stephen Burns, this second Scruffs album (recorded in 1978/9) contains band staples like "Go Faster", "Alice, Please Don't Go" and the post-Flamin' Groovies blood-letting of "Treachery".
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