Album

In The Name Of The Lawn

Three-CD reissue of 1968 masterwork. Includes mono and stereo mixes, bonus singles and B-sides, plus obscurities previously only available on the long-deleted The Great Lost Kinks Album

Modest Mouse – Good News For People Who Love Bad News

Scrupulously weird indie-rock from Seattle suburbs

The Flatlanders – Live At The One Knite: June 8th 1972

Ely, Hancock and Gilmore in full flight

Beenie Man – Back To Basics

Tirelessly horny MC returns to his dancehall roots

Various Artists – Dread Meets B-Boys Downtown

Don Letts soundtrack to early-'80s NYC

Animals That Swim – Faded Glamour

Best-of compendium from mid-'90s indie should-have-beens

The Real Deal

Given the unfolding and increasingly tragic saga of The Libertines, it's a miracle this record even exists, let alone has any artistic worth. For, in the two years since their extraordinary debut album (2002's Up The Bracket), the story of this erratic but enthralling group has taken in serious drug addiction, a prison sentence and—during the making of this record alone—three failed attempts to get frontman Pete Doherty through rehab. Indeed, on the eve of release, Doherty has temporarily been removed from the Libertines line-up. The second Libertines album is all about this.

Tom Baxter – Feather And Stone

Superb debut from string-laden troubadour

Louis Eliot – The Longway Round

Britpop nearly-man gets pastoral

Swede Dreams

Ravishing pop debut from Malmo four-piece
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement