Album

Sunn O))) – White2

Agonisingly slow metal rituals

Bright Eyes – Neva Dinova

Six-track EP from rising Nebraskan noiseniks

The Datsuns – Outta Sight

Kick-ass Kiwis make a blues-rock move with their second album

Metal Boys Featuring China – Tokio Airport

Oft-forgotten Parisian new-wavers' audacious synth-punk opus

Supergrass – Supergrass Is 10: The Best Of 1994-2004

Enjoyable survey of underrated Oxford trio's first decade

Pale Horse And Rider – Moody Pike

Brooklynite Jon DeRosa's outfit are deceptive. At face value, PHAR offer little more than a sad shuffle, the odd cracked waltz and scattered flurries of noise. But give it time and these trampled-heart melodies burrow under the skin. Last year's Uncut-endorsed These Are The New Good Times was DeRosa's stoned-slacker take on slo-mo country mores, but here he broadens the palette with the addition of Low collaborator Marc Gartman as co-songwriter and ex-Mercury Rev pedal-steeler Gerald Menke.

Shaun Of The Dead – Island

Not only a Brit comedy that's funny, but an indie-pop soundtrack that's in good taste. Queen's "Don't Stop Me Now" and "You're My Best Friend" are here to ensure nobody thinks this is XFM, but otherwise I Monster, Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster and Ash do it for the kids. Grandmaster Flash and Man Parrish do it for the kids with rhythm. Lemon Jelly do it for the parents. The Smiths and The Specials do it for us all. And Ash teaming up with Chris Martin to cover Buzzcocks' "Everybody's Happy Nowadays" is surely done with good intentions and a sense of humour.

Sixtoo – Chewing On Glass & Other Miracle Cures

Latest from sometime Buck 65 sidekick

The Concretes

Smart pop from eight-strong collective of Swedish waifs and strays

The Fall – 50,000 Fall Fans Can’t Be Wrong

Noble attempt to shrink three decades of excellence onto two CDs
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