Album

Various Artists – Dr Lektroluv Presents Lektrokuted

Mix of new and old future-funk

The Stranglers – Norfolk Coast

Return to form for original punks

Daevid Allen & Gong – The World Of…

The Radio Gnome Invisible Trilogy complete, plus selective Daevid Allen solo cuts over three CDs

Revenge – One True Passion V2.0

First extracurricular project from New Order bassist, plus EP tracks, demos, remixes, new recordings and bonus CD of old but unreleased material

David Bowie – Sound And Vision

A strange one, this, with Bowie's usually obsessive control seemingly relaxed enough to have allowed packaging that looks cheap and hurriedly slung-together. The content, though, is better—a straight documentary, punctuated with live and video clips, and interview snippets with Bowie, Iman, Iggy Pop, Trent Reznor and Moby. There's lots of rare early stuff but, for all his eloquence, the music does the talking best of all.

M Craft – I Can See It All Tonight

Six tracks of bliss from new singer-songwriter

Woodstar – Life Sparks

Debut album from spiritual kin of Grandaddy and Flaming Lips

Ty – Upwards

Second album from the stentorian UK rapper, the Harry Secombe to Roots Manuva's Spike Milligan

Pierson, Parker, Janowitz – From A Window: Lost Songs Of Lennon & McCartney

The songs The Beatles gave away rediscovered

Bill Withers – Just As I Am

That so little of Bill Withers' catalogue is available domestically is nothing short of scandalous; someone at Sony (who also own the four superb early Sussex albums) should be beaten soundly. Still Bill did slip out here a few months ago, but with little fanfare, and now that and his 1971 debut, Just As I Am, produced by Booker T Jones, appear on Australian label Raven.
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