Album

Luke Vibert – Yoseph

Warp debut from The Artist Sometimes Known As Wagon Christ

LFO – Sheath

Comeback of sorts for long-dormant Leeds techno pioneer

Brett Smiley – Breathlessly Brett

As detailed in Uncut (see Strange Days, Take 76), this 1974 debut from the super-effete Smiley has been rotting in obscurity for nearly 30 years. Unashamedly over-produced by Loog Oldham (who saw Brett as "the British Jobriath" rather than a pale Bowie), it's clear on the glam-baroque of "Queen Of Hearts" alone that Smiley had superstar potential. Just listen to his angelic cover of Neil Sedaka's "Solitaire" and mourn the career that might have been.

Ursula Rucker – Silver Or Lead

Second album from Philadelphia roots poet and nu-soul star

Amy Rigby – Til The Wheels Fall Off

NYC singer-songwriter covered by Ronnie Spector and Laura Cantrell

The Distillers – Coral Fang

Stadium punk from ambitious LA quartet

Primal Scream – Live In Japan

Japanese import, recorded in Tokyo last November

Buddy Guy – Blues Singer

Rare unplugged outing for leading Chicago bluesman

Linda Perhacs – Parallelograms

Gorgeous, ethereal folk, recommended to Uncut by Devendra Banhart

The Proclaimers – Born Innocent

Edwyn Collins-produced follow-up to 2001's Persevere
Advertisement

Editor's Picks

Advertisement