Reissue CDs Weekly: Terry Allen

‘Pedal Steal + Four Corners’: outstanding collection of the Texas-born polymaths’s aural plays

Torso Hell tells the story of an American soldier whose limbs were blown off in Vietnam. Amazingly, he and his buddies survived, and in the ensuing medical chaos his arms and legs were re-attached to them rather than him. The narrator says “At the hospital, it’s so crazy and confused that when these guys come in, the doctors and nurses don’t know what from what … they just start sewing. The main guy stays a torso, but they put his arms and legs back on the other guys.

Rock Island Line: The Song That Made Britain Rock, BBC Four review - the early dawn of Britpop

★★★ ROCK ISLAND LINE: THE SONG THAT MADE BRITAIN ROCK The early dawn of Britpop

Billy Bragg travels back through the primeval swamps of skiffle and beyond

If you were a fan of “Rock Island Line” when it became a pop hit, you’d have to be at least in your mid-70s now. In 1956, Paul McCartney heard Lonnie Donegan perform it live in Liverpool, and Paul’s rising 77.

CD: Sun Kil Moon - I Also Want to Die in New Orleans

Further musical and lyrical adventures of an American maverick

Like Dylan when he went electric, and Waits when he went Beefheartian, Mark Kozelek (aka Sun Kil Moon) divided his fans when he moved from jangly elegiac rock of standard proportions to expansive, digressive prose enquiries into the crumbling state of a nation, and the crumbling state of the man just trying to negotiate it all. But my advice to dissenters is to surrender rather than resist. No, Kozelek hasn’t "lost it". If anything he’s found it, and found it in abundance. 

Blu-ray: Detour

Edgar G Ulmer's film noir road movie is a thing of sordid beauty

“Whichever way you turn, fate sticks out a foot to trip you,” Al Roberts (Tom Neal) says in Detour (1945), as if his native pessimism and self-destructive choices had nothing to do with his inexorable descent into hell.

Us review - can Jordan Peele deliver the thrills again?

★★★★ US No shortage of cinematic fireworks in Jordan Peele's follow up to Get Out

No shortage of cinematic fireworks in this follow up to Get Out

Us is Jordan Peele’s much-anticipated follow-up to his 2017 horror film, Get Out, which won the first-time writer-director an Oscar for best original screenplay. A lot has been riding on this, Peele’s sophomore film with questions being raised over whether he would succumb to the pressures of a bigger budget and make a far more obviously commercial movie. So far Peele is riding the wave, Us has already broken records in the USA where it’s had the highest grossing opening weekend for an R rated film ever.

Downstate, National Theatre review - controversial but also clear-eyed and compassionate

★★★★ DOWNSTATE, NATIONAL THEATRE Bruce Norris's ever-provocative play puts people first, labels second

Bruce Norris's ever-provocative play puts people first, labels second

"Some monsters are real," notes a retribution-minded wife (Matilda Ziegler) early in Downstate, Bruce Norris's beautiful and wounding play that has arrived at the National Theatre in the production of a writer's dreams. But by the time this restless, ceaselessly provocative evening has come to its reflective close, you may find yourself reconsidering the efficacy of the word "monster" to describe any human being.