Maria Stuarda, Welsh National Opera

MARIA STUARDA, WELSH NATIONAL OPERA Second episode in WNO's Donizetti Tudor cycle has musical style but is coarsely directed

Second episode in WNO's Donizetti Tudor cycle has musical style but is coarsely directed

Last week Anne Boleyn, this week Mary Queen of Scots. Donizetti’s trawl through the Tudor monarchs and their victims was more a recurrent obsession than a systematic exploration. WNO, on the other hand, seem to be implying some Ring-like continuity.

CD: Arctic Monkeys - AM

Swapping Sheffield for the Sunshine State, the Arctic Monkeys return

There’s something about the Arctic Monkeys that calls to mind the Rolling Stones. Not now, obviously - it might feel like it’s been forever since four messy hairdos and northern accents burst out of Sheffield, though in truth it’s only been about a decade - but the Stones that scandalised an America expecting another Beatles with their sleazy, bluesy rock. Recorded in California, if there’s one thing AM does not sound like it’s an album by a band whose name still sounds like a practical joke dreamed up in some spotty kid’s bedroom.

CD: Avenged Sevenfold - Hail to the King

Likeable riff-fest from US west coast metal stalwarts

There is no guarantee of success in any area of rock and pop but those who wish to succeed through sheer graft might look to metal as their main chance. While multiple bands in other genres have fleeting, unpredictable moments in the sun, a decent metal act ticking the right boxes with the fans and initially willing to slog the circuit for 350 nights of every year, especially in the endless wilds of Middle America, can build and build and build. Look at Iron Maiden, possibly the biggest band of their vintage in the world.

Pipe Dream, Union Theatre

PIPE DREAM, UNION THEATRE Attractive and sympathetic lovers carry Rodgers and Hammerstein's Steinbeck musical

Attractive and sympathetic lovers carry Rodgers and Hammerstein's Steinbeck musical

Rodgers and Steinbeck: sound unlikely? Well, self-proclaimed “family show” man Hammerstein may have baulked at words like "whorehouse" when he created a play for music out of Steinbeck’s Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday. But by 1955 the R&H duo had already dealt with issues like miscegenation and ageism (South Pacific), domestic violence (Carousel) and slavery (The King and I), so Steinbeck’s north Californian coastal community of amiable social dropouts, drunks and whores might not have been totally unexpected territory.

CD: Deap Vally - Sistronix

No need for musical boundary pushing on Californian duo's astonishing debut

It is unfortunate that those who hate Deap Vally find it way easier to articulate why than those who love them. There’s little new in the bluesy, garage-rock riffs that pose and swagger their way through debut album Sistronix, and it’s not as if - on the evidence of the hidden a cappella track that closes off the album - they have the greatest voices. Even the two-piece, guitar and drums setup has been done before, with the White Stripes so obvious a reference point it would be negligent not to mention it.

CD: Middle Class Rut - Pick Up Your Head

Tuneful Californian noiseniks generate a contagious racket

For starters, Middle Class Rut is a great name for a band. It sounds irritated, punky, full of fighting spirit. Happily the duo from Sacramento California, live up to it. Their second album is an impassioned roar, occasionally a howl of disgust, grounded somewhere between punk and heavy rock, but smeared with distortion and MCR’s own take on the wall of sound.

CD: Queens of the Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork

CD: QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE - LIKE CLOCKWORK Josh Homme's rockers are back - and they've brought their pals

Josh Homme's rockers are back - and they've brought their pals

Reasons behind the prolonged absence of Queens of the Stone Age are legion, including line-up turbulence, successful side projects and the near-death experience of band linchpin Josh Homme. As if to acknowledge and compensate for the lengthy gap in new material since 2007‘s Era Vulgaris, there’s little that hasn’t been thrown into the ...Like Clockwork mix: power ballads, industrial sleaze, surprising reunions, the sound of broken glass - and Elton John on piano.

The Eagles at Sundance - History in the Making

THE EAGLES AT SUNDANCE LONDON - HISTORY IN THE MAKING New documentary tells the 40-year story of the legendary Los Angeles band

New documentary tells the 40-year story of the legendary Los Angeles band

The Eagles recorded their first two albums in London in the early Seventies, though they couldn't have imagined they'd be back 40 years later to present their new documentary, History of the Eagles Part One, at Sundance London. There is, as you may have surmised, also a Part Two, which is available in the DVD and Blu-ray package that goes on sale on Monday 29 April.

CD: Cold War Kids - Dear Miss Lonelyhearts

Californian quartet aim at stadiums but only occasionally thrill

Cold War Kids remain all mixed up. The Californian band appeared in 2006 bearing tasty blues-rock indie that leapt about in the same places Jack White hangs out. There was lots of media blather about their being a Christian band since most of them had met at the private Christian college, Biola University. Then it turned out they had much more complex and conflicted theological perspectives than were easy to sum up in music mag pull-quotes.