Album: Rag'n'Bone Man - Life by Misadventure
Low-key, ruefully wise sequel to a chart juggernaut
Rory Graham was always stoically familiar with life’s knocks.
Album: Van Morrison - Latest Record Project Volume 1
The king of Celtic soul suffers a bad case of lockdown blues
If you want to understand the psychic harm that prolonged lockdown can do to a man, then take a listen to Van Morrison's new 28-song set. Actually, you don't need to listen, the song titles say enough: “Where Have All the Rebels Gone?”; “Stop Bitching, Do Something”; “Deadbeat Saturday Night”; “They Own the Media”; “Why Are You on Facebook?”
Blu-ray: Raw
Bloody, compelling French horror in Julia Ducournau's feature debut
Album: Ziúr - Antifate
Fantastical industrial cabaret from the cellars of Berlin
It’s funny how the most high tech music can sound very traditional. In the case of producer / instrumentalist / occasional singer Ziúr, it’s the tradition of her hometown of Berlin that is expressed in her whirrs, clangs and mutated voices.
Blu-ray: The Chalk Garden
Who wouldn't want Deborah Kerr as a nurturing governess?
Enid Bagnold’s 1955 English play The Chalk Garden, a Broadway hit before it opened in the West End, is usually described as a comedy because of Bagnold’s acerbic dialogue and droll appreciation of intricate employer-servant dynamics. If most of the wit was polished out of the 1964 version, directed by Ronald Neame and scored by Malcolm Arnold in a high-blown romantic style, that only served to emphasize the psychological complexity of the relationships between its three strong women characters.
Album: Sufjan Stevens - Convocations
Rich and complex requiem for a dad
Sufjan Stevens is not only prolific, multi-talented and wide-ranging in his experimentation, but he never fails to make interesting work. He’s undoubtedly one of the giants of American contemporary music. His originality and creative risk-taking have led to him being one of the most underrated artists of his time.
Album: Martial Solal - Coming Yesterday
The great French jazz pianist's last concert
“Thank you. I think I’ve told you everything. I do have a couple more tunes, but I’ll hold them back for next time – I don’t want to bore you, it’s better that you leave here serene. A nice chord like this. (plays F major first inversion). A good impression. Voilà. Merci.”
Album: Marianne Faithfull & Warren Ellis - She Walks in Beauty
Everyone’s favourite Nan crashes the goth poetry club
Let’s get this clear from the off, Marianne Faithfull and Warren Ellis’s new album is not an artistic statement on a par with her classic 1979 album Broken English. Nor I suspect, was that ever the aim.
Blu-ray: To Sir, with Love
Rose-tinted but affecting look at life in a late 1960s secondary modern
To Sir, With Love is a very loose adaptation of ER Braithwaite’s autobiographical novel. Reflecting on his experiences as a teacher in London’s East End in the late 1940s, Braithwaite’s commentary (one of two provided here) advises us that “as you read the book, that’s how it was.