Album: Spiritualized - Everything Was Beautiful

Jason Pierce brings a rainbow of influences to his Lockdown album

The Covid pandemic’s various lockdowns may have been a living hell for some, but there were also plenty of people who thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to distance themselves from society. One of those to thrive during this time was Jason Pierce, band leader and the only constant member of psychedelic space rockers Spiritualized.

Album: Swedish House Mafia - Paradise Again

★ SWEDISH HOUSE MAFIA - PARADISE AGAIN The EDM trio return. Swedish? Yes. Mafia? Doubtful. House? Definitely not

The EDM trio return. Swedish? Yes. Mafia? Doubtful. House? Definitely not

Returning with their first new music in almost a decade, EDM supergroup Swedish House Mafia (the producer-DJ trio Steve Angello, Axwell and Sebastian Ingros) deliver their debut album with a sense of vaulting ambition and anything-is-possible belief. In their own words, Paradise Again is a “sonic adventure” to a “new world, a world of free thoughts, limitless ideas and space for progression.”

Album: Reef - Shoot Me Your Ace

★★★ REEF - SHOOT ME YOUR ACE Outrageous, unashamed retro heavy rock

Outrageous, unashamed retro heavy rock boosted by Andy Taylor, once of Duran Duran

I have a theory about Reef. In the mid-Nineties, when the Somerset outfit appeared, they were reviled by London music journalists. This was mostly because they sounded like a hoary, unreconstructed early-Seventies blues-rock band. Those same journalists, however, were excitedly touting bands who lamely emulated Kinks-ish Sixties-ness, faux new wave, or a mixture of both (ie Britpop).

Album: Earthen Sea - Ghost Poems

★★★★★ EARTHEN SEA - GHOST POEMS Domestic, yet deep ambient dreams from New York City

Domestic, yet very, very deep ambient dreams from New York City

Kranky, run in Chicago for very nearly 30 years now, is one of the most remarkably consistent record labels around. They helped define “post-rock” in the Nineties with key releases from the likes of Labradford and God Speed You! Black Emperor, and they’ve put out all manner of way out-there postpunk, psychedelic rock and electronica freakery, all well retaining a unifying aesthetic identity.

Album: Kurt Vile - (Watch My Moves)

A sunny soother from the US indie perennial

Although the term “hipster” has become degraded to well beyond cliché, Kurt Vile is one of those artists whose fans may indeed have that in-the-know smugness. With Vile, though, this is not a bad thing. Given the increasingly confidence-shedding nature of recent world events, Vile’s mix of indie rock with psychedelia and Americana makes for a welcome escape.

DVD/Blu-ray: Nineteen Eighty-Four

★★★ DVD: NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR Nigel Kneale's adaptation lacks bite despite strong performances

Nigel Kneale's 1954 TV adaptation lacks bite, despite strong performances

"Disgusting", "depressing", "sheer horror from start to finish", a "filthy, rotten, immoral play". Such were the comments from viewers published across a spectrum of British newspapers following the BBC transmission, on 12 December 1954, of Nigel Kneale’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.

Album: Camila Cabello - Familia

Leaning into the global Latin pop explosion to charming effect

The global popularity of Latin music in the past few years is almost incomprehensibly huge. 2017’s “Despacito” by Puerto Rican Luis Fonsi was the point where it became clear that Latin America – like South Korea – was now operating entirely on its own pop terms and making the rest of the world dance to its beat. And a look at global streaming charts will show consistently vast figures for artists like Brazil’s Anitta whose “Envolver” is currently the worldwide no.1 single with streams in the hundreds of millions.  

Album: Jack White - Fear Of The Dawn

Rock reupholstered for a hip-hop world, in outraged, hungry songs

Jack White is still unsatisfied, and rock’n’roll still unfinished business for its most extremist exponent. His last pre-pandemic album, Boarding House Reach (2018), seemed a major blow to his career, its experiment in warped dynamics and Beat spoken-word relatively rejected, despite its chart-topping start, a setback barely arrested by the Raconteurs’ reunion.