CD: Circa Waves - What It's Like Over There

Power pop with a good mix of yin and yang

Circa Waves, the guitar-band from Liverpool, go over a storm at festivals and large venues. With simplicity, tightness and concentrated energy, they know how to play with the tension that can build between soft and hard, the yin and the yang of rock forms that continue to sound fresh because they're delivered with a sense of fun and the joy of making party music with catchy lyrics.

Tallinn Music Week 2019 review: 'We All Value Being European'

A much-needed reminder that creativity thrives without barriers

“We like people here in Estonia. I think we all here very much value being European. To all our British friends, we know that the offer of e-residency has been ticking-up constantly. You can find a sure foothold for your business here in Estonia. There’s enough space, please come.”

CD: WH Lung - Incidental Music

★★★★ CD: WH LUNG - INCIDENTAL MUSIC Sky-scraping Manchester trio debuts

Sky-scraping Manchester trio’s debut is a prime candidate for album of the year lists

Encountering a debut album this good is a rare thrill. Nonetheless, the case isn't made instantly – "Simpatico People”, the opening track of W.H. Lung’s Incidental Music, takes 127 seconds to bed in and the vocal arrives after another minute.

CD: Edwyn Collins - Badbea

★★★ EDWYN COLLINS - BADBEA Former Orange Juice frontman ebulliently and effectively mines the sounds of his past

The Orange Juice frontman ebulliently and effectively mines the sounds of his past

Edwyn Collins is in a good mood. Perhaps it’s his 2014 move back to his native Scotland where he now lives and records on the wild north-eastern coast. Perhaps it was finding a sheaf of inspiring old lyrics as he packed up to make the move. Or perhaps it’s just his joy at making music 14 years after two debilitating strokes nearly finished him off. Whatever the reason, his ninth solo album (and fourth since the strokes) is as full of beans as a young collie in springtime.

CD: Sleeper - The Modern Age

The song remains much the same for the reformed Britpoppers

While Oasis have so far resisted the temptation of the big pay-off that a Gallagher family reunion would ensure, plenty of other Britpoppers have been considerably less coy about getting back together since the heady days of the 1990s. We’ve already had reunions from Blur (albeit temporarily), Suede, Dodgy and even Shed Seven. Now though, it is the turn of Louise Wener’s four-piece, Sleeper.

CD: Lucy Rose - No Words Left

★★★★ LUCY ROSE - NO WORDS LEFT An album for the loneliest of sleepless nights

Stark and intimate songs, but there's light at the end of this tunnel

Every so often, an album reminds you that, done properly, the art form is more than just a collection of songs. Barely 35 minutes in length, Lucy Rose’s fourth release No Words Left is a beautifully sequenced work in a time when track listings have come to mean little; its songs, and the spaces between them, something of a late-night reverie.

CD: Stephen Malkmus - Groove Denied

Wayward solo set hits the shops two years after its creator wanted it issued

Groove Denied’s keeper is “Ocean of Revenge”, a drifting Syd Barrett-tinged contemplation with a structural circularity and edge setting it apart from the rest of what’s credited as the first solo album from Stephen Malkmus since 2001’s eponymous set. That, though, was an album he wanted co-billed to him and his band The Jicks. His label Matador had other ideas.

Laura Gibson, Hug and Pint, Glasgow review - fable songs and unpretentious intimacies

Staggeringly intimate solo show from Oregonian songwriter

Laura Gibson’s songwriting was always that of a storyteller but her newest album, Goners, ups the ante still further. Her first album to be made after completing an MFA in creative writing, the album explores weighty themes like grief and the persistent march of time with a spellbinding elegance.

Yes is More: Charlotte Church’s Late Night Pop Dungeon, Tramshed - utterly convincing

Welsh independence gig brings positivity and power to a growing movement

Compared to Scotland, Welsh independence has yet to hit the mainstream. The idea has been mostly supported by the Welsh-speaking population, with opinion polls hovering around 19 per cent. It’s fallen to Super Furry Animals keyboardist Cian Ciaran to change this with the Yes is More campaign.