The KVB, Ramsgate Music Hall

THE KVB, RAMSGATE MUSIC HALL The Darkwave duo bring light as they showcase their new album

The Darkwave duo bring light as they showcase their new album

Without wishing to repeat myself, small venues almost always work best. The intimacy they offer heightens emotion and increases impact while breaking down the barrier between artist and audience. There's a mathematical consideration, too – fewer people means fewer antisocial arseholes no matter which way you divide it. And so I find myself back in East Kent’s best venue, among some of Ramsgate's most upstanding, to see the swirling, melodic storm of Berlin/London duo The KVB. First though, there’s the surprisingly engaging prospect of support band M!R!M.

Basia Bulat, Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen

BASIA BULAT, HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN Consummate display of musical urgency from Canada’s revitalised singer-songwriter

Consummate display of musical urgency from Canada’s revitalised singer-songwriter

The cape is not an everyday item of clothing. Worn by magicians, it brings an air of the extraordinary. It billows in the path of superheroes. The cloak of invisibility confirms the cape’s singularity. Basia Bulat was first seen in a sparkly gold cape on the sleeve of her recent Good Advice album and last night it was integral to the renewed vigour of her music and stage persona. Moved to say how hard it was play guitar with its folds fluttering, she nonetheless did not take the easy path and discard it.

CD: Cate Le Bon - Crab Day

An art-rock winner from the now California-based Welsh maverick

Considering that it was recorded in North California, that she now lives in Los Angeles, that her musical co-conspirators include a member of The Red Hot Chilli Peppers and that the album’s co-producer Noah Georgeson was behind a raft of Devendra Banhart and Joanna Newsom albums, Cate Le Bon’s Crab Day could sound American. It does not. Her fourth album proper evokes the greatest mavericks of pre-punk British art rock: Kevin Ayers, the Brian Eno of Taking Tiger Mountain, Slapp Happy and Robert Wyatt all come to mind as its 10 songs unfold.

theartsdesk in Estonia: Tallinn Music Week 2016

THEARTSDESK IN ESTONIA: TALLINN MUSIC WEEK 2016 A Presidential exhortation to save our Europe and our freedom

A Presidential exhortation to save our Europe and our freedom

“If we want to keep this free and democratic Europe of ours free and democratic, we must enlist ourselves, our skills and our commitment to liberty and justice. The problems we face are too great to simply say let the politicians do it.

CD: Kiran Leonard - Grapefruit

Too many borrowed voices jostle on the magpie-minded art rocker’s second album

In the run-up to the release of his second album Grapefruit, Kiran Leonard has revealed the musical touchstones which map out his world. Boredoms, Kate Bush, the jazzy French Canterbury-rock types Etron Fou Leloublan, Fela Kuti, Swans, Scriabin and Sleaford Mods all colour his prog-tinged vision of music. And he looks elsewhere for ideas. The album's “Ondör Gongor” takes its title from a Mongolian giant while “Half-Ruined Already” is inspired by a Werner Herzog film.

CD: Damien Jurado - Visions of Us on the Land

Narrative concept trumps musical progression on the latest from the American singer-songwriter

Damien Jurado’s last album, 2014’s Brothers and Sisters of the Eternal Son, was, as theartsdesk noted, about “a man setting off in search of himself but never returning”. Its follow-up tracks the same unnamed character and his companion Silver Katherine on a road trip which may or may not be in his mind. Following a concept album with another integrally linked to its predecessor – and the album before that too, 2012’s Maraqopa suggests Durado has faith in his listeners.

CD: Pinkshinyultrablast - Grandfeathered

CD: PINKSHINYULTRABLAST - GRANDFEATHERED Virtuoso Russian shoegazers fuse beauty with energy

Virtuoso Russian shoegazers fuse beauty with energy

The second album by Russian shoegazers Pinkshinyultrablast neatly side-steps any language-barrier issues either by submerging their mono-monikered singer Lyubov’s voice into their sea of noise, or ensuring that what is heard could be wordless singing along the lines of The Swingle Singers – even though she sings in English. As it should be with music so much about texture, the sound of Pinkshinyultrablast marks them as virtuosos of the indirect.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The Long Ryders

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: THE LONG RYDERS The complete works of the ill-fated band which marked out Americana’s ground zero

The complete works of the ill-fated band which marked out Americana’s ground zero

For its 6 April 1985 issue, the NME chose The Long Ryders as its cover stars. The colour picture of the band was emblazoned “A Shotgun Wedding of Country and Punk.” The Los Angeles outfit attracted attention as part of a wave of California bands overtly drawing from the past. Local peers included The Bangles, The Dream Syndicate and The Three O’Clock.