Chas & Dave: Last Orders, BBC Four

CHAS & DAVE: LAST ORDERS, BBC FOUR The cockney styled duo get bigged-up big time

The Cockney duo get bigged-up big time

Chas & Dave’s run of hits up the mid Eighties made them an alternative to the gloss of Wham!, Duran Duran and Culture Club. They had three chart albums in 1983. But was there more to their “rockney” music than a first take suggests? Were they more than a cockney slanted, pie ‘n’ mash Wurzels? This programme, prompted by their 2009 retirement, made a valiant – heroic – attempt to elevate them to the level of the greats. Peter Doherty declared them “just like The Clash, The Smiths, Keats”. Obviously, he was thinking of “Snooker Loopy”.

Ultravox, Hammersmith Apollo

ULTRAVOX, HAMMERSMITH APOLLO The reformed electronic pioneers triumph despite a showstopping interruption

The reformed electronic pioneers triumph despite a showstopping interruption

Now I think I've seen it all. After a storming two-hour set Ultravox returned to the stage for a celebratory twin-pronged past-meets-present encore of "Dancing with Tears in My Eyes" and "Contact". At the very end, during a touching, soft-spoken moment, a female fan in an animal mask clambered onstage and appeared to drop a bowl of greeny-yellow gunk, possibly custard, on Midge Ure's head. The woman was bundled off and a towel cleaned up the dapper vocalist, but the crude incident was in breathtakingly stark contrast to the glistening gig that had preceded it.

Barbara

BARBARA Superb director-actress team offers one of the best German films of the last 10 years

Superb director-actress team offers one of the best German films of the last 10 years

For a remarkable BBC Radio Four half-hour programme broadcast on 14 September, The Stasi Jigsaw Puzzle, Chris Bowlby pieced together tales of treachery in the former German Democratic Republic. At one point a 1950s recording of a trial of a woman was played. Her cries above the rasping sound of the judge, if that’s what he was, sentencing her to death was one of the most harrowing things I’ve ever heard.

Dexys, Queen's Hall, Edinburgh

DEXYS, QUEEN'S HALL, EDINBURGH High emotion and low comedy in the brave, bold and redemptive return of Kevin Rowland's gang

High emotion and low comedy in the brave, bold and redemptive return of Kevin Rowland's gang

Kevin Rowland has gone to great lengths recently to ensure that no one is under any misconceptions: the return of Dexys is no nostalgia trip. Last night’s show in Edinburgh hammered home the point. There aren’t many bands that could return after 27 years (give or take a smattering of gigs in 2003), play for two hours straight, perform only four old songs - even if those were stretched out over 45 extraordinary minutes - and yet still satisfy every demand made of them.

CD: The Killers – Battle Born

THE KILLERS: BATTLE BORN Brandon Flowers gets back to his rock roots with his old gang

Brandon Flowers gets back to his rock roots with his old gang

The showbiz titibit that has intrigued me more than any other in recent weeks is the story that comedian Jimmy Carr helped to inspire one of the tracks on The Killers’ fourth album. The Lloyd Cole lookalike apparently suggested to Brandon Flowers over dinner that the next album to make a breakthrough would be looking at the problems of the economy. Imagine Jim Davidson giving tips to Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Flowers took note, went away and returned with "Deadlines and Commitments".