Reissue CDs Weekly: Judy Henske & Jerry Yester

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: JUDY HENSKE & JERRY YESTER The mystical 'Farewell Aldebaran' gets its first-ever legal reissue

The mystical 'Farewell Aldebaran' gets its first-ever legal reissue

In 1969, a tranche of American musicians looked back to the country’s past for inspiration. Bob Dylan followed John Wesley Harding with Nashville Skyline. The Band’s eponymous second album hit the shops. The Flying Burrito Brothers debuted with The Gilded Palace of Sin. The rootsy was a default. But choosing to draw on country and Appalachian traditions did not have to mean playing it straight. On the amazing Farewell Aldebaren, Judy Henske and Jerry Yester used banjo and hammered dulcimer.

Blu-ray: Women in Love

BLU-RAY: WOMEN IN LOVE Exemplary package celebrating Ken Russell’s compelling DH Lawrence adaptation

Exemplary package celebrating Ken Russell’s compelling DH Lawrence adaptation

Women in Love was Ken Russell’s first cinema film to directly reflect his work in television. He had directed The Billion Dollar Brain (1967), but that was an adaptation of a Len Deighton book. French Dressing (1964) was a few steps removed from a Carry On film. As an adaptation of the DH Lawrence novel, Women in Love (1969) tapped into the ethos of his work for the BBC and featured Oliver Reed, with whom he had worked in television.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Betty Davis, Jeanette Jones

REISSUE CDS WEEKLY: BETTY DAVIS, JEANETTE JONES Intriguing Sixties soul from the woman who married Miles Davis and a lost San Francisco belter

Intriguing Sixties soul from the woman who married Miles Davis and a lost San Francisco belter

Despite their different paths in the Seventies, the final years of the Sixties saw parallels between Betty Davis and Jeanette Jones. Both soul singers had significant backing from music business insiders. Late in the decade, each had a discography limited to one unsuccessful single. They worked as models.

DVD/Blu-ray: A Kind of Loving

DVD/BLU-RAY: A KIND OF LOVING John Schlesinger's lyrical kitchen-sink drama about a couple forced to marry

John Schlesinger's seminal British New Wave drama about a couple forced to marry

In John Schlesinger’s A Kind of Loving (1962), draughtsman Vic (Alan Bates), still reeling from a drunken binge and a fight with his typist wife Ingrid (June Ritchie) and her mother (Thora Hird), staggers into the railway station of their grim Northern English town. To leave or not to leave? That is the question that also tests the mettle of another young Northerner (Tom Courtenay) in another Schlesinger film written by Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall.

Proms at...Cadogan Hall: Hardenberger, Gruber, ASMF

PROMS AT...CADOGAN HALL: HARDENBERGER, GRUBER, ASMF Classy not-quite-easy-listening from Berlin, Vienna and Stockholm, with love

Classy not-quite-easy-listening from Berlin, Vienna and Stockholm, with love

Superior light music with a sting, done at the highest level: what could be better for a summer lunchtime in the light and airy Cadogan Hall? Our curator was that most collegial of top soloists, trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger. He'd invited colleagues of many nations, all of them first rate, but it was almost a given that chansonnier-composer HK Gruber would steal the show.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Jerry Ross

Stylish celebration of Philadelphia’s musical mover and shaker

A two-bar flurry of guitar lays the table for a skip-along beat, handclaps, and an arrangement and melody akin to Martha and the Vandellas’ March 1964 single “In my Lonely Room”. This though was not a Motown production and did not tell the story of a girl so distraught at her boyfriend’s dalliances that all she could do was take to her lonely room and cry. On “The 81”, Candy & the Kisses sang of a dance craze for anyone “tired of doing the monkey, tired of doing the swing.”

Half A Sixpence, Chichester Festival Theatre

HALF A SIXPENCE, CHICHESTER FESTIVAL THEATRE The Tommy Steele musical gets a triumphant, banjo-rehabilitating refresh

The Tommy Steele musical gets a triumphant, banjo-rehabilitating refresh

Watching Cameron Mackintosh’s joyful revision of this Sixties musical, it’s possible to believe for a moment that all the world needs now is love sweet love and a shit-ton of banjos. With a new book by Downton Abbey behemoth Julian Fellowes, new numbers by the pair behind hit musical Mary Poppins, and design that delights at every turn of the multi-revolve, Half A Sixpence seems destined to follow a flush of previous Chichester Festival musicals into the West End. It also puts vintage stars around the previously unknown name of Charlie Stemp.

The Stripper, St James Theatre

THE STRIPPER, ST JAMES THEATRE A musical take on pulp noir is frustratingly uneven

A musical take on pulp noir is frustratingly uneven

Womanising detectives, shapely dames, gangsters and convoluted criminal conspiracies: Richard O’Brien and Richard Hartley’s 1982 musical take on Carter Brown’s California-set whodunit fiction is pulp noir to the max. However, unlike the pair’s previous collaboration, the indelible Rocky Horror Show, this is more homage than send-up – arch but fairly straightforward storytelling in place of riotous, risqué pastiche.

Carole King performs Tapestry, Hyde Park BST Festival

★★★ CAROLE KING PERFORMS TAPESTRY, HYDE PARK BST FESTIVAL Kitsch and intensity collide in a performance of the blues at the heart of the mainstream

Kitsch and intensity collide in a performance of the blues at the heart of the mainstream

If last night made anything clear it's that some things are still some way beyond the reach of hipster reappropriation. The audience in Hyde Park for Carole King was 99% white and middle-aged, with the very few younger people scattered about appearing to be teenagers there with their parents.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Pink Floyd

To mark the anniversary of his death, we take a look at Syd Barrett's historically important first recordings

Pictured above is the label of an exceptionally important Pink Floyd record issued last November. Only a thousand people bought a copy. That was the amount that hit shops. Pink Floyd 1965: Their First Recordings was a double seven-inch set with a historic importance inversely proportionate to its availability. It was the first ever outing for the earliest recordings by the band and, as such, the earliest compositions for them by its prime songwriter Syd Barrett.