CD: Petula Clark – Lost in You

Covering too many bases makes it too safe for the iconic singer

“Cut Copy me”, the opening track of Petula Clark’s first British studio album in six years, is beautiful. It could have been created by Saint Etienne at their most melancholy. Her voice almost a whisper, it’s the sound of shadows and uncertainty even with what sounds like a light touch of autotune. The title track follows. Similarly assured, it’s sparse and centred around a rippling piano. Then a by-rote, in-the-shadow-of-Adele version of Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy" breaks the spell.

CD: The History of Apple Pie - Out of View

London fuzz-poppers prove the tunes are as sweet as the name

A confession: for much of this debut album from London fuzz-pop fivesome The History of Apple Pie, I have little to no idea what vocalist Stephanie Min is on about. Sweet and half-whispered, floating above crunchy bass and tuneful guitar riffage, it’s almost as if her vocals are there for effect rather than having something to say.

CD: Solange - True

The younger Ms Knowles proves to be as much of a pop powerhouse as big sis

Writing about True without naming the elephant in the room was always going to be a challenge, even if the younger Ms Knowles’ next move had built on the more experimental sounds of her earlier work or “Stillness is the Move”, her 2009 collaboration with Dirty Projectors. But then “Losing You” dropped in October, and it just so happened to feature one of the greatest female R&B vocals since, well...

Art Rock: The best and worst songs about artists

ART ROCK The best and worst songs about artists by musicians who could tell their Picassos from their Pollocks

Art rockers who could tell their Picassos from their Pollocks: a video library

That ultimate art rocker David Bowie is 66 today. The Victoria & Albert Museum is opening with a major survey of Bowie the style icon this spring. What’s more, he’s just released a new single, with an album following in March. Fittingly, for an art school idol, he once wrote a song about his favourite artist Andy Warhol (“Andy Warhol looks a scream / Hang him on my wall / Andy Warhol, Silver Screen / Can't tell them apart at all”). It got a typically blank response when Bowie played it to its subject – not even a “Gee, David”.

Reissue CDs: The Best of 2012

REISSUE CDS: THE BEST OF 2012 Can's 'The Lost Tapes', a collection of previously unheard material, shows how it should be done

Can's 'The Lost Tapes', a collection of previously unheard material, shows how it should be done

Can’s The Lost Tapes towers over any of the other reissues theartsdesk has covered this year. Although not strictly a reissue – it collected unheard recordings from tapes which had lain in the band’s archive – it rewrote the story of the seminal German band, offering a new perspective on their creative process and what they had issued. More than any of this, its three discs were a great listen and as essential as any of their albums - Soundtracks, Tago Mago and Future Days.

The Beach Boys: Doin' it Again, BBC Four

THE BEACH BOYS: DOIN' IT AGAIN, BBC FOUR Largely pointless 50th anniversary tribute is rescued by a few essential moments

Largely pointless 50th anniversary tribute is rescued by a few essential moments

“It’s an expression of our collective souls coming together,” said The Beach Boys’ Mike Love of his band, in this celebration of their 2012 50th anniversary world tour and recent album That’s Why God Made the Radio. Subsequent to the making of Doin' it Again and during the ensuing global jaunt, Love announced he was ditching fellow Beach Boys Alan Jardine, David Marks and Brian Wilson, whom he had been sharing the stage with. Not much of a shelf life for this collective expression, with little chance of doing it again.