Music Reissues Weekly: Soft Cell - Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret

SOFT CELL - NON-STOP EROTIC CABARET Marc Almond & Dave Ball’s landmark 1981 debut

Head-spinning box-set makeover of Marc Almond and Dave Ball’s landmark 1981 debut album

"Both of us have always enjoyed listening to dance music, and we wanted to interpret disco in our own way. We wanted to make good quality soulful electronic dance music, more biting than the usual bland disco stuff. We wanted to make records that would stand out in a disco and that you could listen to in your own bedroom."

Tish review - haunting portrait of a driven working-class photographer

★★★★ TISH Haunting portrait of a driven working-class photographer

Intimate documentary on the life and extraordinary art of Tish Murtha contains a timely political message

Paul Sng’s documentary Tish is one of the best British films of 2023 – both a heartfelt tribute to the life and work of the late photographer Tish (born Patricia) Murtha and a timely reminder of the war waged on the nation’s industrial working-class by the Thatcher government and its successors. Murtha’s death in 2013 was not unrelated to that war.

Album: Madness - Theatre of the Absurd presents C'Est la Vie

A tuneful, witty, melancholy and dynamic state-of-the-nation address

Madness are an English institution due to deathless, jolly hits such as “House of Fun”, “Baggy Trousers” and “One Step Beyond”, but there’s always been another side to them.

DVD/Blu-ray: 23 Seconds to Eternity

Collection capturing the berserk, exhilarating vision of music-art mavericks The KLF

The KLF are endlessly fascinating. There’s never been a “pop group” like them. From the late Eighties into the early Nineties, they treated music, especially electronic dance music, as a laboratory for lunatic experiment. Unlike most avant-garde thinkers in pop, though, they made a glorious and highly unlikely commercial success of it, via a series of globally successful singles (and, to some degree, the album, The White Room).

Album: OMD - Bauhaus Staircase

★★★ OMD - BAUHAUS STAIRCASE 80s electro-pop duo sound like they're enjoying themselves

Eighties electro-pop duo sound like they're enjoying themselves

The three previous albums that Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark have released since reforming in 2010 have all, to varying degrees, adhered to their early sound. The band were part of the post-punk, post-Kraftwerk, 1979-82 synth-pop boom, alongside the likes of The Human League, Depeche Mode and Gary Numan.

Music Reissues Weekly: Ibrahim Hesnawi - The Father of Libyan Reggae

The musical pioneer who flourished under the rule of Colonel Gaddafi

Initially, it doesn’t sound so unusual. The collection’s first song is titled “Never Understand.” Sung in English, it’s poppy reggae with a light feel, twinkling keyboard lines and a lengthy, rock-oriented guitar solo. The singer appears to be a fan of Bob Marley. Originally, it was the last track on Side One of Hesnawi and Peace, the 1980, Italy-recorded debut album by Ibrahim Hesnawi.

Dead Dad Dog, Finborough Theatre review - Scottish two-hander plays differently 35 years on, but still entertains

★★★★ DEAD DAD DOG, FINBOROUGH THEATRE Nostalgia rather than political satire drives charming revival 

A play that will speak to any middle-aged Londoner with roots elsewhere

I know, I was there. Well, not in Edinburgh in 1985, but in Liverpool in 1981, and the pull of London and the push from home, was just as strong for me back then as it is for Eck in John McKay’s comedy Dead Dad Dog.