Reissue CDs Weekly: Peephole In My Brain - British Progressive Pop Sounds Of 1971

PEEPHOLE IN MY BRAIN - BRITISH PROGRESSIVE POP SOUNDS OF 1971 A fresh perspective on the year glam rock began flexing its muscles

A fresh perspective on the year glam rock began flexing its muscles

The title comes from the lyrics of “Andy Warhol”: track two, side two of David Bowie’s late 1971 album Hunky Dory: ”Put a peephole in my brain, Two new pence to have a go, I'd like to be a gallery, Put you all inside my show.” The new pence reference recognised Britain’s recent adoption of decimalised currency.

Album: Groove Armada - Edge of the Horizon

★ GROOVE ARMADA - EDGE OF THE HORIZON Dance duo produce a yacht rock stinker

First album in ten years from hit-making dance duo is a yacht rock stinker

Alongside Basement Jaxx, Groove Armada were one of the last big acts to blossom from the 1990s boom in clubland and DJ culture. They are responsible for bona fide classics in “Superstylin’”, “At the River” and “I See You Baby”, and also founded the Lovebox Festival, which was named after their fourth album.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Helen Shapiro - Face The Music The Complete Singles 1967-1984

HELEN SHAPIRO - FACE THE MUSIC: THE COMPLETE SINGLES 1967-1984 A lack of hits doesn't weaken this homage to the UK's first home-grown female popstar

A lack of hits doesn't weaken this homage to the UK’s first home-grown female pop star

What happens when the hits dry up? And what happens a little further down the line, as the years of being on the charts recede into the past? For Helen Shapiro, the questions are answered by the intriguing Face The Music: The Complete Singles 1967–1984, a 25-track compilation collecting all her pop singles from the period covered by the title. Her work in jazz is not heard. The latest tracks were originally issued by Charlie Gillett’s Oval label and became her final singles.

White Riot review - energetic documentary races through the history of Rock Against Racism

★★★ WHITE RIOT Energetic doc races through the history of Rock Against Racism

The power of music to change hearts and minds in the 1970s

This documentary about the 1970s activist movement Rock Against Racism comes with festival prizes and much acclaim. It’s certainly a nostalgic feast for those old enough to remember when punk and reggae musicians were purposely united and it’s a timely release in the age of Grenfell, Windrush and Brexit.  

Hendrix and the Spook review - a search for clarity in murky waters

★★★ HENDRIX AND THE SPOOK A search for clarity in murky waters

A detailed account of events surrounding a famous death that leaves you none the wiser

September 18th is the 50th anniversary of Jimi Hendrix’s death, an appropriate moment to release Hendrix and the Spook, a documentary exploring the vexed question: was it murder, suicide or a tragic accident? Trying to unravel this conundrum, director Tim Conrad sifts through the evidence, speculates about the crucial unknowns and, rather unconvincingly, creates possible end game scenarios.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The London Pub Rock Scene, The Year The UK Turned Day-Glo

Box sets underlining how Brit-punk didn’t create a cleavage with the musical past

The standard recitation goes like this. In the early Seventies a London scene evolved, centring on bands playing in pubs. Music was taken back to the grassroots. Finesse was unnecessary. What happened was dubbed pub rock and it laid the ground for an even more basic style: punk rock. Pub rock fed into and helped foster punk rock.

Reissue CDs Weekly: The Stooges - Live At Goose Lake

THE STOOGES - LIVE AT GOOSE LAKE Iggy and pals roar through full ‘Fun House’

Blistering 1970 recording of Iggy and pals roaring through the full ‘Fun House’ album

So far this year, Live at Goose Lake August 8th, 1970 is 2020’s most exciting archive release. The album is a previously unknown soundboard recording of The Stooges playing at Jackson, Michigan’s Goose Lake Festival. The event was formally billed as Goose Lake Park – International Music Festival. Also on were Faces, Ten Years After, The Flying Burrito Brothers and The James Gang.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Ready Or Not - Thom Bell's Philly Soul Arrangements & Productions

THOM BELL'S PHILLY SOUL ARRANGEMENTS & PRODUCTIONS 1965-1978 Homage to the great American sonic auteur

Overdue homage to the great American sonic auteur

A skim though the track listing confirms that this is no typical soul compilation. Actress and some-time pop singer Connie Stevens crops up. So does Johnny Mathis. Such seeming quirks are fitting as Thom Bell was never a typical arranger, producer or songwriter. There’s much more to the story than the timeless O’Jays and Stylistics hits he created for Gamble and Huff’s label Philadelphia International Records.

Reissue CDs Weekly: Be-Bop Deluxe - Axe Victim

BE-BOP DELUXE - AXE VICTIM Box-set makeover of Bill Nelson & Co’s impressive debut

Box-set makeover of Bill Nelson and Co’s impressive but ‘NME’-slated debut album

Bill Nelson’s views on his band Be-Bop Deluxe’s debut album are measured. In the essay accompanying its reissue, he writes “Axe Victim is one brief snapshot of a band in the process of becoming something else…a modest beginning, flawed but not without charm. And not the end of the story. I’ll always be grateful for the way that it helped launch a more appropriate vessel for my music, a ship which sails onward to this very day.” He sees the album as transitional.