Echo in the Canyon review – California droopin'

★★ ECHO IN THE CANYON Disappointing tribute to the Laurel Canyon folk-rock scene

Disappointing tribute to the 1965-67 Laurel Canyon folk-rock scene

Echo in the Canyon is a lamentably thin documentary about the vibrant folk-rock music scene that flourished in the bohemian Los Angeles neighbourhood of Laurel Canyon from 1965 to 1967.

Banana Split review - likable if essentially timid romcom

On-the-shelf romcom deserves both a proper airing - and an epilogue

Is friendship mightier and more durable than sex? That's the proposition put forward by the engaging if ultimately cautious Banana Split, the Los Angeles-set romcom in which two teenagers become friends unbeknownst to the long-haired himbo boyfriend whom they have shared.

Album: Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith - The Mosaic of Transformation

★★★★ KAITLYN AURELIA SMITH - THE MOSAIC OF TRANSFORMATION Warm oceans of sound from the mystical synth-wrangler

Mystical synth-wrangler continues to create warm oceans of sound

A singer-songwriter of somewhat mystical bent, originally from a forested island in the US Pacific Northwest, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith really came into her own when she discovered vintage synthesizers. In particular, her masterpiece, 2016's EARS, saw her vocals merging into the rich flows of bubbling tones, melodies channelling folk traditions from various corners of the world, creating an unmistakably utopian sound.

Album: Fiona Apple - Fetch the Bolt Cutters

Rare bulletin of crafted rawness from LA auteur's personal front line

Fiona Apple simmered in the LA sun for eight years to make this record, mostly holed up at home since her beloved dog died and she stopped drinking. Rather than polish the result to a sleek gleam, this is an album of trailing threads and percussive clatter, layered like unwiped tape.

Album: Thundercat - It Is What It Is

★★★★ THUNDERCAT - IT IS WHAT IT IS Shadowy Californian dreams from bassist firing at full-blast

Shadowy Californian dreams from bassist firing at full-blast

Alongside the man he calls “the other half of my brain”, Flying Lotus, Stephen “Thundercat” Bruner sits near the heart of Los Angeles’ fertile, genre-busting scene, helping to link Kendrick Lamar’s righteous rebel rap, Kamasi Washington’s spiritual jazz, and the faux-nerd white one-man bands of Louis Cole and Sam Gendel. Breaking through himself with Drunk (2017), It Is What It Is confirms Thundercat’s own complex character, being both slyly funny and obscurely moving, as if attending a party that’s almost over.

Album: The Weeknd - After Hours

★★★★ THE WEEKND - AFTER HOURS R&B superstar's fourth album soon impresses

Fourth album from R&B superstar impresses after a slow start

Let’s talk about “Blinding Lights”. What a sleek single, like an escapee from the acclaimed soundtrack to the film Drive, a polished riff on mid-Eighties synth-pop, ripe for 21st century dancefloors, one of the songs of the year so far, all topped off with the crystal falsetto of Abel Tesfaye, AKA The Weeknd.

Oscars 2020: a 'Parasite' love-in caps a night of firsts

OSCARS 2020 A 'Parasite' love-in caps a night of firsts

South Korean triumph dominates a generously-spirited Oscar night

The 92nd Academy Awards saved its surprises for a final stretch that saw Parasite make history as the first foreign language film ever to win the Oscar for Best Picture, pipping to the post the presumptive favourite, the World War One drama 1917 (pictured below).

The L Word: Generation Q, Sky Atlantic review - is the new Word as good as the old Word?

★★★ THE L WORD: GENERATION Q, SKY ATLANTIC Is the new Word as good as the old Word?

Despite new themes and fresh characters, it's still soap

The L Word originally ran for six seasons between 2004 and 2009, and its then-revolutionary depiction of the lives of a group of lesbians in Los Angeles won it both a fanatical audience and acclaim for its game-changing content, exploring such topics as same-sex marriage, gay adoption and female sexuality which weren't being seen elsewhere on TV.

Blu-ray: Black Angel

BLACK ANGEL  Dan Duryea stars as a sympathetic fall guy in director Roy William Neill's swansong

Dan Duryea stars as a sympathetic noir fall guy in director Roy William Neill's swansong

Waking at a pivotal moment in Black Angel, alcoholic songwriter-pianist Marty Blair (Dan Duryea) momentarily mistakes his new professional partner Catherine Bennett (June Vincent) for his estranged wife Mavis Marlowe (Constance Dowling). Each is a radiant blonde singer, but to Marty they are polar opposites: Catherine the madonna, Mavis the whore.