Album: Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders and The London Symphony Orchestra – Promises

★★★★ FLOATING POINTS, PHAROAH SANDERS AND THE LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA - PROMISES 46 minutes and 37 seconds of electronic, jazz and classical spiritual transcendence

46 minutes and 37 seconds of electronic, jazz and classical spiritual transcendence

My first (conscious) encounter with the music of American jazz saxophone legend Pharoah Sanders was 1970’s “Let Us Go into the House of the Lord”, a nearly 18-minute piece which, right until the end, sounds like it’s only just forming through an explosion of light and layers of sound. Promises has a similar effect – an ever-unfolding spiritual journey, marked by repetition, build-ups and climaxes.

Album: Frida Hyvönen - Dream Of Independence

★★★★ FRYDA HYVÖNEN: DREAM OF INDEPENDENCE Unflinching accounts of change and loss from the Swedish singer-songwriter

Forensic, unflinching accounts of change and loss from the Swedish singer-songwriter

Track two on Dream Of Independence, the new album from Sweden’s Frida Hyvönen, is titled “A Funeral in Banbridge”. An account of attending a funeral in, indeed, Banbridge, County Down, Northern Ireland, it’s bright, melodically jaunty, piano-driven and moves along at a fair clip.

Album: Lana Del Rey - Chemtrails Over the Country Club

★★★ LANA DEL REY - CHEMTRAILS OVER THE COUNTRY CLUB More cinematic confessionals from Pop Art queen

More cinematic confessionals from Pop Art queen

Lana Del Rey has turned pop’s volume down, returning hushed intimacy to the music’s heart. Her collaborator Jack Antonoff was also heavily involved in Taylor Swift’s Folklore reinvention, but Del Rey’s idea of Americana remains very different.

Album: Black Honey - Written & Directed

★★★ BLACK HONEY - WRITTEN & DIRECTED Brighton band's second album gives indie a good name with huge-sounding and catchy guitar pop

Brighton band's second album gives indie a good name with huge-sounding and catchy guitar pop

Indie rock has taken a commercial back seat, even if the music press still hasn’t quite caught up. Sure, there have been hit-makers, and bands that sell out stadiums, but overall, indie’s tide is very slowly retreating. Like any genre, it will always be about, like westerns in Hollywood, a classic formula, but the take-up of technologies far beyond the electric guitar renders it a retro curio.

Album: Ted Barnes - 17 Postcards

★★★★ TED BARNES - 17 POSTCARDS Devastating bulletins from a world where craft and care matter above all else

Devastating bulletins from a world where craft and care matter above all else

Ted Barnes is an outsider by design. Not in the sense of being wilfully awkward or outré – the music on his first solo album in almost 13 years years is gentle, harmonically rich, extremely accessible – but in that he has sidestepped standard career paths, and seems to be all the better for it.

Album: Gazelle Twin & NYX - Deep England

★★★★★ GAZELLE TWIN & NYX - DEEP ENGLAND Dreamlike psychedelia trips on pagan England

Dreamlike psychedelia trips on pagan England

Deep England is Gazelle Twin’s reimagining, with the help of ambient drone choir NYX, of her 2018 Pastoral album. Based on their live reworking of the album from 2019, it is like the musical soundtrack to wandering through an unfamiliar English forest under the influence of magic mushrooms. For where Pastoral was angular and harsh, Deep England is haunting and trippy and is really something special. One thing it isn’t, though, is hippy dippy.

Blu-ray: Viy

Disquieting folk-horror from the USSR

Released in 1967, Viy (Вий) was the first horror film to be produced in the USSR. Based on a novella by Gogol that draws from a multitude of folkloric tropes, Viy is more disquieting than chilling, though several sequences still unnerve. Konstantin Yershov and Georgi Kropachyov are credited as directors, but screenwriter and art director Aleksandr Ptushko was the film’s guiding spirit.