Album: James Blunt - Who We Used to Be

★ JAMES BLUNT - WHO WE USED TO BE And the gloop just keeps on coming

And the gloop just keeps on coming

Who knew! James Blunt has sold 20 million records worldwide. Who to, I wonder? Back to Bedlam, his 2004 debut, was the biggest-selling album of the first decade of the 21st century. Call that progress? When pop was pap – think the Carpenters or Bread – it was at least melodic and well-produced, leaving in its saccharine wake a handful of truly memorable songs that still evoke a pang of nostalgia and happy memories of sixth-form parties. But this kind of stuff is just… meh.

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.

Album: Sampha - Lahai

★★★★★ SAMPHA - LAHAI After his Mercury Prize winning debut, an ambitious, remarkable album

Sampha follows up his Mercury Prize winning debut with an ambitious, remarkable album

In 2011 the BBC aired Wonders of the Universe, a documentary presented by physicist Brian Cox about the origins of the universe divided into four parts: “Destiny”, “Stardust”, “Falling” and “Messengers”. These episodes could easily have been titles of songs on Sampha’s remarkable new album, Lahai, which is similarly concerned with the cosmos – but in a deeply personal way.

Album: Emma Anderson - Pearlies

The solo debut of the co-founder of Lush is a delight

Well, this is lovely. Pearlies opens with “I Was Miles Away”, a puffball of a sonic cloud which marries twinkling electronica with guitar-led shoegazing. It has a familial resemblance with the sort of thing perfected by Sweden’s I Break Horses, but lacks the frostiness. Here, there is a glow akin to that of a fire’s embers. Next, the vaguely bossa nova-ish and similarly exquisite “Bend the Round”.

Blu-ray: Brannigan

Ludicrous but likeable crime thriller, strikingly played by John Wayne and Richard Attenborough

Brannigan begins in arresting fashion, Dominic Frontiere’s funky theme playing over leery close ups of the titular hero’s Colt revolver. Directed by Douglas Hickox and released in 1973, this was the only film starring John Wayne which wasn’t shot in the US.

Album: The Rolling Stones - Hackney Diamonds

★★★★★ THE ROLLING STONES - HACKNEY DIAMONDS A new seam of rolled gold

Sixty years on, the Stones strike a new seam of rolled gold

It’s been a while since Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood sat down together at the Hackney Empire to introduce their first album of new songs in 18 years, and their single, “Angry”, is now approaching 20 million views on YouTube.

Album: Agnetha Fältskog - A+

★★ AGNETHA FALTSKOG - A+ ABBA star's decade-old album reimagined to little useful effect

ABBA star's decade-old album reimagined to little useful effect

When ABBA split in 1982, Agnetha Fältskog went on to a solo career that was mostly overshadowed by the titanic popularity of her former band. By the 21st century ABBA’s status in pop, especially with the Mamma Mia phenomenon, had become iconic.