Album: Rain Parade - Last Rays of a Dying Sun

★★★ RAIN PARADE - LAST RAYS OF A DYING SUN The Paisley Underground lynchpins are back

Over three decades on from their last album, the Paisley Underground lynchpins unleash its follow-up

The atmosphere is foggy. What can be discerned through the murk is either out of focus or translucent. Words drift in from somewhere which can’t be pinpointed. “I’m tuning you in,” “I’ve picked up the loaded dice,” “Everything you know is everything that you let go.” Control is just out of reach. The songs are mid paced, with nods to Crazy Horse and Television. There are odd snatches of backwards guitar.

Album: Mahalia - IRL

★★★★ MAHALIA - IRL Decades of R&B folded into Midlands singer's most confident record yet

Decades of R&B folded into the Midlands singer's most confident record yet

Ever since she broke through in her teens, Leicestershire singer Mahalia Burkmar’s music has often been referred to as retro or revivalist R&B. But that framing is a fundamental misunderstanding of the way the genre operates for young 21st century music lovers. For fans and artists of Mahalia’s generation – she’s 25 – the Nineties and early Noughties classics of Mariah, TLC, Destinys Child and co aren’t really retro in the way that Seventies and Eighties music were back then.

Album: Lindstrøm - Everyone Else is a Stranger

★★★ LINDSTROM - EVERYONE ELSE IS A STRANGER Nordic disco-tronic perennial

Nordic disco-tronic perennial serves up four long cuddly tracks that hold the line

The response to this album will depend almost entirely on whether the listener regards Norwegian electronic musician Hans-Peter Lindstrøm’s Seventies-synth-wizard-goes-disco thing as tasty noodle or just noodle.

Blu-ray: Inland Empire

David Lynch's surreal horror wotsit, newly restored and eternally brain-frazzling

Searching for a coherent narrative thread in David Lynch’s Inland Empire (2006) is probably futile, so it’s best to begin with the movie’s nervy central performance by Laura Dern in multiple, overlapping roles as “a woman in trouble” – the movie’s subtitle. Or maybe many different women in all manner of trouble. 

Album: Kool & the Gang - People Just Wanna Have Fun

Kool and his mates are still looking for a good time, all the time

Forty years ago, the songs of New Jersey’s Kool and the Gang formed an essential soundtrack to many a suburban lothario’s weekend. “Celebration”, “Ladies’ Night” and “Get Down on It” were undisputed chart classics of the time – laying down slick grooves that focused wholly on having a good time and not having a care in the world.

Album: PJ Harvey - I Inside the Old Year Dying

★★★★★ PJ HARVEY - I INSIDE THE OLD YEAR DYING Strange and wonderful songs

Strange and wonderful songs from Britain's most original musical artist

As an authentic artist, PJ Harvey manages to remain true to her essence as well as constantly shifting her creative stance. Each of her albums has been a leap forward, and yet anchored in a sound and style that are immediately recognisable as hers.

This new album, the first in seven years, is in character – sensual, mysterious, a mixture of introverted softness and extrovert violence. It's very good, full of surprises, slow to reveal itself, like a really well-accomplished piece of poetry.

Album: Gabriels - Angels & Queens - Part II

After an inconspicuous start, US-UK trio Gabriels are a slow-burn sensation ready to soar

You could say the catalyst behind it all was Rocketman himself. During his Apple Music Show, celebrated CBE Elton John named Gabriels’ self-released EP, Love and Hate in a Different Time, one of the most seminal releases in the last ten years. At that time, little was known about the US-UK trio. When they eventually signed a major record deal a few months later, there wasn’t a single photograph of the three of them in the same room.

Album: ANOHNI - My Back Was a Bridge for You to Cross

★★★★ ANONHI - MY BACK WAS A BRIDGE FOR YOU TO CROSS A country-soul diversion

An unexpected country-soul diversion for the apocalyptic chanteuse

A “back to basics” album is a risky thing. When an act has expanded into big, lavish or experimental production, it’s not a simple act to strip that away. Trying to go back to the intimacy or spontaneity of early work can feel forced: they may find they’ve become reliant on the possibilities of studio craft, or simply evolved into a different kind of artist. U2’s recent horrorshow of a catalogue-reworking album, for example, shows just how laboured such an exercise can be.

DVD/Blu-ray: Western Approaches

Masterful 1944 story doc captures courage and cooperation of Britain's merchant seamen

Writer-director Pat Jackson’s Western Approaches (1944), a Technicolor tour de force partly shot in turbulent seas by Jack Cardiff, is a stirring World War II story documentary that demonstrates the bravery, resilience, selflessness, and collective spirit of men of the British Merchant Navy during the Battle of the Atlantic.