Blu-ray: Laurin

Stylish, atmospheric chiller, handsomely restored

Mario Bava and Dario Argento are cited as key influences on Robert Sigl’s debut feature Laurin (1989). British viewers will also be reminded of the series of MR James ghost story adaptations broadcast by the BBC in the 1970s; a glimpse of a murdered child peering through a window eerily similar to a terrifying sequence in Lawrence Gordon Clarke’s macabre Lost Hearts. Éva Martin’s ornate, candle-lit sets are also redolent of vintage period drama.

Album: Foo Fighters - But Here We Are

The pre-eminent stadium rockers' poignant and heart-wrenching latest is coloured deeply by their loss and grief

In 1995 Dave Grohl returned with a new project and album, called Foo Fighters, following the death of Nirvana band-mate and close friend Kurt Cobain. Given his close connection with Kurt, and his avoidance of the media spotlight, this new album was pored over by many for any reference to Cobain or Nirvana.

Album: King Krule - Space Heavy

★★★★ KING KRULE - SPACE HEAVY A sombre, but warm, meditation on love, loss and space

Archy Marshall’s fourth album as King Krule is a sombre, but surprisingly warm, meditation on love, loss and space

At first, I misread the title of the lead single “Seaforth” from King Krule’s fourth album, Space Heavy, as “Sea Froth”. It felt like a fitting title, combining the watery motif that runs through all of Archy Marshall’s music with a grimy image of frothy, decaying algae. This was after all the same artist whose 2017 album, The Ooz, was named after human gunk.

Album: Dream Wife - Social Lubrication

★★★★ DREAM WIFE - SOCIAL LUBRICATION Making the political playful, powered by punk

The London-based trio make the political playful, powered by punk

Five years ago, breaking dry January a few days early, I joined a throng of folks amongst the merch boxes and strip lights of Rough Trade East to see Dream Wife. The London-based trio has come a long way since those small-scale shows in the backroom of a Brick Lane record shop.

Album: Baxter Dury - I Thought I Was Better Than You

★★★★ BAXTER DURY - I THOUGHT I WAS BETTER THAN YOU Sad-funny and brilliant

Sad-funny, brilliant and worth playing on repeat

This is a slight album in terms of length (under half an hour) but not in emotional insight. It’s absolutely haunting. Here we have the characteristic all-consuming melancholy that oozes from Baxter Dury but without the menace of Prince of Tears. And his f*cked up childhood still takes centre stage.

Album: Rufus Wainwright - Folkocracy

★★ RUFUS WAINWRIGHT - FOLKOCRACY He does it his way

He does it his way

"This album is almost like a recorded birthday party and birthday present to myself. I just invited all the singers that I greatly admire and always wanted to sing with." So says Rufus Wainwright, a brilliant and compelling performer – and one, you suspect, who brooks few challenges, be they from family, friends, or producers. And someone needed to tell him that Folkocracy is often a tad OTT. Rather more than a tad actually.

Blu-ray: The Conquest of Everest

★★★★ BLU-RAY: THE CONQUEST OF EVEREST Post-war heroics, still impressive 70 years on

Post-war heroics, still impressive 70 years on

Studio Canal’s restored print of the 1953 documentary The Conquest of Everest is so sharp, so clear that initially it’s hard to believe that we’re not watching a studio reconstruction. Skies, snowscapes and sunlit uplands glow; it’s only in the perilous final stages that things turn murkier.

Album: Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds - Council Skies

Noel's latest is portentous but never convinces

Council Skies was created in Noel Gallagher’s new studio, partly during lockdown, an attempt to reconnect with where he came from, Manchester, as per its cover art. It’s not an exercise in nostalgia (except insofar as everything either Gallagher sibling has ever done is), but more about mining his origins for inspiration, authenticity and emotional meaning. There’s an audible earnestness, then, a ferventness, but, unfortunately, the ratio of catchy anthems is low.

Album: Bob Dylan - Shadow Kingdom

The Song and Dance Man's lockdown-era live stream resurfaces

Dylan’s Shadow Kingdom first crossed our paths in July 2021, his first streaming event, and coming little more than a year after the garden of unearthly delights that was Rough and Rowdy Ways. To enter this kingdom, you were given a key code for $25, and allowed fifty minutes, 13 songs, and the chance to revisit over the following 48 hours.

Album: Shirley Collins - Archangel Hill

★★★★ SHIRLEY COLLINS - ARCHANGEL HILL The voice of English traditional music takes stock

The voice of English traditional music takes stock

Mount Caburn is east of Lewes in Sussex. Shirley Collins’s stepfather used to call it Archangel Hill. The site of an Iron Age hill fort, it was defended with a ditch during the Roman and Saxon periods. In World War II, a gun emplacement was positioned there. While physically strategic, it’s a spiritual landmark for Shirley Collins – a marker in the story of her life.