DVD/Blu-ray: Breathless

★★★★ BREATHLESS Avant-garde with a sense of history

Avant-garde with a sense of history

Just as British pub and punk rock of the mid-to late 1970's ushered in an era of music that referenced the history of pop and thrived on irony, much of the French New Wave, nearly 20 years earlier, looked back as much as forward, an avant-garde anchored like none other before in a sense of cinema history.

Michael Clark: Cosmic Dancer, Barbican Art Gallery review - mould-breaker, ground-shaker

★★★ MICHAEL CLARK: COSMIC DANCER, BARBICAN Mould-breaker, ground-shaker

A crash course in the life and times of an iconoclast and muse

It must be tough being Michael Clark, subject of one the largest retrospectives ever dedicated to a choreographer still living. Post-punk’s poster boy is that curious thing, a creative figurehead who defined a very particular anti-establishment strand in Britain’s recent history but who is virtually unknown to today’s under-40s. Michael who? was the common reponse to my own admittedly fairly narrow survey.

Max Richter's Sleep review - refreshing as a good night's rest

★★★★ MAX RICHTER'S SLEEP Refreshing as a good night's rest

Meditative new documentary perfectly captures the composer’s boldest experiment

If there was ever a balm for these confusing times, then it’s Max Richter’s Sleep, a lullaby of a documentary that explores the composer’s eight-hour-plus experimental 2015 composition based on sleep cycles. Richter is a remarkable musician and, alongside his experimental albums, has also been responsible for some of the most moving film scores of recent years, such as Dennis Villeneuve’s Arrival and James Gray’s Ad Astra.

CD: Soundwalk Collective with Patti Smith - Peradam

The third in a beguiling trilogy of immersive albums

"The gateway to the invisible must be visible." So intones Patti Smith on the third and final journey in sound with Stephan Crasneanscki and Simone Merli, AKA Soundwalk Collective, musical psychogeographers and field recorders whose journey for this evocation of French spiritual-surrealist writer Rene Daumal’s posthumous 1952 cult classic Mount Analog took him to the peak of Nanda Devi in the Himalayas, the former Beatle hangout of Rishikesh, India’s "spiritual capital" of Varanasi,

Album: Conrad Schnitzler & Frank Bretschneider - Con-Struct

Complete abstraction engenders a bizarre sense of familiarity

When does the avant-garde become folk? Both of the participants in this album have certainly been on the very cutting edge of sound-making, on multiple occasions. Conrad Schnitzler was a student of radical artist Joseph Beuys and leading light in the utopian thinking and radical soundmaking of 1970s West Germany as a member of Tangerine Dream and Kluster.

Album: bdrmm - Bedroom

★★★★ BDRMM - BEDROOM Shoegaze five-piece's journey of discovery ends with a hugely impressive debut

The shoegaze five-piece's journey of discovery ends with a hugely impressive debut

Shoegaze stable Sonic Cathedral has, in truth, always been a much broader church than its name implies. From the psychedelic, sunshine pop of Gulp, to the blistering art noise of Spectres, it has consistently released music that shares a similar heritage, without putting all its pedals on the same board.

theartsdesk on Vinyl 57: Gramme, Terry Edwards, The Orb, The Monochrome Set and much more

THE ARTS DESK ON VINYL 57 Gramme, Terry Edwards, The Orb and more

The most extensive monthly record reviews for lockdown times

After C19 delays theartsdesk on Vinyl is back. My initial policy, reckoning that new vinyl would dry up under COVID conditions, was to do regular lockdown mini-editions with the material already set aside here, until it ran out. That didn’t work out. The vinyl, to my surprise, kept on coming. Global crisis be damned! A backlog grew! Thus, theartsdesk on Vinyl 57 is a catch-up on the past couple of months. Due to these factors, a few more records I’d like to have covered were missed and a couple I should have covered this time are held back until June.