CD: Purple – (409)

CD: PURPLE - (409) A thrilling high-energy garage punk debut straight out of East Texas

A thrilling high-energy garage punk debut straight out of East Texas

Purple’s debut album (409) is loud, brash and full of beans, with a big smile and an eye on a good time. This lively three-piece come on like a Texan take on UK indie favourites The Subways, but without the angst, and their exuberant garage punk rock with yelping, over-excited vocals is just the tonic for a wet autumn.

CD: Ex Hex - Rips

CD: EX HEX – RIPS DC power-pop trio deliver 35 minutes of bliss

DC power-pop trio deliver 35 minutes of bliss

If you’ve ever found the idea of “cock rock” to be unnecessarily gendered, then the debut album from Ex Hex – an all-female trio who, between them, have created the best 35 minutes of ballsy rock 'n' roll I’ve heard since Sleater-Kinney’s “The Fox” – is for you. If you haven’t, and you’re just looking for something new to listen to that’s uncomplicated and up-front that will blow the cobwebs out from between your ears, then Ex Hex is also for you.

DVD: Otway the Movie – Rock and Roll's Greatest Failure

DVD: OTWAY THE MOVIE – ROCK AND ROLL'S GREATEST FAILURE Fans-only tribute to a tenacious musical eccentric

Fans-only tribute to a tenacious musical eccentric

For someone who tags himself rock and roll's greatest failure, John Otway hasn’t done too badly. Anyone attempting to navigate their way through a career in rock ‘n’ roll wouldn’t do badly looking to Otway as an example to follow. He’s had chart singles, headlined the Royal Albert Hall, written two autobiographies and has a massive, loyal fan base. At age 61, he’s still at it over 40 years after the 1972 release of his first single. Judging from Otway the Movie, he does what he does full time, has a roof over his head, has a wife and an enviably articulate daughter. Failure?

Blondie’s New York and the Making of Parallel Lines, BBC Four

BLONDIE’S NEW YORK AND THE MAKING OF PARALLEL LINES, BBC FOUR Superficial tribute to one of pop’s great albums

Superficial tribute to one of pop’s great albums

“It looked like Dresden after the bombing.” Blondie’s Chris Stein may be a member of one of pop’s most-loved bands, but he also has a way with words. Describing 1970's New York City in this way is offensive to the memory of the 25,000 who died in the World War II air raids on Dresden. More pertinently for New York-dweller Stein, his comment also chimes badly with the destruction of the twin towers of Manhattan’s World Trade Centre in 2001.

DVD: We Are the Best!

DVD: WE ARE THE BEST! Love, life and the last days of punk embraced by three winning girls in 1980s Sweden

Love, life and the last days of punk embraced by three winning girls in 1980s Sweden

Lukas Moodysson caught the miseries and splendours of kids on the cusp of teendom in an early gem, Together (Tillsammans), but there they made up only one strand in the general trajectory of trouble to triumph. That difficult theme of very early adolescence, so easy to parody, so hard to keep truly affectionate, is the entire domain of We Are the Best!

The Culture Show: Girls Will Be Girls, BBC Two

THE CULTURE SHOW: GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS Exploration of women in punk strikes only a few bum notes

Exploration of women in punk strikes only a few bum notes

In 40 years’ time, when some suit at the BBC is searching the archives for some suitable footage to illustrate women in music in the early 21st century, will he pull out an image of Miley Cyrus or Rihanna wrapped in fishnets and bondage tape?

DVD: The Punk Singer

An intimate and inspiring look at the life of a feminist punk rock icon



For a long time, Kathleen Hanna was ensconced in a world where she cared more about the noise she made onstage than off. Despite being in a band that couldn't really play their instruments, her political message was what mattered.