CD: The Avalanches - Wildflower

★★★★ CD: THE AVALANCHES - WILDFLOWER The Aussie sample stitchers' follow-up inhabits the light and makes sense in the sun

The Aussie sample stitchers' follow-up inhabits the light and makes sense in the sun

The weight of expectation can be a terrible thing to bear. When Since I Left You, The Avalanches’ patchwork party debut, was released in 2000, there was no sense of how long it had taken to make, just a collective intake of breath at the dense layers and intricate detail. Plundering anything and everything in their bid to create this delightful decoupage, it was the sheer scale of the band’s collective imagination that thrilled. How could any follow-up possibly compare?

CD: Paper Tiger - Blast Off

British space-funk collective blend local and global while keeping rumps shaking

Around the turn of the millennium, two producers – the Californian Otis Jackson Jr aka Madlib, and the late James Yancey aka J Dilla from Detroit – started a revolution in hip hop: knocking beat patterns off the musical grid, searching further and wider than before for obscure and psychedelic sample sources, and generally making things weird and wonky.

CD: Bugzy Malone - Facing Time

CD: BUGZY MALONE – FACING TIME As grime enters its mature phase, what contribution can Manchester make?

As grime enters its mature phase, what contribution can Manchester make?

In 2016, grime is facing a new test of its ability to operate on its own terms. At the start of this decade the genre was flirting with major label crossover that resulted in a few great pop records, but all too often diluted its musical impact or left its stars stuck in contractual or “artist development” limbo. Other urban genres pushed it aside, and it was no longer the only game in town for inner city youth.

Vinyl, Sky Atlantic

VINYL, SKY ATLANTIC Scorsese and Jagger's series is prone to warping, skipping and scratches

Scorsese and Jagger's series is prone to warping, skipping and scratches

You can almost hear the words ringing out in the dramatic pauses. “We should call it Vinyl. Like, y’know... when you could hold music in your hand... touch it... FEEL it. When it was really WORTH something.

CD: Odd Nosdam - Trish

CD: ODD NOSDAM – TRISH A combination of instinct and intellect that proves a worthy tribute

A combination of instinct and intellect that proves a worthy tribute

Originally available on cassette only, Odd Nosdam's Trish has now become the producer and former member of hip-hop pioneers cLOUDDEAD's first release for the Sonic Cathedral label. With six tracks coming in at just under half an hour, it falls into the hinterland between EP and album – a kind of musical novella. This means that there are certain constraints at play here, yet the shortened format is, in reality, a strength.

CD: Public Enemy – Man Plans God Laughs

Hip Hop's grand masters produce their best in almost a decade

Billed as the hardest hitting Public Enemy album for years, Man Plans God Laughs has a lot to live up to; as far as sonic sledghammers go PE have more than their fair share. However, with lone Bomb Squad member Gary G-Wiz at the controls and the current socio-political climate in America built on the twin foundations of despair and anger, the stage is well-set for Chuck D to lay down the law at his direct, sloganeering best.

CD: Jill Scott - Woman

CD: JILL SCOTT - WOMAN The neo-soul queen on charming form on her fifth studio album

The neo-soul queen on charming form on her fifth studio album

Jill Scott albums should, in theory, be a bit of a chore. Everything about them, this one included, is like listening to a life coach: positive affirmations, exhortations to self-care, expressions of gratitude to the universe, homely snippets of advice... It's all so wholesome you almost feel as if it should be printed in a curly script over tranquil beach scenes and shared on your more uncomplicated school friends' Facebook feeds. Almost.

The Story of Funk: One Nation Under a Groove, BBC Four

A history of funk that looks great, but has nothing new to say

There is a tradition in oral storytelling of individual embellishments and flourishes, of one tale taking many forms – the more it is told, the finer the detail. Characters are added and the narrative extended. In this way, stories stand up to near endless repetition for they always have something new to offer us, there is always something new to learn.

Celebrating 75 years of Blue Note, Royal Festival Hall

All-star Blue Note sextet brings the audience to its feet

Paying homage to the legendary imprint that brought us 'The Finest In Jazz Since 1939', this concert on the penultimate evening of the EFG London Jazz Festival really did have everything, including the unlikely sight of master pianist Robert Glasper pirouetting across the Royal Festival Hall stage. The first half saw Glasper in duo with fellow NYC-based Houstonian, pianist Jason Moran, in an extraordinary, hour-long set that referenced jazz past, present and future.