Album: Bas Jan - Back to the Swamp

Bankers, road signs and a witch inspire arty and idiosyncratic band’s fourth album

Margaret Calvert's creations are never far. She set the rules for the design of Britain’s road signs, as well as drafting typography and graphics for national, regional and local rail signage. Back to the Swamp’s fifth track “Margaret Calvert Drives Out” features the lyrics “maximum information conveyed by minimum means, triangles for warning, circles for limits, blue for instructions, green for directions.”

10 Questions for the avant-pop icons Stereolab

10 QUESTIONS For Laetitia and Tim of the avant-pop icons Stereolab

Laetitia and Tim on Nineties tribes, new-age technology and their lifelong affinity with music

Just over 30 years ago, avant-pop icons Stereolab released their debut album Peng! establishing the early hallmarks of the English-French band’s sound; 1960s pop harmonies, chorus-laden guitar riffs and a borderless world of analog electrics.

Snayx/Shelf Lives/Monakis, Patterns, Brighton review - storming, punking triple-header

★★★★ SNAYX / SHELF LIVES / MONAKIS, BRIGHTON Storming, punking triple-header

Fired-up three band package tour hits the south coast with a communal sense of fury

Patterns is a small, low-ceilinged, underground, seafront venue. Tonight it would be a feast for any passing ancient succubae who happens to feed on raw human energy. From 7.00 PM until 10.00 PM, the room plays host to a package tour of three rising bands. Their short, vim-filled sets are hard-wired to a thrilling, relentless punk intensity.

Album: Emma Anderson - Pearlies

The solo debut of the co-founder of Lush is a delight

Well, this is lovely. Pearlies opens with “I Was Miles Away”, a puffball of a sonic cloud which marries twinkling electronica with guitar-led shoegazing. It has a familial resemblance with the sort of thing perfected by Sweden’s I Break Horses, but lacks the frostiness. Here, there is a glow akin to that of a fire’s embers. Next, the vaguely bossa nova-ish and similarly exquisite “Bend the Round”.

Thea Gilmore, Union Chapel review - after Afterlight, a challenge

London concert in atmospheric venue offers a preview of forthcoming album

Recently recovered from her fifth bout of Covid, Thea Gilmore last night made a return to London’s Union Chapel, a wonderfully atmospheric venue where the price to pay for a concert is a numb bum (unless you remember to hire a cushion). For the first time since 2017, she stepped out with a band – Charlie Rachael Kay on bass, Jim Kirkpatrick on guitar, Olly Tandon on drums – playing to a not-quite-full house that was overwhelmingly white and appeared rather surprisingly old. It was a strikingly weird disconnect.

The Last Dinner Party, SWG3, Glasgow review - affection and adulation for rising stars

The hotly tipped band spread a joyful mood at one of their largest gigs yet.

The first declaration of love for the Last Dinner Party arrived approximately one song into their set. “I love you too,” declared a delighted looking Abigail Morris, the band’s pirouetting frontwoman, in response, and the ensuing hour suggested outpourings of affection are just one of many reasons for Morris to be cheerful these days.

Album: Thea Gilmore

★★ THEA GILMORE - NICE NORMAL WOMAN Still strident after all these years

Still strident after all these years

The artist formerly known as Afterlight returns with her first self-titled album, a collection of songs which “delves into the cracks between the paving slabs of life's big themes” and which explores “the understanding that comes with experience”.

"Nice Normal Woman", the track, which opens the album, was inspired by a quote from Bette Davis in All About Eve (“write me one about a nice normal woman who just shoots her husband”) and it arrives in the world with an 800-frame stop-motion video attached, filmed by Gilmour in her bedroom.

Music Reissues Weekly: Pale Saints - In Ribbons

Open-minded Leeds band’s second album catches them at their peak

In an interview following the release of Pale Saints’ March 1992 second album In Ribbons, the band’s Ian Masters expressed his admiration for Eyeless in Gaza, Laura Nyro and Television. He told Option magazine “I find it incredible how much I am moved by Laura Nyro’s songs and how much of the emotional input that she has translates. I find it quite disturbing – it’s uplifting and depressing and really has the full spectrum of feelings.”