CD: LCD Soundsystem – Electric Lady Sessions

★★★★ CD: LCD SOUNDSYTEM - ELECTRIC LADY SESSIONS Life into old favourites

James Murphy's post-punk disco outfit breathe new life into old favourites

Jimmy Hendix’s Greenwich Village studios are the venue for LCD Soundsystem’s third live album, which features the most recent touring line-up playing a set heavy with songs from 2017’s American Dream album along with a smattering of covers. 

CD: Mercury Rev - Bobbie Gentry's The Delta Sweete Revisited

★★★★ MERCURY REV - BOBBIE GENTRY'S THE DELTA SWEETE REVISITED Tribute to a Sixties masterpiece

Tribute to a Sixties masterpiece evokes the band's own classic album ‘Deserter's Songs’

The Delta Sweete was Bobbie Gentry's second album. Issued in February 1968 six months after her single “Ode to Billie Joe” topped the US charts, it did not make the US Top 100. Nonetheless, it is classic southern-gothic country and a peerless concept album about her roots. Of its 12 tracks, eight were written by Gentry.

CD: Better Oblivion Community Center - Better Oblivion Community Center

Phoebe Bridgers and Conor Oberst’s new band doesn’t disappoint

In recent weeks, you may have noticed signs for the Better Oblivion Community Center, from billboards to park benches, all displaying a mysterious helpline telephone number. This was not some new community support project, but a surprise collaborative album from premier sad songwriters Phoebe Bridgers and Conor Oberst.

The Dandy Warhols, O2 Institute, Birmingham review - a silver jubilee jaunt with plenty of new tunes

★★★★ THE DANDY WARHOLS, 02 INSTITUTE, BIRMINGHAM Portland's finest celebrate 25 years

Portland’s finest celebrate their 25th anniversary but forget to turn up the volume

This week, the Dandy Warhols rocked up in Birmingham to begin the UK leg of their 25th anniversary tour with a gig in the Institute’s shabby but beautiful main hall, with its dusty neo-classical alabaster reliefs and almost comically antiquated balconies.

CD: Girlpool - What Chaos Is Imaginary

LA duo's musical world expands still further

Few bands have grown up in real time in quite as interesting a way as Girlpool. It’s partly a question of timing: Harmony Tividad and Cleo Tucker were barely old enough to play bars around the release of their precocious 2013 debut EP, with its sing-song harmonies and cover like a child’s painting.

CD: James Blake - Assume Form

Figurehead of blubstep grows up

There is an inevitable change that comes with moving from the realms of self-produced bedroom blubstep to slickly-produced West Cali smoothness that will cause chaotic realms of loss of self, fans and at some level, originality. But let’s not forget – this is surely what Blake has always been aiming for.

CD: Kikok - Sauna

★★★ CD: KIKOK - SAUNA Ear-pleasing retro synth sounds from an obscure corner of Russia

Ear-pleasing retro synth sounds from an obscure corner of Russia

Russian trio Gnoomes have created small waves over the last couple of years with their woozy psychedelia. One of its defining factors is the way the band have utilised Soviet-era synthesizers. During the Cold War it wasn’t only weaponry and the space race that defined the endless competitiveness between the United States and the USSR; the technologies of sound were also an area of rivalry.

CD: The Twilight Sad - It Won/t Be Like This All the Time

★★★★ CD: THE TWILIGHT SAD - IT WON/T BE LIKE THIS ALL THE TIME Stunning return

Scottish miserabilists remind you why you fell for them in the first place

The disappearance of a band for a while calls for a re-set. A reminder, perhaps, of why you fell for them in the first place. "[10 Good Reasons for Modern Drugs]", the four minutes of minor-key chaos that opens the new album from The Twilight Sad, is exactly that reminder: a title written by a computer programme, a sound like an air raid siren, and James Graham’s raw, tender, aching voice, screaming “I see the cracks all start to show” in a tone at once unhinged and pure.

CD: Pedro the Lion - Phoenix

Redemption and rebirth in a return to old haunts and old names

It’s hard to see the first album under the Pedro the Lion name in 15 years as anything other than a homecoming. There’s the title, Phoenix, for one thing: a dual-purpose nod to both songwriter David Bazan’s hometown and the mythical bird, reborn from the ashes of what came before.

CD: Lorelle Meets the Obsolete – De Facto

The Mexican duo return with a head-spinning album of considered contrasts

De Facto is the fifth album from Mexican duo Lorelle Meets the Obsolete and the first to be recorded in the home studio of core members Lorelle (Lorena Quintanella) and The Obsolete (Alberto González). The change has certainly served them well, seemingly freeing them up and giving them room to move.