Reissue CDs Weekly: Teenage Fanclub

From ‘Bandwagonesque’ to ‘Howdy!’: a decade’s worth of albums from Scotland’s pop-rock sensation

The cover images of the four albums Teenage Fanclub issued on Creation Records suggest ambivalence. While Bandwagonesque’s title acknowledges the hopping onto trends endemic in pop, the graphic of a bag with a dollar sign recognises the related collateralisation of music. Thirteen's mismatched halves of a ball hints towards oppositionality as well as, with the sporting reference, competitiveness. Grand Prix features a Teenage Fanclub-branded sports car.

CD: Slaves - Acts of Fear And Love

SLAVES - ACTS OF FEAR AND LOVE Kentish punks tread water

Kentish punks tread water with their third

When Kentish hardcore punk two-piece, Slaves emerged with their debut album, Are You Satisfied?, they caused quite a stir with lairy tunes of austerity Britain like “The Hunter”, “Sockets” and the magnificent “Hey”. Since the heady days of 2015, however, they seem to have been somewhat stuck in the musical doldrums, in need of something to reinvigorate their sound.

CD: Mark Lanegan & Duke Garwood - With Animals

★★★ MARK LANEGAN & DUKE GARWOOD - WITH ANIMALS Spectral union of America's master of melancholy and the British multi-instrumentalist

Spectral union of America’s master of melancholy and the British multi-instrumentalist

Turning over the sleeve of With Animals reveals a full-frame picture of a Tascam Midistudio 688. First marketed in 1990, it was an eight-track home studio which aimed to bridge the gap between analogue and digital. Midi signals could be fed into it. As could digital recordings. What was input was captured as an analogue recording on a cassette tape. White Town's "Your Woman" became the best-known track recorded on this hybrid, envelope-pushing tech.

CD: The Proclaimers - Angry Cyclist

★★★★ CD: THE PROCLAIMERS - ANGRY CYCLIST Poetic teeth, righteous attitude, solid songs

Tenth album from Scottish pair has poetic teeth, righteous attitude and solid songs

A sight every music fan should see and hear once is The Proclaimers playing Scotland. Around 18 years ago I saw them play a giant marquee at the T In The Park Festival. It was like a rally, a roaring wall of joyful fanaticism (on which note, their autumn 2018 tour there sold out 30,000 tickets in 20 minutes!). If it was a rally, though, it was a righteous, tending-to-socialism one for The Proclaimers have a strand of activism in their blood. On their latest album, this is writ large.

CD: Breathe Panel - Breathe Panel

★★★ CD: BREATHE PANEL- BREATHE PANEL Brighton quartet produce an album of shoegaze-pop perfect for the summer

Brighton quartet produce an album of shoegaze-pop perfect for the summer

Signed to FatCat records and purporting to create music that “recalls thoughtful days spent outdoors”, Breathe Panel’s self-titled album could easily be lost in the thriving soft-psych scene that seems to have set itself up in the south of England. Ultimately, though, Breathe Panel’s considered melodicism and dynamic range ensures that it’s a strikingly tender body of work that gets more and more enjoyable with each listen.

CD: Tanukichan - Sundays

★★★ CD: TANUKICHAN - SUNDAYS Decent opening shot of phased out dream-pop from California

Decent opening shot of phased out dream-pop from California

Shoegaze was only a moment really, a scene that flared briefly as the Eighties drew to a close. The music press – the “inkies” - used the term to describe bands, usually flop-fringed with lazy posture, whose heads would hang as they played gigs, ostensibly because they were looking at effects pedals and wotnot, but really because they and their music were shy. Following the example of My Bloody Valentine, they’d found a way to hide their pop songs amid distortion, deep down in it.

theartsdesk at Cornbury: Pixie Lott, Amy MacDonald and Alanis Morissette

★★★★★ THE ARTS DESK AT CORNBURY Pixie Lott, Amy MacDonald and Alanis Morissette

Family-friendly festival fun and female empowerment as women of the world headline

Cornbury Festival holds a very special place in my heart. When the babies were young, we realised that if we were going to be up all night without sleep we might as well be sat in a field listening to music rather than staring out of the window at a dreary North London street. Luckily for us, we accidentally picked one of the most family-friendly festivals out there.

CD: Juniore - Magnifique

★★★ JUNIOR - MAGNIFIQUE Glistening, archetype-aware second album from Parisian pop stylists

Glistening, archetype-aware second album from Parisian pop stylists

At 29 minutes, the second album from Paris’s Juniore is short. But as it makes its point, it’s hard to hear how it needs to be longer. Magnifique opens with “Ça Balance”, a harmony-drenched vapour trail suggesting a kinship with the great French Eighties band Antena. It’s that good. As is the rest of this album.

CD: Dirty Projectors – Lamp Lit Prose

Crisp and inventive production shine through a musical odyssey

Lamp Lit Prose is the ninth Dirty Projectors album since 2003, an incredibly prolific output for any artist. All the more impressive when you consider it’s the project of producer/songwriter David Longstreth, who also finds time to collaborate with artists such as Rihanna, Kanye, Paul McCartney and Solange. Such a notable CV befits an act as innovative as Dirty Projectors, and their latest release further demonstrates the talent on show.

theartsdesk on Vinyl 40: Talking Heads, Ornette Coleman, Crayola Lectern, Brian Eno, Ash and more

THEARTSDESK ON VINYL 40 Talking Heads, Ornette Coleman, Crayola Lectern, Brian Eno, Ash

The all-encompassing monthly record review round-up

Earlier this year, in May, Brighton hosted the Vinyl World Congress where Paul Pacifico, head of the Association of Independent Music, told the assembled that, “People pay for vinyl not because they have to but because they want to - they want a physical representation of their emotional connection with an artist." There was a general agreement that vinyl collectors and fans account for the majority of sales, but also that things are still stable and/or rising.