Reviews

Where’s The Beef?

No Captain, but a Beefheartless supergroup assembled from various Magic line-ups

Pedro

Debut album from London-based 24-year-old

Lynryd Skynryd – Vicious Cycle

First album in four years from survivors of star-crossed Southern rock behemoth

The Last Great Wilderness – Geographic

The Pastels always seem to find their wheelbarrow positively overflowing with acclaim, though some of us have struggled for over a decade to remember what they actually sound like. Here they wibble along, inoffensively enough, through a 25-minute accompaniment to the recent Brit road movie directed by David Mackenzie. It climaxes, if that's not too bold a word (it is), with a Jarvis Cocker collaboration, "I Picked A Flower", a parody of a pop hit which demonstrates that Cocker used up all his parody power a while ago.

Nico – Femme Fatale: The Aura Anthology

Double CD featuring Velvet Underground chanteuse's solo comeback material from early '80s

Emmylou Harris – Producer’s Cut

New compilation in surround sound, plus unreleased Johnny Cash duet

Ripley’s Game

Patricia Highsmith's villain comes to life again

Etre Et Avoir

French classroom documentary hits the mark

Lenny

Bob Fosse surprised everyone in '74, showing there was more to his dark vision than nimble dance steps. He riffs permissively on Lenny Bruce's stand-up routines (which were never routine), and Dustin Hoffman's rarely been bolder. Somehow nominated for loads of Oscars while railing against the establishment's buffoonery.

Bande À Part

The definitive example of High Godard (that brief period after his spectacular debut, À Bout De Souffle, and before the left-wing quasi-revolutionary abstractions of British Sounds and Passion), Bande À Part is a veritable checklist of stylish and insouciant Nouvelle Vague chic. There's the casually one-dimensional protagonists, in this case pseudo-gangsters Franz (Sami Frey) and Arthur (Claude Brasseur) and their new playmate Odile (Anna Karina).
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