Death, embezzlement, nervous breakdowns โ€“ the first half of the Charlatansโ€™ career alone packed in enough incident to send most bands fleeing for a desk in the Civil Service. If things have taken a more surreal turn recently, with drummer Jon Brooksโ€™ unscheduled onstage appearance with Franz Ferdinand, and Tim Burgessโ€™ role in light-hearted supergroup The Chavs (with Primal Screamโ€™s Duffy, Carl Barat and Andy Burrows from Razorlight), think of it as therapy.

Having resolved their internal squabbles with 2001โ€™s career best Wonderland, The Charlatans have clearly decided that if theyโ€™re stuck with each other, they might as well enjoy themselves. Gone, then, is the feisty if predictable Charlies-rock of 2004โ€™s Up At The Lake. Instead, their ninth studio album is a sprawling mix of dub, loose-limbed boogie and weirdo guitar-pop which will leave newer converts scratching their heads and fans of 1994โ€™s bleak third album, Up To Our Hips, reaching for the Rizlaโ€™s.

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Opener โ€œBlackened Blue Eyesโ€ is a reminder that when they do funky, bar-room rock, thereโ€™s no-one to match them, and Tim Burgessโ€™ voice is ever more an instrument of hope and resilience on lyrics like, โ€œWe all need a shoulder to cry on/Once in a while.โ€ But after that, you can almost hear the rulebook flying from the studio window. A choir of rampaging Cossacks invade the chorus of The Specials-influenced โ€œCity Of The Deadโ€. โ€œSunset & Vineโ€ is a synth-heavy Moroder-like soundscape, and mid-tempo skank โ€œMuddy Groundโ€ relocates The Stonesโ€™ โ€œWaiting On A Friendโ€ to a windswept Glastonbury Tor. The ever-present whiff of Camberwell Carrot, meanwhile, reaches a pungent peak on creditable dub-plate โ€œThe Architectโ€ โ€“ a nod, presumably, to paranoiacโ€™s favourite The Matrix.

Talk of Simpatico as the bandโ€™s Sandinista, is, in truth, wide of the mark. Itโ€™s better seen as a footpath linking the claustrophobia of their early work with the Black Country funk of Wonderland, whilst hinting at a way forward for this most durable and eclectic of bands. As Burgess sings gleefully in the raunchy punk-funk of โ€œNYC (No Need To Stop)โ€, โ€œWeโ€™re not here to educate/Only here to stay up late!โ€ The Walsall pact remains inviolable.

By Paul Moody