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tue 11/03/2025

New Music reviews, news & interviews

Album: Reg Meuross, Fire & Dust: A Woody Guthrie Story

Liz Thomson

I come to this album from a week or so spent among the denizens of the New York and Boston folk revivals, including a key figure from Tulsa and the Guthrie Center, and a concert (Judy Collins, marking 85 years of music and activism).

Music Reissues Weekly: Liverpool Sunset - The City After Merseybeat

Kieron Tyler

What happens after the spotlight is directed towards another target? In the case of Liverpool and the Merseybeat boom – which, in terms of chart success, peaked in 1963 – the question is addressed by Liverpool Sunset: The City After Merseybeat 1964–1969. The city’s musicians carried on, despite record labels looking elsewhere for the next big thing, and despite the Liverpool tag no longer ensuring an automatic interest.

Album: Lady Gaga - Mayhem

Joe Muggs

Just the other day I overheard one of my kids watching a YouTuber called Nathan Zed and was instantly gripped. It was called “How Trying Became...

Album: Spiritbox - Tsunami Sea

Tom Carr

Within the loud realm of metal, it often exists happily unbothered by the mainstream. And although a metal band going mainstream isn't always well...

Album: The Burning Hell - Ghost Palace

Kieron Tyler

Cultural references run up the flagpole on Ghost Palace include Deep Purple’s “Space Truckin’” buskers covering Lynryd Skynyrd and Ed Sheeran, Mad...

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Chuck Prophet, Mid Sussex Music Hall, Hassocks review - the good American

Nick Hasted

Liberating, humane rock'n'roll from an unassuming master

Album: Anoushka Shankar - Chapter III: We Return to Light

Guy Oddy

Sitar titan blends the sounds of modern India into her travelogue triptych

Album: Jethro Tull - Curious Ruminant

Graham Fuller

Tull burst out again with a set of bristling folk-prog anthems

Music Reissues Weekly: Kraftwerk - Autobahn at 50

Kieron Tyler

A reminder of changing perspectives

Album: Architects - The Sky, The Earth & All Between

Tom Carr

The Brighton metallers condense their 20-year career into an impactful concoction

Jopy/Lemonsuckr/King of May, Green Door Store, Brighton review - exhilarating showcase for new young guitar bands

Thomas H Green

Local label Goo Records put on an ebullient show on their home turf

Album: Abel Selaocoe - Hymns of Bantu

Mark Kidel

A celebration of the ancestors, African and European

Album: Doves - Constellations for the Lonely

Joe Muggs

Prog-rock existential wranglings from the grizzled Mancunians

Album: bdrmm - Microtonic

Kieron Tyler

Post-shoegazing quartet’s third album evokes the communal musical experience

Rats on Rafts, The Victoria review - crepuscular Dutch quintet begins to see the light

Kieron Tyler

Unexpected sprightliness gets feet moving

Bilk, O2 Academy 2, Birmingham review - Essex rock'n'rollers blast into the weekend

Guy Oddy

Sol Abrahams’ crew whip up a storm

Album: Artemis - Arboresque

Sebastian Scotney

A safe album from a band with a necessary message

Hinds, St Lukes and the Winged Ox, Glasgow review - Spanish garage rockers surviving and thriving

Jonathan Geddes

After a difficult few years, the group sounded resurgent, delivering a frantic show.

Music Reissues Weekly: Diggin' For Gold Volume 14 - Norway's Sixties beat-group scene

Kieron Tyler

Welcome overview of neglected musical territory

Album: Heather Nova - Breath and Air

Katie Colombus

A mellower, acoustic sound that contemplates life's rhythms

Album: Panda Bear - Sinister Grift

Guy Oddy

A psychedelic curiosity that’s unlikely to wear anyone’s stylus down

Album: Sam Fender - People Watching

Tom Carr

The North Shields indie star's third album is a solid, sincere evolution

Album: Basia Bulat - Basia's Palace

Thomas H Green

Canadian singer's seventh album musters dreamy pop that simultaneously arrives and floats away

Josienne Clarke, Across the Evening Sky, Kings Place review - celebrating Sandy Denny

Tim Cumming

The contemporary singer-songwriter holds a torch for the late, great Sandy Denny

Patrick Duff, The Mount Without, Bristol review - sacred music for the soul

Mark Kidel

A dilapidated Bristol church brought back to vibrant life

Album: Tim Hecker - Shards

Joe Muggs

Finessed expressiveness as a compilation of soundtrack work coheres

Music Reissues Weekly: Sharks - Car Crash Supergroup

Kieron Tyler

The early Seventies blues rockers admired by prime movers in British punk

Fat Dog, Chalk, Brighton review - a frenetic techno-rock juggernaut

Thomas H Green

The rising London outfit deliver a sweaty Cossack-rave hoedown

Album: Park Jiha - All Living Things

Mark Kidel

Music and nature in synergy

Footnote: a brief history of new music in Britain

New music has swung fruitfully between US and UK influences for half a century. The British charts began in 1952, initially populated by crooners and light jazz. American rock'n'roll livened things up, followed by British imitators such as Lonnie Donegan and Cliff Richard. However, it wasn't until The Beatles combined rock'n'roll's energy with folk melodies and Motown sweetness that British pop found a modern identity outside light entertainment. The Rolling Stones, amping up US blues, weren't far behind, with The Who and The Kinks also adding a unique Englishness. In the mid-Sixties the drugs hit - LSD sent pop looking for meaning. Pastoral psychedelia bloomed. Such utopianism couldn't last and prog rock alongside Led Zeppelin's steroid riffing defined the early Seventies. Those who wanted it less blokey turned to glam, from T Rex to androgynous alien David Bowie.

sex_pistolsA sea change arrived with punk and its totemic band, The Sex Pistols, a reaction to pop's blandness and much else. Punk encouraged inventiveness and imagination on the cheap but, while reggae made inroads, the most notable beneficiary was synth pop, The Human League et al. This, when combined with glam styling, produced the New Romantic scene and bands such as Duran Duran sold multi-millions and conquered the US.

By the mid-Eighties, despite U2's rise, the British charts were sterile until acid house/ rave culture kicked the doors down for electronica, launching acts such as the Chemical Brothers. The media, however, latched onto indie bands with big tunes and bigger mouths, notably Oasis and Blur – Britpop was born.

By the millennium, both scenes had fizzled, replaced by level-headed pop-rockers who abhorred ostentation in favour of homogenous emotionality. Coldplay were the biggest. Big news, however, lurked in underground UK hip hop where artists adapted styles such as grime, dubstep and drum & bass into new pop forms, creating breakout stars Dizzee Rascal and, more recently, Tinie Tempah. The Arts Desk's wide-ranging new music critics bring you overnight reviews of every kind of music, from pop to unusual world sounds, daily reviews of new releases and downloads, and unique in-depth interviews with celebrated musicians and DJs, plus the quickest ticket booking links. Our writers include Peter Culshaw, Joe Muggs, Howard Male, Thomas H Green, Graeme Thomson, Kieron Tyler, Russ Coffey, Bruce Dessau, David Cheal & Peter Quinn

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Album: Reg Meuross, Fire & Dust: A Woody Guthrie Story

I come to this album from a week or so spent among the denizens of the New York and Boston...

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What happens after the spotlight is directed towards another target? In the case of Liverpool and the Merseybeat boom – which, in terms of chart...