Albums
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Albums
Cruiser - Northern Electric
So honest they make Belle & Sebastian seem callous. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Clockcleaner - Babylon Rules
Lullabies for an AIDS-infected world. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Charalambides - Likeness
A dizzying mesh of droll, stoner strumming and satanic axe-burning. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Augie March - Moo, You Bloody Choir
Haunting enough to engross the most sombre of hearts. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Aerial - My God, It's Full of Stars
Instrumental noise pop with feeling. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Jack Penate - Matinee
May be the perfect tonic for some, but even then, surely only in small measures. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007
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Albums
Akron/Family - Love Is Simple
A truly original, brilliantly daft, wholly enjoyable piece of work Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
sole and the Skyrider Band – sole and the Skyrider Band
Tim Holland's a sensitive sole: seemingly consumed by the imperialistic misdeeds of the western world after living in war-torn parts of Eastern Europe for a ... Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Dave Gahan - Hourglass
Where Paper Monsters saw Dave Gahan peeping his head out from Depeche Mode's shadow to make an overdue claim as a songwriter, the bolder, comparatively bomba... Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Radiohead - In Rainbows
Worth every penny. Read more »| 07 Nov 2007 -
Albums
Zeitkratzer with Lou Reed - Metal Machine Music
No voice, no tune, no real sense of structure and no concession to the listener whatsoever Read more »| 08 Oct 2007 -
Albums
The Rumble Strips - Girls and Weather
Ultimately more amusing than engaging Read more »| 08 Oct 2007 -
Albums
Kate Walsh - Tim's House
Fans of Gemma Hayes will rejoice that there is now another wispy singer-songwriter for them to curl up in bed and cry along to Read more »| 08 Oct 2007 -
Albums
Band of Horses - Cease To Begin
The oft overused and trite ""difficult second album syndrome,"" fits like a glove. Read more »| 08 Oct 2007 -
Albums
A Whisper in the Noise - Dry Land
The ratio of unremarkable misery to remarkable tenderness is too high Read more »| 08 Oct 2007