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Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova Win Oscar For 2008 Best Song 
Having alone in the UK supported Glen Hansard and his band the Frames, and more recently Marketa Irglova, we are proud to announce that our favourite singer/songwriters have WON!
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Goldfrapp SEVENTH TREE. Mute 
For a while now I’ve been hoping that the real Alison Goldfrapp would be revealed on record following three albums displaying diverse styles. But perhaps with Alison that’s the whole point… Blessed with a quite extraordinary voice (that I’ve witnessed on stage on a couple of occasions) I’ve never really understood where she stands musically, or what she really likes. Listening to SEVENTH TREE I believe that it’s getting closer, with the absence of some of the musical frippery evident on past records.
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Tegan And Sara THE CON. Sire Records 
Young Canadian twins Tegan and Sara Quin have been recording since 1999 and have released three albums, and a DVD prior to this latest release. Chris Walla, Death Cab For Cutie guitarist, has co-produced this album with the twins and has added a rock immediacy to the girls’ pop sound. The album was released in the States last year and garnered huge praise from the likes of The New York Times (“One of the year’s best albums”) and Billboard (“Full of classy melodies”). The twins have toured with some important artists including Neil Young, Rufus Wainwright, The Killers, and Ryan Adams. The White Stripes also covered their USA radio hit ‘Walking With A Ghost’ on their EP of the same name. So, the girls have gained the respect of both critics and peers and so I was eager to hear them on this new album.
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Sheryl Crow DETOURS. A&M 
For me Crow is capable of writing some of the best folk rock songs around as well as some of the worst. Fortunately this new album has more winners than losers. Opener ‘God Bless This Mess’ is a stripped down, moving beauty that sounds as though it’s been recorded in the lady’s kitchen. A simple guitar refrain is matched by a sincere, expressive vocal and lyrics against a highly melodic backdrop. Then she cleverly moves straight into heavier rock territory with the thumping rhythm of ‘Shine Over Babylon’ – a song as good as any of her past, more upbeat tempo songs. It’s a narrative of our over-consuming times and in pretty much every way hits the mark. The theme is carried on in the next track ‘Love Is Free’ although the vibe is lighter and funkier. ‘Peace Be Upon UsGasoline’ is about oil or rather its rapidly diminishing quantity and high price. It’s topical and relevant while the song is too mainstream to be taken that seriously. ‘Out Of Our Heads’ makes the same mistake in plying a really serious message in a rather light musical fashion. Yes, it’s catchy and no doubt heading for a single release, but there’s something superficial about interpreting serious lyrics (“Losing babies to genocide…”) in such a radio-friendly way. Fortunately such creative errors in judgement are few and far-between, and the album comes with a buy recommendation.
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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds DIG, LAZARUS, DIG!!! Mute 
Cave has rightly earned the title of ‘most productive musician’ following last year’s studio and two film soundtrack album releases. And for Cave, quality has not been sacrificed for quantity. All three albums met with universal acclaim, and rightly so. With critical success comes an aggressive confidence that screams out from the tracks of this new album. Cave’s dark musical side has always fascinated me and can arguably be interpreted as self-flagellation for his own misjudgements, broken love affairs and other misfortunes. But it’s his acute powers of observation and thought that both feature heavily on DIG, LAZARUS, DIG.
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Lupen Crook & The Murderbirds ISCARIOT THE LADDER. Delta Studios 
Just before Christmas I met up with Lupen in Liverpool during his support slot performance with Carina Round. I quickly established that this friendly and rather shy young man really changes character when on stage and on record. Anyone who welcomes a little adventure into their musical lives should seek out this album…
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Explosions In The Sky & Eluvium Live Manchester Academy 29 January 2008
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Whiskycats 
“That is, by a country mile, the best record I’ve heard in three months doing this show.”– Phill Jupitus on In This Chair
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Hot Chip MADE IN THE DARK. EMI 
With one Nationwide Mercury Music prize nominated album under their belt those cynics amongst us would claim that the band couldn’t produce another potential winner the second time around. And perhaps justifiably as the road is littered with disappointing album follow-ups… But there are exceptions and this is definitely one of them. What I really like about this album is that it tears up the existing rule book and replaces it with a brand new and exclusive one. Take the first track, ‘Out At The Pictures’, with its long and winding rhythmic intro (worth its weight in gold on its own!) which opens out with guitars and drum machine, then becomes stuttered and jagged as the fabulous and unusual vocals unexpectedly appear, while the pace quickens and slackens… Then an intensely dark ‘Shake The Fist’ plays with its varied vocals which includes Todd Rundgren’s sampling anthem. The song changes tack at around the middle-eight with a spoken vocal passage introducing a bass-driven segment that darkens even more. It’s a dance track unlike anything I’ve ever heard before. ‘Ready For The Floor’ is dance pop reinvented with simpler electronic backdrop, more conventional vocals and keyboards doing overtime. ‘Bendable Poseable takes a similar route but with diving, ocean deep bass lines, rap samples, and unremitting rhythm layered with dancing guitar chords. ‘We’re Looking For A Lot Of Love’ is almost monotone in texture with a lonesome male vocal and hand clap sample that never lets up. It’s a mesmerising, beautiful track and in the context of this album is overtly simple while still managing to surprise when it seems to end but then struggles to life again. With clap sample intact the band launches into ‘Touch Too Much’, a more conventional, downbeat tune underpinned by floating Hammond sounds. ‘Made In The Dark’ is a simple ballad with piano, brushed snare backdrop and the most fragile male vocal. ‘One Pure Thought’ opens with jangling guitar and soaring synth before the bass line appears to belt out a thumping dance beat that carries over to the next track, ‘Hold On.’ The diversity and invention continue through the final four tracks when jaunty pop tunes exist alongside intensely moving stripped-down, glacially paced beauties like ‘Whistle For Will’ and drop-dead gorgeous ‘In The Privacy Of Our Love’ with its haunting, distant female backing vocal.
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Laura Critchley SOMETIMES I. Big Print 
From the sound of her voice and songs you’d think that Critchley hails from America’s Mid-West, and not from her hometown of Liverpool. She has a good voice and, as the PR material keeps telling me, she looks great. But the big test is the quality of the songs because it really doesn’t matter how good, or pretty, if the songs don’t cut it. So how does Critchley fare? Well the news isn’t bad and it isn’t great. Opening song ‘Today’s Another Day’ is very standard country pop material but things improve with the next song, ‘What Do We Do’, with its tidy lyrics, expressive vocal and workmanlike instrumental arrangement. The song is about a couple breaking up and the realisation that things aren’t the way they used to be. It’s an epic pop ballad that should be selected as the lady’s first single but probably won’t be (too sad, too downbeat…). ‘Shoulder To Lean On’ goes down the R&B route but fails to light my fire. ‘I’ll Be OK’ tacks back to emotional vibe in a contemplative, slow-paced song about lovers parting. It runs on a tank-full of melody and then ups the anti with sweeping string arrangements that add something worthwhile to the song’s dramatic message. ‘Sometimes I’ is the worst song in the album and I bet that it’s the one that is released as a single. ‘Tell Me’ is another R&B love song with passable lyrics and melody, with Critchley letting fly with her vocal to great effect.
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