The End of the Month Playlist Revue for May 2026
May 29, 2026
Our Monthly Playlist selection of choice music from the last month. Picked by Dominic Valvona, Matt Oliver & Brian ‘Bordello’ Shea.

The Track list is as follows:
Sub Hop Collective ‘Hundred and One’
Konono No1 ‘Volta’
Sunk Giants ‘Radio Problems’
Party Dozen ‘Special Unit’
Occult Character ‘Anti-Human Hate Machine’
Spirit Level ‘Forest Lagoon’
Khalab & Baba Sissoko ‘Denifurla’
Dumama ‘No Abiding City’
Cocanha ‘Forabanda’
Stik Figa & Heather Grey ‘All Is Fair’
The Allergies ‘Dig It Up’
7X3=21 & Pruven Ft. Masai Bey & Fred Ones ‘Woven Fabric’
Black Milk ‘Crash Test Dummy’
Meiko Kaji ‘Tokyo Nagare Mono’
Farma G & Relense ‘The Circus’
Juga-Naut ‘Scratch The Surface’
Whait/More Eaze/Wendy Eisenberg ‘Suffer Less’
Yazz Ahmed ‘A Moment To Be Free’
J Scienide ‘Stay Tuned’
Von Pea ‘The Goof’
Termanology/Royal Flush/Dru Hoffa ‘Angel Whispers’
Vic Spencer/BlaQ Chidori/J Wade/Aakeem Eshu/Lil Kydd ‘The Becomers’
A-F-R-O ‘The Hangman’
The Bordellos ‘Hop To It Bunny Girl’
Thomas Dollbaum ‘Pulverize’
Kyivite ‘test cylinder’
Neuro…No Neuro ‘Doubting’
Arab Strap ‘You You You’
Opus Kink ‘The Sweet Goodbye’
Double Francoise ‘Allumer’
The Legendary Ten Seconds ‘A Universe That Has No End’
Upupayama ‘Mystic Chords of Memory’
Lunar Bird ‘Sinderesi’
SUO ‘Lightening Strikes’
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BRIAN ‘BORDELLO’ SHEA’S REVIEWS ROUNDUP – INSTANT REACTIONS.

Arab Strap Photo: Luke Bovill
Arab Strap ‘You You You’
Single (Rock Action Records)
If I was young and one of these influencer types you see popping up on YouTube and such, being all jolly and hip and now and current and suchlike, I would describe this as a bit of a banger and not mean old car or sausage but a bit of a toe tapper, one to cut some rug to; a record in the bygone age of when Morrissey had something to say; a record that would have dented the bottom half of the Hit Parade as indie crossover singles tended to do. Ahh…those were the days, of Gallup chart machines and record shops. And this song would have been good enough to visit your local record store and part with your penis. I meant to write pennies but I will stick with penis as it could even be good enough to part with your penis, unless you don’t have one which would mean having to borrow someone else’s to part with, and if you did, what compartment in the till would you put it? The notes or change compartment? The mind boggles.
Double Francois ‘La Poursuite’
EP (Freaksville) 15th May 2026
La Poursuite is a rather lovely thing indeed. 5 tracks of pure French pop from the synth pop of Allumeur to the lovely acoustic summery jazz Trop Ou Paz Assez and the blissfully sweet romance of the love duet Un apres- midi a Paris which features the wonderful Benjamin Schoos. Yes, five wonderful tracks that will soundtrack the oncoming summer; songs to lick ice cream and drink wine whilst trying to look cool in ill-fitting flannel trousers.
Filalete ‘Frequencies Of The Soul’
Album (Cruel Nature Records) 16th June 2026
I will be completely honest, me writing about modern classical is like asking the incredible Hulk to successfully reenact the final meeting scene in Brief Encounter: it is not going to end well.
Modern classical is a musical genre I have only occasional dipped into, mostly when I have been sent some new music to review. But I am a human being for god sake! And have emotions and fallibilities like most others, so can appreciate beauty and soul and feeling. And those three things are in abundance with this rather lovely album and has me thinking there are far worse ways of me spending my Sunday afternoon than being totally moved by the outpourings of instrumental piano emotional grandeur.
The Legendary Ten Seconds ‘Sci Fi Hi Fi’
Album Released 7th May 2026
Well, what’s not to like about an Sci Fi themed album with songs concerning planets and space and aliens and ray guns. It’s all twanging guitars ala The Ventures and suchlike and whooshing sci fi synths and Monochrome Set like vocals. Sci Fi Hi Fi has a wonderful eccentricity and includes many rewrites of Incense and peppermints, which believe me can only be a great thing.
Occult Character ‘The Zodameta Working’
EP (Subvert)
This is rather wonderful, the new EP by Occult Character is a splendid three track EP of pure bonkers experimental pop/dance part Eurovision, part Welsh Male voice choir, part satanic black mass. The Occult Character never fails to astound and surprise with this quite hypnotic three track gem.
Opus Kink ft The New Eves ‘The Head Tree’
Single
I quite enjoy the madness of this track. Imagine if you will Sam and The Womp getting together with Nick Cave to perform a track about hanging a witch, the kind of thing one really does not hear much about these days on the radio: That’s if you still listen to the radio, nowadays it’s all curated playlists and suchlike. I know that makes me sound like I am old enough to remember the days when they used to burn and hang witches but maybe it’s because I am.
Schizo Fun Addict ‘Desolate Ecstasy’
Album (Fruits de Mer) 10th June 2026
The world needs a new album by Schizo Fun Addict, it honestly does. The tragic thing about this is that the world does not realise it yet as they are criminally undervalued. The perfect pop band, just like The Beatles and The Beach Boys (in the 60s and 70s) and the Velvet Underground are perfect like Orange Juice (another criminally undervalued band), The Smiths and first few albums by the B52s where perfect.
SFA have a wonderful sense of adventure and inner spirituality that all the finer artists and, indeed, people do. In fact, there really should be a Schizo Fun Addict cartoon (Hanna-Barber get on it please). The world is a mess, more of a mess than I have known in my near 60 years on this planet, so we need Schizo not just to soundtrack these times but also give us an escape route from life for the 35 minutes that this gem of an album plays. The radio and mags and blogs in an ideal world should be all over this album.
Desolate Ecstasy is a pop fantasy. It is the lighted up pave stones of Billie Jean. It is the mop top headshake. It is the aural image of Otis Redding falling to his knees and begging for a little tenderness. The band bring all the magic and danger and sexiness of the last 60 years or so of Rock ‘n’ Roll because they still believe in the magic.
The album kicks off with the single “Pasteline Dream”, a guitar jangling pop beauty that brings the sound of the early Stone Roses being fronted by the girls from The B52s. Jayne Gabriel and Ilona Virostek voices blend perfectly: they have that perfect blend of heavenly sass that all the best 60s girl groups have and again on “The Scent Of Heather” the sound of the BJM being fronted by the Shangri-La’s – perfect heavenly sass psych pop.
Desolate Ecstasy is one of those albums when it really is impossible to choose your favourite track as it constantly changes depending on your mood, and because all the tracks are quite special. “Coming To You” is a rather hypnotic and beautiful mellow gaze of a dance track that once again highlights both the spirituality and sensuality of the girls’ vocals, a song that takes me back to the days of the Manchester Acid scene when the Hacienda was many a peoples place of worship: “Coming To You” is an aural E of togetherness. “The Line Is Gone” is a somewhat darker beast of a track, one that highlights the genius of guitarist and producer Rex John Shelverton; a song drenched in fury and guitar twang in equal measure, the sound of the priest in the Exorcist driving the Demons out of Linda Blair by playing her The Ventures greatest hits. “Strange Theatres”, at the time of writing my current fave from the album, is a wonderful baggy like dirty pop gem of a track with sleazy bass and groove drums of Daniel Boivin and Jet Wintzer sounding like he has been possessed by the spirit of Sean Ryder chanting “let the people all die”: a truly dark and hypnotic listening experience I tell thee. So Desolate Ecstasy is quite wonderful and could be the best Schizo Fun Addict album yet and probably already my favourite album of the year. I have just realised I have not mentioned the track “Cathedral Sunshine”, a song so perfect that JAMC could have written it when they were very special…And that is very good indeed.
The monthly Digest includes a clutch of accumulated short new music reviews, the social inter-generational/eclectic and anniversary albums celebrating playlist, and a piece celebrating the 60th anniversary of Pet Sounds from the Archives.

___/NEW MUSIC IN REVIEW____
The Bordellos ‘Let’s Play Lo-Fi’
(Metal Postcard Records) Released 8th May 2026
Marking our own homework so to speak, regular contributor to the site Brian Shea and his family band The Bordellos have released a new album on the unsuspecting public. Well, I say new, but it is in fact another chance to hear a compilation of older tunes recorded over 26 years, mostly over the course of a drunken Friday night at Ant Shea’s abode.
Almost silently slipped out, unheralded and with absolutely jack-shit in the way of promotion, it’s as if it never happened. A campaign run out of embarrassment, or perhaps in the manner of their lo-fi(ish) credentials, dropped out of the ether without a thought. This compilation sounds like it could have in fact been recorded at any time over the last forty odd years. Pop songs saved from obscurity however, we are grateful for this opportunity to rave about the lost band.
A band that revels in self-sabotage, The Bordellos walk a line between notoriety and truth. But they need to unshackle from the lo fi prison they’ve built for themselves, as many of the aphorisms and self-deprecated songs on this new album are far too good to lay languishing in irrelevance and indifference. They are better than many of the bands they emulate, and a damn sight more witty, true and sharp than the overrated Jesus And Mary Chain, who they sometimes evoke – the buzzy and flange indie tune ‘Sleeptight’ sounds like a much more genuine and earnest version of the Scottish band’s Psychocandy era. Dan Shea’s vocals are a highlight as always, but that’s not to do down Ant and Brian Shea. With the bonus of youth, but just as malcontent, Dan isn’t quite as despondent and dispassionate as his dad and uncle, and recalls the very best of Sarah Records, Postcard, and umpteen great indie labels from the golden period of the C86 phenomenon. In contrast, his older generation X relations sound like John Shuttleworth (“Can I borrow Batman Forever? No, you got to bring it back tomorrow”)of John Cooper Clarke over a backing that despite the buzzes, the low rent apparatus, the chirping at one point of a budgie, and the distortion, could be off a New Order demo or The Sundays. Then again, you can’t not pick up on The Fall vibes; the love of beat groups and the garage music of the 1960s; all filtered through the hazy recollections of a Northern town in England during the 80s and 90s.
Appearing on bass, for at least some of the songs, is good old Gary Storey, who emphasis the band’s pop and post-punk credentials with a twang of Hooky and some C86 inspired lines.
An album filled with declaration to that age old trope of unrequited love, or lost love, or a love that cannot survive the class divides of a grimy life spent at the coalface of modern Britain – which is as Blur correctly pointed out, if in an actual halcyon age compared to now, on their famous LP of the early 90s. In the vape shop, nail salons and chicken takeaways dominate arcades and precents of shitty England, the band find something worth putting to song, as they praise, desire and court a string of both unsuitable and suitably uninterested muses. That and the odd drug addict; those that have fallen to the wayside in an age of despair and high anxiety. ‘Driftwood’ is an ode to the high jinks’ tragedy of Dennis Wilson, spooked by a Manson and heavy bass.
The lyrics make the album as usual. Far too many to quote, they could fill a book of modern toss age poetry with observational dark humour, despondent asides and gripes. But love is never far from the sneering captured lines that perfectly sum up the age in which we are unlucky to be living through. Heartfelt, lovelorn and yearning, you get a sense that the band really means it. And that’s where that truth comes to the forefront.
As I said already, this songbook is way too good to be lost on bandcamp amongst the millions of releases dolled out each day. Or indeed on Spotify, where it will be lucky to reach the proscribed limit to receive any compensation of a thousand plays. If this was released over forty years ago, we’d be speaking about The Bordellos in the same breath as the BMX Bandits and their ilk. As it is, this cult release will probably need every push it can get. Then again, the playfulness of the title, the silly snowman dress up costume that Brian adorns on the cover point towards a confliction of amateurish fucking around and finding the audience and acclaim they deserve: that’s showbiz. I’ve done my bit, the rest is up to you, kind followers/readers.
In The Labyrinth ‘Worlds On Fire’
Released 2nd May 2026
Across Nepalese mountain ranges at the heights of nirvana, then seamlessly blending into the Afghan valleys before taking the troubadour’s journey to Turkey and ending up in a fantastical vision of olde Europe, In The Labyrinth’s latest album collection of past material saved from the vaults and remade anew, of original new compositions and transformed covers takes its Nordic roots on a geographical music tour. From Arabia to Peshawar and Iran; from Tudor England to India, there’s musical absorptions that all fans of prog and psych-rock will be familiar with and various signature stopovers on the hippie trail: a Kabul of a very different era, the holy sanctuaries of Varanasi.
Orbiting around the Swedish version of Mike Oldfield – playing an exhaustive and too long to list assortment of instruments -, Peter Lindahl since the early 90s, but born out of the previous Aladdin’s Lantern in the 1980s, In The Labyrinth opens its doors to a wide range of foils and accomplices. So many people are involved, including former band members and acquaintances, over this album’s span of at least forty years of material refashioned or revived and newly augmented. There’s too many to name individually anyway, with various international musicians and voices – including the ethereal, soothing, near spirit-like backing vocals and harmonies of Helena Selander and Natalie Knutsen. One such mirror-y Krishna-vibe atmospheric soundtrack of replenished waters and Yeti era Amon Düül II-esque, ‘Varanasi Sunrise’, is recalled back from the late 90s, just before band member and drummer Feri (Fereidoun Nadimi) returned back to his native Iran.
Pulled through Lewis Carroll’s mirror both forwards and backwards, there’s a spectrum of psychedelic influences at play on this fantasy of tumultuous ills and more dream-like and healthy meditations.
The album opens with a revival of the Catholic litany, as made so cultishly famous by Axelrod’s Electric Prunes project on the Mass In F Minor LP of ’67. Here it’s given an almost pastoral feel that’s somewhere between a Medieval Yes, Clannad and The Far East Family Band sunning it in the Byzantine Court. ‘Kabul’ is very much of its inspiration but reminded me of that electric-saz vamped up Turkish-Anatolian configuration of Baba Zula, whilst the psychedelic posed ‘Disillusion’ – partly a new arrangement of a song from the turn of the 21st century about losing one’s self-esteem during a relationship gone sour – has a touch of Head era Monkees, Van Der Graaf Generator and the Strawberry Alarm Clock. One of the album’s covers/interpretations, ‘Golden Hair’ reimagines the Madcap Laughs Syd Barret in Rapunzel’s Indian acid-fairy tale tower, and the brassy sitar resonated ‘Sagarmatha’ – initially released back in ’99, the song was first featured on the Floralia Volume 3 compilation by Wot 4 Records – once more talks to Yogi on the ADII and Aphrodite’s Child, projecting in a trance-like state to mystical India.
Just when you think you may have the measure of this group, along comes the strange bass heavy and phaser, flange and vapour trip ‘The Endless City’; a mix of Steve Hillage, post-punk, and Hawkwind, this track is, I believe, an amalgamation of the 90s tracks ‘The Black Plague’ and ‘Lovecraft’ originally made under the Lovecraft moniker. The sword and sorcery of ‘Nightriders’ reminded me in part of Jefferson Airplane, whilst the hallucinogenic Alice In Wonderland-ish ‘The Mirror’ somehow reminded me of Bryan Ferry, but partnering up with Steve Hackett and Floyd. There’s also takes on the Swedish prog and rock scene of the 70s with versions of tracks based on or inspired by Gregg Fitzpatrick (the American bred musician slipped the Vietnam War ending up in India, before navigating back west to first Finland than his eventual home of Sweden, where he performed under various Nordic pseudonyms to escape detection, but managed to form many bands and have an eventful career) and Kebnekajse. The former, and the album’s title piece, takes the maverick American’s plaint and Medieval-like folkish lament and adds a mystifying layer of the Indian subcontinent, the Celtic and the environments of a bustling street. The later reprises a traditional Swedish folk song made famous by the “foremost” Swedish folk-rock band, amping up the fuzz and Queen-ish rock postures.
Each song has a story you could say. Each one a chapter in a particular period of the band and its offshoot’s career arcs. But all fit together rather well on this fantastical new age acid trip of evergreen troubadour folkery, prog, the regal, the enchanted and worldly musical.
Kyïvite ‘Broadcast’
(Staalplaat) Released 24th April 2026
As Putin’s increasingly unhinged invasion of Ukraine continues, now stretching into yet another year – a war period so long now that volumes and untold books about it have been published, but been found wanton or made redundant by the escalations and constant changing landscape of events both in Europe and outside it –, the survival of the country’s culture, its music, hasn’t just been left to those fighting on the extensive frontlines but its army of archivists, its radio stations still broadcasting under the frightening threat of drone and missile attacks and its many independent labels.
Despite it all, Putin’s previous cold steely determination and tyrannical unapologetic resolution has taken a battering. His war is all but check-mated, stalled and in fact losing ground. As untold thousands return to home from the front, with limbs missing, psychologically damaged, Russia’s people have seen the Vietnam effect– that and the hundreds of thousands of coffins – and realised the implications and realities of this unjust invasion. And as yet another peace deal, or at least break in the ongoing destruction is tabled, it will take some convincing in making the Ukraine give up any land or concessions, just as the tide has turned and they look to have made significant ground up and penetrated and set fear into the minds of Russia’s ruling regime.
One such conservationist of the country’s musical legacy is the Kyïvite, a Kyïv-based ambient-radio experimental music project that merges electronics with Ukrainian folk, archival recordings and minimalist sound design. Embodying erasure, the loss and way in which we remember fragments and scrapes of the past, the people behind this latest release recall and reprise filtered and deliberately made gauzier and obscured archival material from the country’s renowned Transcarpathian Folk Choir.
Led for a time between the years of 1954 and 1969 by the Kyïv Conservatory hot-housed conductor, composer and vocalist Mykkhailo Krechko, the professional artistic collective and recognized folk choir was founded in the Ukrainian city of Uzhgorod in 1945. Sitting by the Uzh River in Western Ukraine, the city is close to the country’s border with both Hungary and Slovakia; famous for its Medieval castle, its holy places and diverse cross-border mix of cuisines. Enduring the Soviet years, a range of the choir’s beatified and ethereal performances have had new life breathed back into them at a time when the country, suffering unimaginably, is working to save its independency, its spiritual nationalist identity and its very survival against an Empire bent on domination if not erasure of Ukraine and its history. Broadcast, then, isn’t just a creative, artistic exercise but an act of preservation.
Connecting old recordings with a contemporary interference of minimalist techno, broken beats, various sound effects of reverberation and the spectre of war, Kyïvite work a Fortean-like radio set to invoke ghostly visions. A hauntology of a kind, but one that churns, recycles and loops some truly beautifully sung and impressively voiced evocations of remembrance, loss, historical record and pastoral romantism. Holding on to that culture, each track merges its timelines whilst being submerged under a constant soundtrack of wax cylinder-like crackles, record scratches, static, retuning and a signalled calculus of buzzes and oscillations. Some titles prompt more elegiac and serious matters, whilst others reference traditional dances (track eight, ‘dudochka (pipe) dance’, is, I believe, a fast-paced Ukrainian folk dance performed in pairs, lines or solo; moving with lightness and flow) and draw on the country’s diverse historical peoples (a reference to the famed Cossacks of Ukraine; one strand of which can be rooted back to the famous western Zaporizhia Cossacks who were centred near the Dnieper River).
As with the terrain and focus there’s many an elegiac example to be found on this album: ‘ballad of a soldier’, ‘ballad of a widow’, ‘ballad of a Cossack’s death’. But all are as supernatural as they are evocative and near esoteric. Elsewhere there’s spells of what can only be described as dub, and other times, when the choirs are less obfuscated, some passages of the stately, the gospel and filmic.
The machine against the naturalistic vocals of a different time adds up to an experimental broadcast steeped in historical documentation, lament and the beautiful. Time is drawn back and forth in an alternative dimension, as Soviet era Ukraine, very much under the cosh and finding its former independence and sperate culture erased for that of tyrannical Communist ideals, connects with a country once more threatened with the very same erasure. At the time of writing this however, the tide has turned in Ukraine’s favour. Putin looks far less stable, and cracks are emerging. Let’s hope this conflict does end soon in Ukraine’s favour, and that we really don’t have to foresee the eradication of its culture and rich musical heritage.
Neuro…No Neuro ‘Memloss’
(Audiobulb) Released 2nd May 2026
Having had to face a debilitation of my cognitive capabilities, of memory erasure and problems with speech since being hit out of nowhere by a stroke this year (still waiting, still being tested to find out exactly why) I can sympathise and relate to the ongoing work of the Tucson, Arizona synthesist and electronic artist Kirk Markarian. Coming to terms with, or rather as a result of increasingly noticing that his own speech and memory has become inconsistent, Markarian (under his micro-inspired cerebral Neuro…No Neuro alias) finds that everything from articulating his emotions, thoughts and instructions to remembering steps in his various daily tasks are disappearing into the ether and fog. Those aren’t the words he’s using, but I get the sense that, and especially as demonstrated by the small sounds on this latest album, his grip on holding on to such memories is slowly being tested, and that his grasp on the routine tasks is being eroded.
To compensate, or to prompt and kick-start the neurological charges, Markarian has linked together the various detritus and fragments of life through producing a soundtrack of softened bulb-shaped notes, musical microbes and atoms, ambient waves and spheres and the tubular. If it was a colour (as demonstrated by the artwork) it would be a washed-out rose red or an enervated pink.
Using titles as prompts and reference points, a new language is created that hopes to remind or jog a memory in decline. Sometimes almost like illusions or mirages, and at other times like more saddened passages of loss, each track plays with the building blocks a little differently; from searching spheres of pretty notation bouncing or bobbling over vapours, to the glassy, the sticky, the licked and pinged. Sometimes there’s points in which it feels the artist has remembered something only for it to then fade away; a smack of this, a gamelan like pattern suddenly of metallic percussion, and a spacy fur of remembrance.
Tiny steps on the road to recovery of memories and the cognitive, Markarian’s latest work of erasure and recollective gravitas is suddenly more serious; a blueprint to sonically cataloguing and hanging on to what’s been lost.
___/THE SOCIAL PLAYLIST VOLUME 106
The Social Playlist is an accumulation of music I love and want to share; tracks from my various DJ sets and residencies over the years; and both selected cuts from those artists, luminaries we’ve lost and those albums celebrating anniversaries each month.
The series has been running for over a decade or more now. Volume 106 is the latest eclectic and generational spanning playlist come radio show from me – the perfect radio show in fact, devoid of chatter, interruptions and inane self-promotion.
Manic Street Preachers ‘Elvis Impersonator: Blackpool Pier’ – Taken from Everything Must Go album, released this month 30 years ago.
Super Fury Animals ‘Frisbee’ – Taken from the Fuzzy Logic album, released this month 30 years ago.
NOV3L ‘To Whom It May Concern’ – angular no wave funk dance from the Canadian collective.
High Pass Filter ‘Eat System’ – Melbourne electro-dub group, from the mid 90s to the early 2000s; once supported the likes of Tortoise, Fugazi and the Beasties.
Hamburger All-Stars‘One Million Hamburgers’ – Post-punk dub and funk no wave band from the West London squat scene of the early 80s. A shifting lineup as such that featured at any one-time members of Alternative TV, Blue Midnight, The Impossible Dreamers and The Pretenders.
Sleeper ‘Dress Like Your Mother’ – Taken from The It Girl album, released this month 30 years ago.
Dwi ‘Reanimate’ – just love this from the alter ego of Dwight Abell, the Vancouver-based multi-instrumentalist and bassist with The Zolas A newish track.
Nine Days Wonder ‘Hovercraft Queen’ – Sax-honked and squeezed, cow bell rock from the German group.
The Beach Boys ‘You Still Believe In Me (Mono)’ – Taken from the Pet Sounds 60th Deluxe anniversary edition; see also my piece on Pet Sounds in the Archives spot.
Beverly Martin ‘Get To The One I Want To’ – paying homage this month to the late folk icon (left somewhat in the shade by her famous husband), who died earlier this month.
The RDF ‘He Is Coming’ – An abbreviation of the band members, “Russ, Fred, and Dan”, a bluegrass down country Christian outfit.
The Difference Machine ‘Orange Lazarus’ – Futuristic Cosmic dystopian hip-hop from the counterculture Atlanta collective and friends.
Run-D.M.C. ‘Proud To Be Black’ – Taken from the Raising Hell album, released forty years ago this month.
Geeker-Natsumi ‘Advertiser’ – New tune from the Japanese maverick of odd pop and bitcrush game machine electronica shunts.
The Beach Boys ‘I Know There’s An Answer (Stack-O-Vocals)’ – Taken from the Pet Sounds 60th Deluxe anniversary edition; see also my piece on Pet Sounds in the Archives spot.
Keith Jarrett ‘Solara March (Dedicated To Pablo Casals And The Sun)’ – Originally released this month, fifty years ago.
Delired Cameleon Family ‘Le bouef’ – prog-electronica peregrinations from the obscurest 1970s French band.
Beverly Martin ‘Reckless Jane’ – paying homage this month to the late folk icon, who passed away earlier this month.
Nick DeCaro And Orchestra ‘Caroline, No’ – a cover version tribute this month, paying tribute to one of the most complete and perfect album’s ever made: Pet Sounds.
Susan Alcorn ‘Mercedes Sosa’ – new spiritualism suite from the iconic pedal steel guitarist, bandleader, improviser and composer.
The Jerry Hahn Brotherhood ‘Early Bird Café’ – One from the American jazz guitarist of repute and notable sessions star’s 1970 country-rock ensemble.
Electric Sandwich ‘China’ – Very much on topic this month, a hand-drum electrical rock jam from the Krautrock era group.
Pip Pyle ‘Hannello’ – Prog-jazz from the journeyman drummer and Canterbury scenester.
The Beach Boys ‘I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Stack-O-Vocals)’ – Taken from the Pet Sounds 60th Deluxe anniversary edition; see also my piece on Pet Sounds in the Archives spot.
Vincent Over The Sink ‘Number Theory’ – psychedelic mirage from the Australian duo.
The Tryp ‘I Dream In Black And White’ – British revivalist psych band.
Sonic Youth ‘Green Light’ – Taken from the Evol album, released forty years ago this month.
Scott Walker ‘Psoriatic’ – Taken From The Drift album, released 20 years ago this month.
The Butthole Surfers ‘Space’ – Taken from the Electriclarryland album, released forty years ago this year.
John Saturley and The Slumber Party ‘Midnight Deathbed’ – North Carolina outfit I believe, with scant information nor any real bio. Kind of spacy Human League meets Numan and Hercules & The Love Affair.
___/ARCHIVES______

To coincide with the 60th anniversary of Pet Sounds (possibly one of the most complete and greatest albums in the rock/pop cannons), another chance (yet again, having already reprised it after the death of Brian Wilson) to read my review and purview of the 50th anniversary celebrations and tour that stopped off in Glasgow, back in 2016.
Brian Wilson presents Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary Celebrations
Friday 27th May 2016 at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
In a soft power, musical arms race with The Beatles, Brian Wilson more or less now mastering the known limits of the studio, was nudged towards ever more ambitious levels of creativity. As the old adage, music history folklore if you like, goes it was The Beatles Rubber Soul that finally did it for Brian. The retort to this foil would not only be The Beach Boys first masterpiece, but one of pop and rock music’s most enduring triumphs, Pet Sounds. No longer happy with the California high school, deuce coupe cruising, beach party spirit that had so far made the group world famous, cast even further adrift, introspective and all but retired from playing live with the his brothers and comrades, Brian was moving on from the fancy-free and footloose sound of the 45s that had always guaranteed a top ten place in the Billboard charts for something more…well, grown up. Voicing a growing anxiety – or the growing pains – of youth, Brian would compose the sound of young adulthood. As the world came to terms with the idea of the ‘teenager’, Brian began encompassing and articulating a new uneasy transition.
As much about the times as about the heartache and pains of being pure of heart, Pet Sounds marked a growing resentment towards the previous generation. At the beginning of a revolutionary change in attitudes, but a year before the ‘free love’ hippie idealism that brought in the psychedelic epoch, these former golden tanned beachcombers were breaking from their parent’s traditions and rules to set their own course: a life mapped out, from education to career and marriage. But at the very heart of all Brian’s work, even today, was a sense of innocence. An innocence lost as the lovesick but married Brian now in his mid-twenties, was coming to terms with the anxieties of that adulthood, and his growing mental anguish. Undiagnosed for years, left at the mercy of countless well-wishers and confidence tricksters, quacks and pseudo-therapists, Brian’s meticulous obsessive production of Pet Sounds and its subsequent, but not satisfactorily finished until 40 years later, magnum opus SMiLE, tipped him over the edge.
Pet Sounds would also mark a shift in lyricism, with Brian collaborating with his friend the lyricist and copywriter Tony Asher. A task of reification, Asher would take the often abstract and difficult expressions that roamed around inside the troubled mind and put them into song. Not exactly the most unified of atmospheres, Cousin Mike Love a constant daddy-o stuck-in-the-mud character, ready to pour a cold bucket of egotistic sick over anything that he felt would compromise or trouble the calm waters of The Beach Boys, so far, winning formula. To be fair, Love would be right to question this new shift towards melancholic, almost philosophical anguish. Asher at that time was but a burgeoning talent with little to back up his credibility as a top pop songwriter. Replacing previous writers and solid contributors with an unproven lyricist would however prove to be genius decision. But the success of the album was slow. Its renaissance and rebirth as one of the greatest albums of the twentieth century was down to the audiences overseas. The change in direction had unsettled the market, as America baulked at this sadder, more cerebral tone. Yet, the UK loved it, buying it in droves and sending it to the number 2 spot in the charts – compare that with its 106 placing in the Billboard. Pet Sounds could have been a disaster, but it was saved, becoming a cult, an iconic masterpiece. And though it would take a while to pick up the desirable sales, its legacy grew and grew years after its original release.
Arriving almost in tandem The Beatles Revolver was released just a couple of months later. Brian’s answer: SMiLE. If Pet Sounds had not only threatened but also sent Brian into a funk, then this grand American musical tour through the ages, from Plymouth Rock to the shores of the Spanish Peninsula, would all but consume and nearly destroy him. So ambitious was the vision that despite the near godlike genius of his assiduous sessions ensemble The Wrecking Crew, the social, political and historically woven rich tapestry lyrics of new songwriting partner Van Dyke Parks, and his own production prowess, the project stalled. Numerous mixes, snippets, vignettes and even completed songs made it onto various albums and compilations over the decades, including the enervated and rushed out – to appease and bring in some much-needed revenue – Smiley Smile. It would take decades for SMiLE to be eventually completed, albeit (sadly and for obvious reasons) without his brothers Dennis and Carl’s near ethereal soulful compassionate voices, and missing any input from Mike Love – now more or less carving the Beach Boys brand up, sporting it like a trophy as he has carte blanche and ownership of the name when touring with his own cabaret version of the group’s back catalogue. Brian did however manage, after spending the longest amount of time and money in recording history on a single, to release the perfectly epic pop rhapsody ‘Good Vibrations’.
Documented, quite favourably and sympathetically, by the Love & Mercy movie, Brian’s wilderness years lasted throughout the 80s and into the 90s, before the most accomplished of L.A. bands and Beach Boy fans The Wondermints helped lure Brian back on the road, performing a Pet Sounds extravaganza in 2000. Just four years later the band would join Brian in the studio to finish that nigh mystical, greatest album there never was, SMiLE, before taking it out on the road. Following in 2011 the eventual hidden away, locked in some fabled vaults, SMiLE Sessions of original material was finally released to the public.
A near renaissance, a scarred and troubled but blooming Brian Wilson is back once again on the road. This time he celebrates the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds, arriving in my new hometown of Glasgow on a nationwide tour. Billed as an ‘anniversary celebration’ – the final performance of the iconic album in its entirety – tonight’s performance is a generous one. Split into two performances of greatest hits and Pet Sounds, with an encore of good time classics, Brian was backed by members of the Wondermints and flanked by special guests, Al Jardine and honouree Beach Boy Blondie Chaplin: a set up that has been repeated on many occasions.
As a steady presence for the vulnerable Brian, Al was on hand to soften the odd tremors of quivered uncertainty. But who was on hand to back up Al? Well as it happens his son Matt Jardine, proving himself the most apt of Beach Boy scions, was there to to aid his old man and Brian with the most adroit and sweetest of falsetto voices. A counterpoint to the now – and for good reason – limited vocal range of Brian, Matt took on the high notes with aplomb and even performed lead on one of the evenings early highlights, ‘Don’t Worry Baby’. He would play the role of a younger Brian during the entirety of the Pet Sounds album suite, almost seamlessly, taking on each alternating verse. However, and it seems almost too disingenuous to point out, there were a few wobbles and miscues throughout that just couldn’t be patched over. Yet we all willed Brian on, and when he took lead on the most diaphanous of love declarations, ‘God Only Knows’, the entire audience stood to their feet in adulated applause – the first of many rapturous ovations that night.
Directed and conducted by Paul ‘Von’ Mertens the entire ensemble began the evening with the heavenly choral warm-up ‘Our Prayer’; featured on 20/20 but originally the lead-in to the album version of SMiLE’s grand trans-American tour ‘Heroes And Villains’, which followed. We were then treated to a litany of favourites from the bobby sox high school daze back catalogue of hits, including a swinging, swayed medley of ‘California Girls’, ‘I Get Around’ and ‘Little Deuce Coupe’. Handing over the spotlight, Al performed centre stage with renditions of ‘Wake The World’, ‘Add Some Music To Your Day’ and ‘Cotton Fields’ – all songs plucked from the Brian breakdown period, when the rest of the Band were prompted to take over the creative reins. As lithe and energetic as ever, former Flame and Beach Boy band member (on tour and in the studio during the early 70s) Blondie Chaplin sprouted onto the stage to add some light-hearted theatrics and rock’n’roll vigour. The much-accomplished Durban guitar maestro, looking more and more like a cross between Jagger and Richards (all that time he spent touring with the Stones in the late 90s has worn off on him), launched into a strutting version of ‘Wild Honey’. Expanded from its soulful howled original setting, Chaplin went into bohemian guitar solo overdrive; showboating across the front of the stage and playing to the audience, who lapped it up. From The Beach Boys’ troubled but most brilliant 1973 album Holland, Chaplin picked up the ocean current waltz ‘Sail On Sailor’. The original vocalist on that recording, he returns to it with carefree élan, adding a wild guitar solo to the end, which sends Brian off into the wings in playful mock exasperation.
Back out for act two, the band minus Chaplin for now, begin the reverent Pet Sounds album. Largely enduring because it encapsulated a particular age and time in Brian’s genius, but mostly for capturing the love tribulations and torments of young adulthood in the most perfect pop songs, the album still chimes deeply with audiences fifty years later. Intricate and multi-layered but never ever laboured or strained – witness the Bond-esque Tropicana lounge instrumental suite title track -, each purposely-poised ballad, paean and tryst says all it needs to in less than two minutes. The rousing ‘Wouldn’t It Be Nice’, shared vocally by the Jardines and Brian, opens proceedings of course, followed by a gentler, more serene ‘You Still Believe In Me’. Highlights from the album set included an Al led version of the sea shanty in the manner of a doo wop Ivy League bruiser, with a reference to a particular paranoia plunged bad acid trip thrown in, ‘Sloop John B’, and flipping over the B-side, a poignant and encouraged Brian led ‘Caroline, No’.
The encore promised a “fun, fun, fun” package of hits. But first the band introductions, each band member receiving a musical signature tune as they came back out onto the stage after the interval. It was then straight into a full cast version of ‘Good Vibrations’, including the gesticulating tambourine wielding Chaplin who turned his percussive role into an art form. Rewinding back through the songbook, we were treated to the sing-along classics ‘Help Me Rhonda’, ‘Barbara Ann’, ‘Surfin USA’ and ‘Fun Fun Fun’. By now the audience were up and out of their seats, dancing where they could in the face of the po-faced security and attendants. From our balcony seats looking down on the main auditorium we witnessed hundreds swaying and weaving in almost perfect timing: the atmosphere couldn’t have been better. On a poignant, perhaps paused note Brian finished the evening with a version of the song that spawned the title of the recent movie, Love & Mercy. Written in more recent times, a reminder of the anxieties and anguish that once crippled Brian, the song’s central tenet is a perfect theme to finish on: a great sentiment for the audience to carry with them as they head home into the night. A joy to witness, the Pet Sounds legacy is in safe hands, especially here in Glasgow; a city twinned with Big Sur for one night only. Simply magical.
Here’s the message bit we hate, but crucially need:
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Dominic Valvona’s world of sonic/musical discoveries reviewed by Dominic Valvona. All entries in alphabetical order. Proudly AI Free.

Cocanha Photo Credit: Amic Bedel
Leah Callahan ‘Our Lady Of The Sad Adventure’
1st June 2026
Between affirmation and the sacred initiations of confirmation, and with a title that evokes something of the saintly modernist poetry of Bob Dylan, Leah Callahan takes a road trip back through her Boston hometown with a songbook of previously unresolved heartaches, breakups and vulnerabilities.
Although once part of the Glass Set band, the Bostonian singer-songwriter Callahan has already released five former solo efforts. Her sixth (and 13th studio album thus far), Our Lady Of The Sad Adventure, sees a continued partnership with foil Chris Stern of The Sterns fame, and a continued adoption of the new wave/Brit-pop/power-pop/punkish/shoegaze/C86/psychedelic sound that has served so well.
As with each chapter, there’s further extensions, roads taken to newish destinations and newish horizons breached; for example, there’s a softened punky-pop 80s vibe take on the late English poet and musician Molly Drake’s (famously the mother of the tragic Nick Drake and the actress Gabrielle Drake) “gut-wrenching sad tally of broken-hearted memories” loaded ‘I Remember’, and glitterball indie-dance and synth pop influences on the funkier title-track and, most surprising of them all, the Japan in Art Deco Xanadu Hollywood ‘Clouds’.
With equal power and tenderness Callahan throws another dime in the Boston jukebox, referencing neighbourhood haunts and scenes of both epiphany and abuse whilst evoking Bends era Radiohead, The Misfits, Blondie, The Cars, and on the opening apocalyptic dazed ‘Fall In Love With Your Mind’ a throwback of the Madchester scene of the early and later 80s (some Stone Roses meets The Smiths action), a touch of outlaw country and early R.E.M..
The driven and the hazy both converge on songs dedicated to support networks, the harrowing accounts of abuse victims read in the news, and an anecdotal bar room scene that features Gloria Gaynor’s most resilient anthem. If Johnny Marr joining Interpol or Echobelly is up your proverbial street, or indeed, appeals to you, then Callahan’s distinctive and unique takes are essential.
Cocanha ‘Flame Folclòre’
(Bongo Joe) 15th May 2026
Playing on France’s foundations, pulled together in dominating fashion from various connected but distinguished former independent kingdoms and regions, and the erosion or indeed forced erasure of languages and cultures like the Occitan, the now parred down to a duo of Cocanha set out a manifesto of radical-folk resistance against the domineering forces of nationalism. Though some nationalistic movements seem more in favour than others, France’s flirtations with fascism during the time of the Vichy regime’s collaboration with their Nazi overlords during WWII infamously, and most dangerously, used various folk traditions as state and ideological propaganda. Wrestling those same traditions now, and within the context of attacks in more recent decades on Occitan speakers and its alliance or take-up by activist groups locking horns with the French government, the Toulouse-birthed Cocanha pairing of Caroline Dufau and Lila Fraysse wish to liberate this music and its songs, its lyrics, from the forces of conservatism, misogyny and the stain imposed upon it by the tyrannical: They bring, as the title roughly translates, a politically motivated vision of “flamboyant folklore”.
Whilst a far more in-depth and researched take is needed on all the ramifications, the nuances and the political outcomes, the strive and acts of resistance that have been imbued within this, the group’s third, album, the main Occitan culture that has been adapted and woven into the fabric of this contemporary take can be traced back to the patchwork of Medieval realms in what is now Southern France. A romantic language porously spreading out from its geographical namesake (loosely, I believe, formed on the model of Aquitaine, which is now known as Languedoc) into pockets of the Pyrenees (and so Spain too) and further afield into Italy, Occitan is roughly still in use, spoken by at least (depending on where you get your stats) a couple of million people. It’s poetic and lyrical turns, its polyphonic harmonies now provide the foundations of this latest songbook and movement of redress.
With the departure of Maud Herrera, the newly adapted duo has had a creative rethink; one that involves the input of two producers (mostly notably Raul Refree, who’s known for his “incendiary” collaborations and productions with the flamenco artist Rosalia and Fado revivalist Lina) and five mixing engineers.
The vocals are as beautiful and ethereal as ever, like some kind of spiritual religious invocation at times from the side of the mountain holy sanctuary, and at others like a breaching of the barricades and a near riotous almost spontaneous wildness. You could call it a rustic form of punk or the diy spirit that’s been merged with age old forms like the Rondeau (or rondo) and polyphonic harmonies of a traditional bent. You can hear the former on the linked-together trio of ‘Diuré tremblar’, ‘Diuré samsir’ and ‘A l’amistat’. The first part pulls us straight into the contemporary climate of activist revengeful violence, with a broadcast news snippet on the murder of the UnitedHealtcare CEO Brian Thompson before tunning or changing the station to a broadcast of the duo beginning their rondo form of a principal refrained theme that alternates with contrasting episodes and couplets. During this triumvirate of clapped and smacked rhythmic performances and buzzy stringy guitar (almost African in style I’d suggest) they also draw upon on the activities and disobedient protests of the “ecoterrorists” charged Les “Soulèvements de la Terre and story of Occitan speakers and their experiences in 1970s Paris.
Changing the clattering, shuttering and springy rhythms, introducing various instruments and sounds and experimenting with phonetics and the cadence, the duo invokes old Occitan myths – the “drac” amphibian dragon of lore that lures its victims from beneath the waters of the Southeastern French River that bares its name – alongside urgent strikes against the current regime and its campaign of environmental destruction and erosion of old cultures and languages.
And throughout it all the crossovers or at least echoes of further afield influences, whether on purpose or just coincidental, seem to recall the Basque, the North African, South American and even Eastern European folk borders of Ukraine. It’s as if Staraya Derevyna, Širom, The Raincoats, Walter Smetek, the Red Crayola and Tarta Relena had been born in a Southern French mountainside village together.
From arenas to the placard waving streets of modern France, the Cocanha duo liven up and breathe a new impetus into an age-old tradition of resistance and independence.
Column of Trout/Partager ‘Split/Lop’
(DAAM) 29th May 2026
The inaugural release in a new split series dedicated to experimental songwriting, the shared experience of Kerchiefs and One Eyed Ancestors’ Ben Wiggs and his latest side-project Column of Trout, and label-boss Distant Animals’ more musically orientated project, Partager. DAAM have brought this pairing together for a surprisingly congruous, complimentary experience; the perimeters of which are pliable, bleeding into an untold range of styles and ideas.
First up, Wiggs bendy and loopy hallucinated slacker-indie-psych Split offering of despondency and lament. A quartet of wallowed and also enervated woes and lovelorn gestures, like Skip Spence and Jeff Buckley being drawn under and into the whirlpool, there’s parts in which the music recalls Ed Penfold, Pavement and The Unicorns, and other times, The Books, and on the stuttered grungy and fuzz rocked ‘Ear’ a lo fi Squeeze.
Wavey and wobbled throughout there’s both lucidity and staccato-like sticks on this mirage of bandy, plaintive songs.
Siding up to Wiggs on this split EP, Partager expands musical horizons further with a non-vocalised songbook of instrumental strangeness that never rests on any particular style. And so, you have musical excursions of the soundtrack variety, recalling Bunny And the Invalids if they’d met Babybird in the mid 90s (‘Heaven Room’); David Sylvain’s backing meets an Indian Talk Talk (‘Lesser Ex’); melodica-like dub pulled through the metal-marching reverberations of grunge and progressive rock (‘Sea Dive’); and a bell-tolled and clanged ghostly and creepy vision not unlike the work of Belbury Poly (‘Earth Turn’). It’s like the most unlikely score to a work of imagination, forewarning and the unsettled.
Recommended for those seeking something different, familiar but very strange and out on the boundaries.
Furcloy ‘Purple Sage’
(Adventurous Music) Released 9th April 2026
Adventurous Music for a reason, the highly prolific ‘micro-label’ platform and magazine (under the EX! Exclamation moniker) facilitates the latest project of ebbs, loops, cycles and oscillation effected guitar absorptions and evocations by David Bradley.
Although now a mainstay of Michigan, Bradley developed this electroacoustic and drone layered work whilst living in the Eastern European city of Prague and playing in his duo Wailstrom.
Thanks to the RHS Plants website for the following description, the purple sage of the title is, ‘an attractive, upright perennial with aromatic, grey-green foliage, which is initially flushed with a reddish-purple as it emerges. From early summer the branching stems are topped with spires of lilac-blue, two-lipped flowers, which are particularly loved by bees.’ Not so much a natural blooming wonder as applied tones, drones and wave forms that form a mist over various methods of guitar playing, dwelling, dwindling, hovering, sustain and melting, the flora inspires a both mechanised and sci-fi-like vision of the landscape and sense of place and feel.
A mirage or hallucination that subtly tracks the horizon, the set scenes, Purple Sage features near languid melodious guitar touches with the evaporated and, on occasion, a sense of the rhythmic. Hidden below and inside the electricity, the magnetic and ghostly I was reminded of a very eroded and obfuscated Jesus And Mary Chain, the Spacemen 3 (that will be the first of two references in this reviews haul), Daniel Fichelscher and Conny Veit’s guitar work for Popol Vuh (although the synthesized parts, and the atmospherics recalled Popol Vuh’s Affenstunde debut), Daniel Vickers and Eno.
For those with daring tastes but who also wish to be immersed in a very different vision of scenery, of pylon and analogue-like currents manifesting into patterns and prompts of the haunted and the illusionary, then feel free to pick this perfectly crafted discovery.
Meiko Kaji ‘Otoko Onna Kokoro No Aika’
(Wewantsounds) 22nd May 2026
In trouble of repeating myself after reviewing a string of such revived LPs from the iconic Japanese actress and singer, from what I’ve gained from the press release, and despite the so-called Tarantino effect, the cult garnered Japanese starlet Meiko Kaji’s iconic run of early to mid 1970s albums have never been reissued on vinyl until the last few years by the specialists at Wewantsounds – one of our favourites in this regard.
With the usual quality control of repackaging such lauded obscurities (including usually the original artwork) the label, in conjunction with both the artist herself and the original label that released this quintet of showcases, Teichiku (between the years of 1972 and 1974), have called upon the services of Hashim Kotaro Bharoocha to interview Kaji, and fill us in on all the background, with insightful, informative linear notes to each song and chapter in the life story.
A sort of third or even fourth revival you could say, the star of various “Japanese Exploitation” franchises inspired the one-time golden boy of auteur pulp, who not only loosely based the plot of his Kill Bill doublet on one of Kaji’s most (in)famous roles as the revenging angel of The Lady Snowblood period-drama revenge shlocker series but also placed a number of her songs in the movie too. This obviously shone a spotlight on the star of such cult curios as Female Prisoner Scorpion, Blind Woman’s Curse and Stray Cat/Alleycat Rock.
In more recent years Kaji has popped up with her own Youtube channel and been coveted and once more invited to various galas and events in light of renowned interest. And as I’ve already stated, and in recent years, a vinyl reissue run of her 70s move into the recording industry, prompted by the film studios cashing in this icon’s popularity.
Coaxed into the recording booth, to initially sing songs associated with the films she starred in, the Tokyo-born actress nervously and with some trepidation, recorded her first album, Hajiki Uta, with the highly experienced TV, film and incidental music composer Shunsuke Kikuchi. The producer was able to put his charge at ease however, as Kaji recalls: “I told Shunsuke Kikuchi that I couldn’t imagine myself singing the songs. He said I could ignore the melody that he wrote, and just sing it the way I wanted to. That really lifted the pressure off my shoulders, and I decided to sing the song as the character in the film. The director was also happy with that idea.”
Following in the wake of the Hajiki Uta LP, reissued for the very first time by Wewantsounds, Tarantino’s crush and untold influence for many over the decades, the star of many infamous Japanese schlock and brutal revenger horrors and violent killings sprees’ debut LP, Gincho Wataridori was the next LP to be revitalised and given a special reissue.
In a similar mode, style and production wise, Otoko Onna Kokoro No Aika (that’s “Lament of Man, Woman and Heart”) showcases the beautifully heartachingly effortlessness of Kaji’s voice across a number of softly connected and layered styles: from the performative traditional form of Enka (a style that often carried masked messages of political texts, and was later on stylized with modern pop sensibilities in the post-war period), both lounge and theatrical balladry, Kayokyoku (another Japanese pop style with simple melodies and lyrics easy to play and sing along to) and quasi- Bacharach Western maladies and horizon gazing sentimental yearnings.
Throughout Kaji inhabits each role, telling the story of each song with swanned, soaring and plaintive hunger and unrequited sorrow. The roles of actor and songstress merge into one.
The album (originally released in 1974), once translated, makes it abundantly clear the intentions and themes. But despite the lament, each song is pretty in its cooed, wooed and subtly dramatized delivery. Notable songs include a rendition of the theme song from Siejun Suzuki’s 1966 Yakuza themed movie Tokyo Drifter, ‘Tokyo Nagare Mono’, sung to a soundtrack of Ennio-like Italian Western meets the glow of sixties era Tokyo city snazzier pop vibes and a faint use of electric guitar fuzz and rattle snake percussion. And a Mexican border town scene meets Mediterranean-like woozy take on the popular pre-World War II ditty of ‘Uramachi Jinsei’, originally made famous by Bin Uehara and Michiko Yuuki; banned as it happens by the government of the day. From a similar era, another throwback modelled in the glow of the 60s and early 70s, ‘Sake Wa Namida Ka Tameika Ka’ (“Alcohol turns into tears and sighs”) is retuned with the sensibilities of Enka and a softened 60s backbeat and the concertinaed swoons of the accordion.
Elsewhere, the production stirs up friendly and warm echoes of John Barry’s dreamy bulb-shaped and chiming spindles (‘Meiko No Yuma Wa Yoru Hiraku’); an enervated fuzzy-soul-funk version of The Temptations sound (‘Ginza No Cho’); and soothed senorita coddled accompaniments (‘Shiretoko Ryojo’).
Theatrical, showy and filmic at every turn, this album further showcases the finely attuned and sentimental heart aches, plaints and touchingly delivered songs of a Japanese star and luminary of the cult film world, who manages to blur the boundaries between styles and disciplines with such effortless timeless grace.
Alex Roth ‘(Dis)possessed’
Released 1st May 2026
Back on familiar sacred ground you could say, Alex Roth continues to capture both the abstract and all-too tragic consequences of his ancestors in the Eastern Europe Jewish diaspora.
A member of the MultiTraction Orchestra multiverse of musicians that draws in members from GoGo Penguin, Supersilent, Melt Yourself Down, Crash Ensemble, Sly & The Family Drone, Hen Ogledd and beyond, Roth made a personal odyssey and album a couple of years back with the Cut The Sky trio of Wacłew Zimpel and Hubert Zemler. Informed by Roth’s artist-in-residence spell at the Galicia Jewish Museum in Krakow, the Esz Kodesz album found a troubling absence in a land once awash with its vibrant Jewish culture. Only emancipated in 1867, when ruled under the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, that community which had given so much to this region of Eastern Europe, were victims of numerous pograms and even extermination – from the tumultuous fall-out of post WWI Ukraine to hostility under the Soviets, and then by the Nazi’s. A sizeable majority of that Jewish community would end up in Israel (another major destination being neighbouring Poland, but further afield too, and on to America) fleeing persecution. Where once those thriving bastions stood, only the ghosts now remain; the imagery accumulation of left objects and the remnants, as displayed in that museum’s main exhibition, can’t help but evoke a deep sadness; commemorating as it does, 800 years of a Jewish presence in Western Galicia. The titles of each section of that main exhibit drive home that tragedy and loss: ‘Jewish Life In Ruins’, ‘Jewish Culture As It Once Was’, ‘The Holocaust Sites Of Massacre And Destruction’. They also make clear the act of remembrance, of never forgetting what went before: ‘How The Past Is Being Remembered’ and ‘People Making Memory Today’.
With a different process and methodology at work, under the project title of a sound installation but in a similar same vein, Roth was commissioned by the Warsaw located POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in 2024 to celebrate the educational hub’s tenth anniversary; invited to respond to objects in the collection that were made out of “(mis)appropriated” Torah parchment during and after WWII. Quantifying a sense of desolation, and yet shared universal commonality, Roth conjures up metaphors of “dispassion” and “repossession”, drawing upon Moses famous/infamous possession of the promised land (Canaan) as laid out in the Book of Deuteronomy; driving out the indigenous King Sihon of Hebron led Ammonite people in the process – although arguably before being assembled under the Israelites banner, those same people, returning from generations of enslavement in Egypt, were also indigenous to those lands too; hostile neighbours but closely related to the Semitic Ammonite who ruled east of the River Jordon, alongside the Moab and Edomites. The Bible describes them as being descendants of Ben-ammi, the son of Lot (Abraham’s nephew) and Lot’s younger daughter.
But let’s pan out before we start getting all scholarly.
With anti-Semitism at an all-time high across Europe and North America in the wake of the barbaric terrorism of Hamas on October 7th, and the ensuing destructive retaliation, obliteration of Gaza by Israel, and the ever expanded war that has led to the USA’s destruction of the heinous Iranian regime, and attacks on Hezbollah in the Lebanon, division has been sown down political lines of grievance: you either stand with Palestine or Israel it seems, with no room for nuance, the complexities let alone balance. The sheer mindlessness and oblivious lack of decency by many is staggering; with opinions cast, placards held, and slogans shouted by people without the faintest clue, knowledge of what they pontificate. You can quite rightly rile against or denounce both parties in this escalating conflict, but to only take one side is disingenuous at best, at worst, deplorable. Yes, the catalyst argument is trotted out every time, but if we want history lessons and context, we should go back not just 70-odd years but a thousand, two thousand. Conspiracy theories, fuelled by social media, have been left to rally and even prompt acts of violence and terror against the Jewish communities in the West, especially here in the UK.
With this in mind, it’s either a brave or dangerous move that will neither appease nor gain much in the way of sympathy depending on which side of the activist division you stand to release a sonic work of such complexity and emote certain passages from a history that many would now vocally and emboldened, knock or dismiss. But Roth has produced a work of ambience, sound art, atmospherics and field recordings that would suit the soul of the late divine styler Florian Fricke; one continuous forty-minute piece that finds passages of melody and expresses the hallowed from the reverberations of artifacts and musical instruments “(mis)appropriated” from pieces of parchment of the Torah. A sacrilegious act in itself, Roth gained permission and guidance by the Chief Rabbi of Poland to employ his special technique of capturing the sounds from these objects without touching them; recording using contact microphones, Roth would attempt to pick up the very vibrations or pick up their resonating frequencies when laying boxed in storage. Amplified of course from their metaphorical burial, and ritualised further with the help of the accomplished Cantor Rachael Weston and her vocal Cantorial melodious prayer – the Cantor leads this form of Jewish vocal prayer, which blends together elements of Eastern European folk with ancient modes, and is used as a display of powerful Jewish spiritualism – and a MIDI keyboard transferred palette of virtual instruments, Roth invokes the very passages of the Torah still visible despite their misuse. Another layer, and one that feeds into a message of not only remembrance and historical record, is of co-existence; the technique of “radical acceptance”, as used in dialectical behaviour therapy to manage painful situations outside one’s control, finding its way in an abstract fashion on this immersive experience.
Surface noise acts as a bed as mystique grows from the hum, the tubular and pipe-like blows of air and wind, the dust caught floating in beams of light and the long sinewaves-like forms that take shape in the sanctified space. There’s a real beauty here amongst the glints and signals, the recording equipment and the cylindrical vapours. But then, after a time, distorted frazzled and near vaporizing bass hits like the toll of a funeral procession making its way in an esoteric and plaintive motion towards the final burial spot. Other spots feature shuttered-like wooden percussion, intermittent rhythms and the obscured sounds of a Frame drum. But then strangely we hear what sounds like a rusty buzz saw and various tools, further removing us from or maybe bringing us closer to those misappropriated uses of the Torah parchments.
We are privy to a moving experience; a burial of a kind and documented abstracted sound experiment that transcribes fate and the scares of the missing. And yet, this abstraction provides sanctuary and relevance to objects that would normally, through religious beliefs and rules, be destroyed or buried and hidden from sight. Transformed and taken in a different direction, this installation soundtrack is far more subtle with its Jewish roots, creating something sonically and performance wise quite unique.
Solar Seas ‘Kraken’
(Somewherecold Records) Released 1st May 2026
An oceanic convergence of myth and legendary sonnet in an alternative sci-fi dimension, the sonic pairing of Mark Cross and Mark Skelton prompt shapes, forms, feelings and themes from a squall and drone-operation of reverberance, resonance, sustain and barely contained tubular vacuums of noise on their debut album as the Solar Seas.
Brought together by a mutual respect for each other’s projects and bands (for Cross that’s 9-Volt Velvet, Viva Voce and The Northern Lights, and for Skelton, Aberrations Of Light, Alpine Slides and Youth Club), and facilitated by the highly prolific North American countercultural label Somewherecold Records, this freshly instigated partnership uses a particular methodology informed by the use of that affordable diy bedroom and rudimental but vital godsend, the four-track recorder, and by extension the cassette tape. Creatively invigorated by such barriers, the pair limited themselves to just two tracks each, which they then swapped between their respected homes in Tennessee and Georgia. And under the “less is more” mantra, and with a theme set in aquatic motion, they’ve gone all submersible and contemplated the many metaphors, readings of Tennyson’s famous Sea monster imbued sonnet/poem The Kraken.
Depending on sources, of which there are exhaustively many, Tennyson was harking on about either the Victorian’s own anxieties of the time (geology, evolution and Biblical literalism), the prospect of the working classes rising up, the apocalypse, or reflecting on his own struggles with the creative process. What warnings, augurs and premonitions are awakened here is left to speculation. As that fabled Nordic legendary beast of the deep sea is invoked and evoked to draw upon a soundtrack like experience of ambient electricity, metallic blocks of heavy meta(l), tubular shaped underwater beams amongst the murky light and noisy squalls.
Influenced in part by that much forgotten (or at least rarely if ever referenced) Bristol band Flying Saucer Attack, Sonic Youth and Medicine, I’d like to throw in the Spacemen 3, and even a passing of Ash Ra Tempel. On the synth preset-like drum programmed and flange guitar mirage ‘Washed’ I’m picking up Gary Numan and the Cocteau Twins. And on the otherworldly, near Lovecraftian ‘Starfish and the Seadragon’ it’s the FSA doing a Hawkwind impression to the flail of distressed guitar trills and distorted screams.
There’s much to deduce and pick up on from the balance of slabbed and more cosmic ray-like breaks from below the heavy surfaces of water: various communications and readings, obfuscated on purpose; the sonar-like rings of guitar imitation; the melodies that emerge from the static and fuzz and scuzz; and the oscillations and portal draws towards alternative worlds.
A great start to a debut project that offers up a suitable alien and electrified vision of a great work; once more awakened, the Kraken has a taste for downer, shoegaze, heavy droning and explorative guitar effects on a lo fi but no less epic scale.
Here’s the message bit that we hate, but crucially need:
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