thu 13/02/2025

New Music Reviews

Duran Duran, O2 Institute, Birmingham review – an intimate gig for the local megastars

Guy Oddy

Incredibly it’s now 40 years since the release of Duran Duran’s debut album. To mark this event, the remaining members of the band’s classic line-up decided to return to Birmingham. Not to the NIA or any similar-sized venue, but for a couple of intimate gigs at the city’s O2 Institute.

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Album: The Eivind Aarset 4-Tet - Phantasmagoria, or A Different Kind of Journey

Kieron Tyler

Phantasmagoria, or A Different Kind of Journey instantly sets its controls for an excursion into the interstellar void between gaseous and solid objects. Opening cut “Intoxication” begins with lightly pulsing bass and a keyboard texture. Shimmering guitar floats over the top. Though more sparse and lacking vocals, it’s as if Pink Floyd’s “Us and Them” were performed by an earlier model of the band which had focussed on reducing performative grandeur as much as possible.

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Michael Janisch Band, Ronnie Scott's review - jazz's ace of bass makes a welcome return

Tim Cumming

This was, said bassist Michael Janisch, his first gig since January last year, and his crack group’s Monday evening set, kicking off at the un-jazzy hour of 6.30pm, was an energising, dynamic group performance from A-list British musicians who are band leaders in their own right.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Goldie & the Gingerbreads - Thinking About The Good Times

Kieron Tyler

In October 1964, New York’s Goldie & the Gingerbreads boarded the RMS Mauretania for Southampton. In the midst of the British Invasion, they were taking on the beat boom at its coal face.

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Blade Runner, Avex Ensemble, Symphony Hall, Birmingham review - synths synced to screen

Miranda Heggie

"I've seen things you people wouldn’t believe." It’s one of the most famous lines from Ridley Scott’s 1982 film Blade Runner, though in the past 18 months we’ve all seen things we would not have believed back at the start of 2020, when I originally secured my tickets for this show that had been scheduled for 26 March 2020.

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Nadine Shah, Winterstoke Sun Shelter, Ramsgate review - a thrilling return in a stunning venue

Kathryn Reilly

Hilarious, potty-mouthed and mesmerisingly beautiful, Nadine Shah is on superb form at the Ramsgate Festival of Sound’s closing evening show. And aside from the banter there is, of course, that remarkable voice – hugely powerful and somehow perfectly suited to this enchanting outdoor venue.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Laura Nyro - American Dreamer

Kieron Tyler

“She is a 20-year-old white New Yorker who sings like a 55-year-old black lady from Mississippi.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Leslie Winer - When I Hit You, You’ll Feel It

Kieron Tyler

When I Hit You - You’ll Feel It opens with “When I Was Walt Whitman”. A French-language answer-phone message is abruptly cut off by a massive-sounding percussive pulse over which a borderline menacing voice enigmatically murmurs words which are hard to make out.

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Edinburgh International Festival 2021: Anna Meredith

Miranda Heggie

She’s an artist who’s impossible to define. Producer, composer and multi-instrumentalist, Anna Meredith has a musical mind that cannot keep still. Her latest studio album, Fibs, which was released in 2019, is a genre-defying blend of electronic and acoustic music, conceived with raw zeal, true artistic integrity, and a huge sense of fun.

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The Beach Boys: Feel Flows - the Sunflower and Surf's Up Sessions 1969-1971

Adam Sweeting

“Add some music to your day,” the Beach Boys urged in their song of the same name, from their 1970 album Sunflower. There’s far more than a day’s worth of music included on this immense five-CD package, which scrutinises the turn-of-the Seventies Beach Boys in miniscule detail as they made the awkward transition from their California surf-and-sand past to a more diffuse, more democratic and in many ways more interesting group.

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