
A superb comeback, 16 years after their last studio LP, from the big-riffed Seattle band.

A wonderful sonic conversation between like-minded souls.

A batty, compelling, smart and unusual fourth LP from the Iranian artist.

Their dark echoes are still to be heard resonating through music’s further reaches.

The blueprint for much of the leftfield music of the past 40 years.

A second LP that successfully sidesteps the shadow of its influential predecessor.

A wonderful, intimate and transportative new album from the German composer.

As blues homage this can’t be faulted, but Rea doesn’t allow his great voice to shine.

An intelligent, decadent debut from the Toronto neo-house quartet

The sound of a band at the very peak of its malevolent powers.

A beautiful, preposterous, ambitious record from a genuinely important band.

Despite moments of brilliance, this latest outing lacks power.

Disappointingly characterised by a rather bland and saccharine air.

Reasserts a forgotten treasure as one of the finest British albums of the 90s.