thu 14/08/2025

New Music Reviews

James, O2 Academy, Brixton

Russ Coffey

If one thing unites James and last night's support act, Echo & the Bunnymen, it’s that they both tend to be underrated. James’s big college rock songs can overshadow the true splendour of their weird, poetic and off-kilter worldview. The Bunnymen’s problem is that, outside their fanbase, too many simply know them for their song “The Killing Moon”, which featured in the film Donnie Darko. Last night, they didn't seem to want to do much to change that.

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The South Bank Show: Tim Minchin, Sky Arts 1

Tom Birchenough

The new South Bank Show has glided into its second season with a seemingly effortless profile of multi-hyphenate Tim Minchin. In case we’ve forgotten what exactly we admire him for these days so varied has been his decade-long career been, through satire, rock, musical comedy, stage performance, to co-creator of the RSC transfer-spectacular Matilda that's now storming Broadway then this was a good reminder.

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Kurt Elling, Ronnie Scott's

peter Quinn

OK, so you've given your copies of Rod's It Had To Be You and Robbie's Swing When You're Winning a few listens (released many, many years ago, the latter is still top of the iTunes jazz albums chart in a gazillion countries). You've memorised the words and now you quite fancy giving “Summertime” a bit of a go. A touch of rubato here, a judicious tweak of the melody line there and, hey, you're singing jazz! Er, not quite.

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Brass Band Battle: Serbia vs Mexico, Barbican

Garth Cartwright

Remember the Brass Band Battle of a couple years ago? The one that pitted Romania’s Fanfare Ciocarlia vs Serbia’s Boban & Marko Markovic Orkestar on CD and stage? The concert at London’s Koko was great fun, less a "battle" and more a good humoured showcase for two great Gypsy brass bands to tear it up.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Sandie Shaw, Country Joe & the Fish, David Bowie, Morrissey

Kieron Tyler

 

Sandie Shaw SandieSandie Shaw: Sandie/Me/Love Me Please Love Me

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Thatcher: The Sound and the Fury

theartsdesk

The political legacy of Margaret Thatcher is being sifted and analysed all over the world. But what of the music she left behind? The first and only female Prime Minister had barely a cultural bone in her body, but on her watch a young generation of musicians had something to kick against or, in one or two cases, a set of values to emulate. The music writers of theartsdesk have identified some of the songs which define the age of Thatcher.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Shuggie Otis, Peter King, Electronic, Billy Mackenzie

Kieron Tyler


Shuggie Otis Inspiration Information Wings of LoveShuggie Otis: Inspiration Information/Wings of Love

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Emeli Sandé, Usher Hall, Edinburgh

Michael Stephen

Only an April fool would deny Emeli Sandé her right to rule as the home-grown pocket diva for the Smartphone generation. The current elfin queen of the UK pop charts took the stage in Edinburgh last night having already won over her capacity crowd on Amazon, i-Tunes and in miles of supermarket aisles.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Simple Minds, Klaus Dinger, The Primitives, Transvision Vamp

Kieron Tyler


Simple Minds Celebrate The Greatest Hits +Simple Minds: Celebrate – The Greatest Hits +

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Mari Wilson, The Komedia, Brighton

Thomas H Green

Long before Amy Winehouse, there was a north London retro soul'n'jazz girl with a beehive hairdo making inroads into the Top 40. However, after a short run of hits in the early Eighties Mari Wilson never achieved the epic popularity of her dark-haired successor. Thus we find her in a Brighton basement playing a cruise ship set to a chicken-in-a-basket audience.

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