Cyprus Today

BUGZY REVIVED

The Avalanches and Japanese Breakfast offer up new music this week

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THE AVALANCHES — SINCE I LEFT YOU (20TH ANNIVERSAR­Y EDITION)

PHOENIX-LIKE, Avalanches rose from the ashes of the two big revivals of the 90s, lounge music and disco. Showing their complete command of both of genres, their 2001 breakthrou­gh album Since I Left You establishe­d them as hippest of hip crate-diggers, sounding like a wildly eclectic Fat Boy Slim, or a less po-faced DJ Shadow.

This 20th anniversar­y remix is a timely reminder that they were as capable as matching either in selecting beats that felt simultaneo­usly authentic and bone-tinglingly cool. The squelchy groove of Electricit­y (Original Avalanches Demo) will put the listener in mind of Uptown Funk, while Thank You Caroline pairs gritty retro synth lines with a drum pattern that is undeniably phat.

For an album of remixes, the rhythm is foreground­ed here, even on the country-influenced So Why So Sad, which in Sean Penn’s hands becomes a sonic slab of West Coast sunshine if ever there was one.

The album builds to a mesmerisin­g climax in Sinkane’s remix of Radio, as the album moves away from its more introspect­ive material to dancefloor-oriented vibes.

8/10

(Review by Rachel Farrow)

WOLF ALICE — BLUE WEEKEND

THE follow-up to 2018 Mercury Prize winner Visions Of A Life, Blue Weekend finds Wolf Alice picking up in prime form.

A mostly understate­d musical palette is spiked with occasional bursts, on Play The Greatest Hits and Smile, of the scuzzy speak-shout grunge style of earlier favourites You’re A Germ and Yuk Foo while Ellie Rowsell’s lyrics show a maturity and a hard-won confidence.

Admitting that she was nervous about the emotional vulnerabil­ity of much of the album — and in particular the intimate nature of Feeling Myself — she drew inspiratio­n from other female artists — citing St Vincent specifical­ly — in not holding back and the result is perhaps the band’s best and most complete album to date, highlighte­d by the mid-album pairing of Safe From Heartbreak (if you never fall in love) and How Can I Make It OK.

8/10

(Review by Tom White)

JAPANESE BREAKFAST — JUBILEE

JAPANESE Breakfast’s Michelle Zauner (pictured) is ready to usher in a new decade of hope with her latest album Jubilee.

The third album by the Seoul-born, Oregon-raised artist explores fighting for happiness through joyful noise.

It moves from 80s-inspired pop pieces like Be Sweet, to mellow tones building to an intense guitar-riff crescendo in Posing For Cars.

It is an evolution from her 2016 debut album Psychopomp and 2017’s Soft Sounds From Another Planet which grappled with anguish and loss during her mother’s cancer treatment, and later her death.

“I want to be good — I want to navigate this hate in my heart somewhere better,” she sings.

It is this aspiration for new beginnings which makes this a joyful album for a postpandem­ic world.

8/10

(Review by Naomi Clarke)

FRANK TURNER — ENGLAND KEEP MY BONES (10TH ANNIVERSAR­Y)

A DECADE on from the album that changed everything for Frank Turner, and England Keep My Bones gets the full reissue treatment.

Before this record he was a cult folkpunk hero, but within a year he’d be playing three of the tracks at the London Olympics Ceremony pre-show to a vast audience and selling out Wembley Arena.

The title comes from Shakespear­e and Turner who set out to make an album about English national identity, explained in Wessex Boy as “when I’m here I’m home”.

English Curse, about the death of William II in a hunting accident in the New Forest, while in Rivers he sings “the only place that I’ll lay my hat down is by an English riverside”.

The brief opener Eulogy is about the importance of trying and perseverin­g, while Turner’s reliable backing band The Sleeping Souls took their name from a lyric in I Am Disappeare­d. Standout track and live favourite I Still Believe is on his eternal theme of the redemptive power of music, with its chorus “now who’d have thought that after all, something as simple as rock ‘n’ roll would save us all”.

8/10

(Review by Matthew George)

 ??  ?? LAST year Bugzy Malone was seriously injured after crashing his bike in his native Manchester.
A recreation of that scene appears on the cover of his aptly named second album, The Resurrecti­on.
This is a good idea of what to expect: Autobiogra­phy and brutal honesty.
The Resurrecti­on is equal parts posturing and despair.
The self-titled opener addresses his troubled upbringing while the third part of his ongoing MEN series sees him turning his crash into a moment of pure swagger.
“Now I’m supposed to feel weak?” he raps.
“For some reason though I feel like Wolverine. Like I smashed the side of the car up with my physique, and left a big boy dent in the concrete.” Biblical references abound. Tracks are accented with angelic choruses, heavenly strings and colossal-sounding drums.
After 15 tracks, this sound palette wears a little thin, although Malone’s lyricism keeps things interestin­g.
The Resurrecti­on proves why he remains one of UK rap’s most important figures.
7/10
(Review by Alex Green)
LAST year Bugzy Malone was seriously injured after crashing his bike in his native Manchester. A recreation of that scene appears on the cover of his aptly named second album, The Resurrecti­on. This is a good idea of what to expect: Autobiogra­phy and brutal honesty. The Resurrecti­on is equal parts posturing and despair. The self-titled opener addresses his troubled upbringing while the third part of his ongoing MEN series sees him turning his crash into a moment of pure swagger. “Now I’m supposed to feel weak?” he raps. “For some reason though I feel like Wolverine. Like I smashed the side of the car up with my physique, and left a big boy dent in the concrete.” Biblical references abound. Tracks are accented with angelic choruses, heavenly strings and colossal-sounding drums. After 15 tracks, this sound palette wears a little thin, although Malone’s lyricism keeps things interestin­g. The Resurrecti­on proves why he remains one of UK rap’s most important figures. 7/10 (Review by Alex Green)
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 ??  ?? BUGZY MALONE — THE RESURRECTI­ON
BUGZY MALONE — THE RESURRECTI­ON

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