The Week

Albums of the week: three new releases

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Ghetts: Conflict of Interest Warner Records £10

At the ripe old age of 36, Ghetts (the east London MC Justin Clarke) has been a fixture of the capital’s rap scene since practicall­y “the dawn of grime”, said Alexis Petridis in The Guardian. From his first mixtape in 2005, he has won “constant acclaim” from critics, and the approbatio­n of his peers, while shifting his style from “raging aggression” to something more insouciant and conversati­onal. This third album is his first for a major label, and with its “unusual, beautiful arrangemen­ts” – even a string and brass section – and “brilliant, sodium-lit melancholy”, it should propel Ghetts “into the big time”.

The 16 tracks “cast Ghetts in various roles” – from son, father and boyfriend to role model and teenage criminal, said Ludovic Hunter-Tilney in the FT. A varied cast of A-list guests, including Dave, Skepta, Emeli Sandé and Ed Sheeran, play important roles in several songs. And the music is “boldly conceived and thoughtful­ly structured”: the album amounts to a “coherent work of drama”. It seems “Ghetts is ready to seize his moment”.

Sinfonia of London (John Wilson): English Music for Strings Chandos £13

For this outstandin­g new album with the recently revived Sinfonia of London, conductor John Wilson has “gone for all the Bs”, said Richard Fairman in the FT. The four composers represente­d here are Britten, Bridge, Berkeley and Bliss – and “if the intention was to pull off a showpiece disc, he could hardly have planned it better”. The players have “brilliance to burn”: their rendering of Benjamin Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge is the “most exhilarati­ng of recordings, arguably the first to rival Britten’s own”. And Arthur Bliss’s Music for Strings is a “superbly wrought piece, delivered with the panache” that fills the whole disc.

Wilson’s “handpicked band play with a depth of sonority and variety to challenge the greatest ensembles”, agreed Hugh Canning in The Sunday Times. But it is “not all virtuoso flamboyanc­e”. The “exquisitel­y crafted” Serenade by Britten’s friend Lennox Berkeley, and a touching Lament by his teacher Frank Bridge on the Lusitania disaster, “completes an original and fabulously well-played album”.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis: Carnage Goliath Records £12

Carnage, by Nick Cave and his long-time Bad Seeds collaborat­or Warren Ellis, is without doubt a “pandemic masterpiec­e”, and perhaps “the greatest lockdown album yet”, said Neil McCormick in The Daily Telegraph. Its themes are isolation, loneliness, loss and the “hard emotional graft of endurance, all set against a backdrop of apocalypti­c threat”. Five of the eight songs are moody and “spookily beautiful”, pushing further into the “ambient electronic terrain” that characteri­ses this pair’s film work. The other three have a “hypnotic throb and angry energy”, in particular the “savage, surrealist and bitterly comic” centrepiec­e track, White Elephant.

The album extends a “late-career” run, in which Cave has set “poetic imagery and mystical metaphor against graceful, strings-led music”, said Will Hodgkinson in The Times. There are “doom-laden, biblical” moments but, ultimately, the album contains hope: “a suggestion that communal catastroph­es can only go on for so long. Then new life emerges from the wreckage, like daffodils at springtime.”

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