fri 10/01/2025

New Music Reviews

WOMAD 2013, Charlton Park - Days Three and Four

Peter Culshaw

Arriving early on Saturday, the first music I was exposed to in the tranquil arboretum area of the Radio 3 Stage was the mesmeric and gorgeous sounds of Leicester sitarist Roopa Panesar floating from the stage, with dreamy oboe-like shenhai adding to the musical mix.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Saint Etienne, Honey Ltd., Chas & Dave, ZTT

Kieron Tyler


Saint Etienne Present Songs for a Central Park PicnicVarious Artists: Saint Etienne Present Songs for a Central Park Picnic

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WOMAD 2013, Charlton Park - Day Two

Caspar Gomez

If there’s a patron saint of WOMAD it must be Bob Marley. His visage, serious but gentle, peers out from more T-shirts than I care to count. And all the festival-goers who don’t have WOMAD-standard long, white, straggly hair sport dreadlocks. The silliest haircut goes to a fellow in (again) WOMAD-standard travellers’ pantaloons who sports small knots of hair, each tied with a different coloured elastic band.

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Wu-Tang Clan, O2 Academy Brixton

James Williams

Just how loyal is the average hip hop fan? This was the question on many lips after the fiasco that the previous Wu-Tang tour in 2011 turned out to be. Their last sojourn on these shores was marred by members dropping out at the last minute and a general lack of organisation. There was pressure this time for the band to deliver.

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WOMAD 2013, Charlton Park - Day One

Caspar Gomez

I am a WOMAD virgin. “Princey will be here later, he usually frequents this bar,” a man with straggly white hair tells me as I wander aimlessly about. I think he means Prince Rogers Nelson, the diminutive rock star who sang “Purple Rain”, and I grow vaguely animated. He starts telling me about how last year he advised Prince not to shoot civilians and begins a short diatribe about how Prince is falling into the ways of his father and his grandfather. My mind is slow.

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Reissue CDs Weekly: Michael Hurley, James Govan, Dan Penn, 14 Iced Bears

Kieron Tyler


Michael Hurley Armchair BoogieMichael Hurley: Armchair Boogie / Hi Fi Snock Uptown

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Hermeto Pascoal, Ronnie Scott's

peter Quinn

Squeaking toy pigs. Tea pots. Bicycle pumps. Yes, the dynamic Brazilian composer, arranger and multi-instrumentalist Hermeto Pascoal was back in town, making a rare appearance at Ronnie Scott's.

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Devendra Banhart, Barbican Centre

Russ Coffey

Last night the “freaky” Devendra Banhart didn’t make an appearance. No songs were performed cross-legged, nor were there any wig-outs. For the majority of the evening the 32-year-old American-Venezuelan hippy was, by his standards, practically understated. In keeping with his new album, Mala, he chose to emphasise songwriting over personality. For those of us who were beginning to lose faith in him, it all came as something of a relief.

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Friends, Coalition, Brighton

Thomas H Green

Samantha Urbani is one of the sassiest frontwomen in all pop, a sexy, feline creature whose polyamorous lifestyle fuels her lyrics and adds to her projected sensuality. She sits outside Brighton seafront venue Coalition, watching water-skiers ride the mill pond sea in balmy summer heat, but one whisper from a bandmate in her ear and she's onstage within a minute, attacking opening song "Shattered".

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Bellowhead, Billy Bragg and Karine Polwart, Kew Gardens

Tim Cumming

Sunday evening was the last of a week of Kew the Music concerts – from Blondie to Paul Weller via Jools Holland and Leona Lewis – six nights, 8,000 people per night. The gate money is going towards the £400m facelift of the Temperate House, where the stage was set for the closing Sunday night of English and Scottish folk songs from Karine Polwart, Billy Bragg and Bellowhead.

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