Album Review – Cigarettes After Sex

Cigarettes After Sex -‘Cigarettes After Sex.’ (Partisan Records)

In the year that two of the British shoegazing acts of the 1990s, Ride and Slowdive, release their first albums in over two decades, along come an American act from the same ilk to give us a debut album that suggests that the sound the Americans dubbed dreampop is continuing to produce absolutely wonderful sounds. There’s also echoes of slow-core type bands like Low and Mazzy Star, with a nod to the 1980s 4AD roster of acts like the Cocteau Twins and This Mortal Coil with the shimmering melancholy within.

That’s not to dismiss Cigarettes After Sex as some kind of retro sound. This is a fresh take on it all, and the first thing that draws you in is the androgynous voice of Greg Gonzalez. It’s slow and dreamy music, with a definite noir undertone- as if David Lynch had decided

online pharmacy order ampicillin with best prices today in the USA

that a shoegaze-dreampop band was needed for one of his projects.

A number of the tracks on this album

online pharmacy order diflucan with best prices today in the USA

have been doing the rounds for a while – opening track ‘K’ first appeared as a single back in late 2015 – but the reality is a very cohesive whole, without a duff track among them. Even more reassuring in this age of streaming is how this is an album that can be played

online pharmacy clomid for sale with best prices today in the USA

from start to finish, with ‘Each Time You Fall In Love’ and ‘John Wayne’ amongst the highlights.

Without wishing to descend into hyperbole, I genuinely expect this album to do well on the year-end lists (hey! Don’t you realise we’re going to have to start thinking about this when summer’s over?) and it will deserve to be there. To paraphrase Wilco, I can’t help wondering if they are trying to break listeners’ hearts. But what a soundtrack to be heartbroken to…

****

Ice Cube: Good Cop, Bad Cop’ – angry, timely – and very good indeed

Ice Cube is shortly to release a 25th anniversary edition of his Death Certificate album, complete with three new songs. (Actually it came out in 1991, but let’s not split hairs.) One of those three new songs is the utterly astounding ‘Good Cop Bad Cop’.
Over an infectious horn loop that’s married to drums that sound…urgent,

buy trazodone online nsstulsa.com/mt-content/uploads/2021/08/png/trazodone.html no prescription pharmacy

Ice takes on police corruption and brutality and how tackling this in 2017 is as urgent as when he started performing 30 years ago: “Black Lives Matter/It’s not chit chatter/Cause all they wanna do is scatter brain matter/A mind is a terrible thing to waste/A nine is terrible in your face.” This has the potential to be his biggest crossover hit since ‘It Was A Good Day’.

Ice Cube has been upfront in this being a ‘Fuck Da Police’ for 2017. Speaking to Zane Lowe, he said: “We [NWA] had done ‘Fuck tha Police’ so many years ago…with the emergence of Straight Outta Compton the movie, we realized that it’s still the same thing that’s going on. We needed a more up-to-

buy doxycycline online nsstulsa.com/mt-content/uploads/2021/08/png/doxycycline.html no prescription pharmacy

date version of the community talking to the police and the authorities.”

This is angry, timely, pertinent – and very good indeed.

 

Album Review – Profusion

Profusion -‘Where Do I Begin?’ (First Word Records)

Pro

online pharmacy order lopressor w

order suhagra online in the best USA pharmacy www.indcheminternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-suhagra.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

ith best prices today in the USA

fusion is a collaboration between K15, or Kieron Ifil, and Emeson. It’s fair to say that this title is accurate – and hopefully the beginning of a beautiful (musical) partnership, to slightly misquote Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca.

A collaboration in the sense that both men have great pedigrees and achievements already before this record came into being. K15 has a track record of working in different forms such as house, jazz, soul, hip-hop and techno. Even if you’ve never heard these projects, they have all rubbed off on this album. Emeson has also worked across a multitude of genres and is also a successful actor, having appeared in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and various Marvel comic adaptations to name but a few projects.

Of course, absolutely none of this would matter if the end result wasn’t so damn brilliant. It starts with that sense of questioning what lies within from the album cover, in the fir

buy symbicort online mexicanpharmacyonlinerx.net/buy-symbicort.html no prescription pharmacy

st instance. Just as Marvin Gaye looks out at the rain on the cover of his seminal album What’s Going On, so here the two men look out at the world as if deciding their next move(s).

In writing this review I’ve listened to this album no less than five times. Not because it didn’t grab on first listen (it most certainly did) – but I felt I had to check what my ears were telling me. That here is an album that melds all manner of music – from jazz to hip-hop to drum’n’bass and electronica, ultimately coming up with an album that is, above all, soulful. It feels utterly contemporary, whilst drawing on a range of influences that might loosely be termed ‘urban.’

Whether it’s the title track, which opens the album and draws you in from the word go, or the heartbreaking ‘Time’s Up,’ Emeson’s voice is one that both commands and soothes. Married to K15’s beats, melodies and productions, this is not just a collaboration, it’s a connection. It’s not to say that it will make a connection with everyone – metalheads and indie-landfill lovers may not find much on here that will grab ’em.

To these ears, this is a record which is for the heart and feet, to chill to on summer days (good luck with that for our UK readers!) or snuggle up with on winter nights. It feels like it is a continuing lineage of a number of classic records – Massive Attack‘s Blue Lines and The Streets‘ Original Pirate Material, certainly, with nods to both Burial and Zero 7.

There are some moments which seem to perhaps go on a little longer than need be, a smoothness tha

online pharmacy order wellbutrin with best prices today in the USA

t heard out of context might commit the aesthetic crime of being ‘soundtrack to a middle-class dinner party.’ Whoever’s listenin

order kamagra oral jelly online in the best USA pharmacy www.indcheminternational.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-kamagra-oral-jelly.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

g is almost certainly in for a treat.

This hasn’t had the hugest amount of exposure and coverage from what I can see from the web…yet. But the – dammit – utterly bloody brilliance of the

buy levitra super force online mexicanpharmacyonlinerx.net/buy-levitra-super-force.html no prescription pharmacy

whole thing is something that could well be a critical and commercial hit.

And that’s where you come in, dear listener.

****1/2

Where Do I Begin? is out now on First Word Records

 

 

 

Foo Fighters unleash brilliant video for ‘Run’

I guess like a lot of people, my initial interest in the Foo Fighters was because Dave Grohl had been in Nirvana. I bought the debut album the week the self-titled debut came out in 1995 (if memory serves, the day before school finished for me for ever) and I’ve enjoyed them on their own terms ever since.

In the last week they’ve unveiled a new song ‘ Run’ and not only is it a fabulous song, but the video is fantastic.  With a sentiment about getting old but not taking any crap that hasn’t been shown

buy provigil online www.skincareandlaser.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/png/provigil.html no pres

buy xenical online infobuyblo.com/buy-xenical.html no prescription pharmacy

cription pharmacy

so much since Pulp‘s ‘Help The Aged’ (bloody hell, that’s 20 year

buy fluoxetine online infobuyblo.com/buy-fluoxetine.html no prescription pharmacy

s old now as well), the six-minute-plus promo sees the now six-piece sho

zepbound online in the best USA pharmacy thecifhw.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/png/zepbound.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

wing t

best online pharmacy with fast delivery augmentin for sale with the lowest prices today in the USA

hat there’s no harm to be had in rocking out, and taking no

vidalista online in the best USA pharmacy thecifhw.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/png/vidalista.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

prisoners while they do it. Without wishing to give too much away, the band feature as part of a bunch of elderly miscreants who cause havoc in a churc

h before carjacking some kids. As you do. Pipe and slippers can wait.

As

best online pharmacy with fast delivery hydrochlorothiazide for sale with the lowest prices today in the USA

the birthday cards say ‘Growing old is inevitable, growing up is optional.’ Damn skipper!

 

Getting stoked for Ride’s comeback album

buy symbicort online yourcialisrx.com/buy-symbicort.html no prescription pharmacy

I wrote a few

best online pharmacy with fast delivery furosemide for sale with the lowest prices today in the USA
buy lexapro online yourcialisrx.com/buy-lexapro.html no prescription pharmacy

months ago about how excited I was about the return of Ride. Their first album for twenty-one years, Weather Diaries, will be released on June 16.

I’ve previously posted two tracks that were ava

buy azithromycin online http://malpracticeexperts.com/imagesho/gif/azithromycin.html no pres

best online pharmacy with fast delivery artvigil for sale with the lowest prices today in the USA

cription pharmacy

ilable from the album, ‘Charm Assault’ and ‘Home Is A Feeling.’ Having not been able to write much during the last few months (loooonnng story) I didn’t post ‘All I Want’, also taken from the forthcoming album, but now I do…

h

buy ventolin online http://malpracticeexperts.com/imagesho/gif/ventolin.html no prescription pharmacy

ttps://youtu.be/8vFHPdbHrMQ

…along with the remix of the track done by GLOK (AKA Ride’s Andy Bell), which clocks in at ten minutes long, and is also rather fine in its own right.

 

Ride will be t

online pharmacy order addyi with best prices today in the USA

ouring England and Scotland in November, the dates are as follows, and tickets are available from tomorrow (June 7). :

Tuesday 7th Nov London Forum Kentish Town
Wednesday 8th Nov B

online pharmacy order vidalista with best prices today in the USA

irmingham O2 Institute
Thursday 9th Nov Bristol SWX
Friday 10th Nov Leeds Beckett Student Union
Sunday 12th Nov Liverpool Academy
Monday 13th Nov Newcastle Boiler Shop
Tuesday 14th Nov Edinburgh Queens Hall

Placebo update ’80s art classic

Lots of bands have strange evolutions over time – and Talk Talk went from being possible rivals to Duran Duran in 1982 to ambient art-rockers over the course of their five studio albums over the next decade.

Placebo, meanwhile, may have emerged around the same time as the Britpop crowd, but they’re still going strong over twenty years later, without having had to cross over to

order revia online in the best USA pharmacy www.thesupplementreviews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-revia.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

the comeback/nostalgia trail.

Placebo have just unveiled the video for their version of Talk Talk’s 1986 hit ‘Life’s What You Make It,‘ which probably remains Talk Talk’s best known song. Placebo’s Brian Molko had a concept in mind that was loosely based around the original 1986 Talk Talk video that was shot at night on London’s Wimbledon Common. Directed by Tim Pope – most famous for his work with The Cure – the video featured the band surrounded by nature, complete with, as Molko puts it, little beasties crawling over leaves. Brian felt that there could be an updated version, where the band would be robots playing instruments and that e-waste would replace nature, as it appears to be doing only a few decades after the song’s original release. The brief that the band put out to prospective directors was short, simple and open to interpretation: e-waste, please!” 

The only response they got was from Sasha Rainbow. The resulting video was shot in Agbogbloshie, a former wetland in the heart of Accra, in Ghana, which is home to one of the world’s largest electronic waste dumps. It sets an apocalyptic backdrop of first-world waste against the daily lives of those who inhabit this thoroughly otherworldly space.

She explains: “The two boys in the film live in this extraordinary place, which for me, highlights a human’s ability to a

online pharmacy buy vermox online with best prices today in the USA

dapt with incredible strength, resili

order paxil online in the best USA pharmacy www.thesupplementreviews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-paxil.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

ence, and humanity.” She adds: “I hoped to capture the environment in a dreamily meditative way that would at once juxtapose and yet synergise with the theme of the song, and glimpse at part of the repercussions of our current technological revolution. On the one hand, technology is enabling us to create things beyond our wildest imagination, and yet little discussion has been had about what to do with all our discarded e-waste.”

Placebo will also be on tour in the UK in October:

Sat 7  Edinburgh Usher Hall
Sun 8  Dundee Caird Hall
Tue 10  D

online pharmacy buy provigil online with best prices today in the USA

oncaster Dome
Wed 11  Blackpool Empress Ballroom
Fri 13 Reading Rivermead
Sat 14  Cardiff Motorpoint Arena
Mon 16 Portsmouth Guildhall
Tue 17  Swindon Oasis
Fri 20  Plymouth Pavilions
Sat 21 Wolverhampton Civic Hall
Mon 23  London O2 Brixton Academy

The return of Arcade Fire

Rejoice, people, for Arcade Fire have announced the release of their fifth album, to be released on July 28.

It’s entitled Everything Now and the video for the first single, the ti

buy synthroid online visualhealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/jpg/synthroid.html no prescription pharmacy

tle track, can be watched below. It’s a glo

buy erythromycin online v

isualhealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/jpg/erythromycin.html no prescription pharmacy

buy zocor online noprescriptionbuyonlinerxx.com/buy-zocor.html no prescription pharmacy

rious piece of uplifting anthemic work, that suggests the signs are good for the parent album.

htt

order prednisolone online in the best USA pharmacy visualhealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-prednisolone.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

ps://youtu.be/zC30BYR3CUk

Their collaboration with the legendary Mavis Staples , ‘I Give You Power’, which came out earlier this year, may or may not be on the album, but if you’ve missed it, you should che

buy cialis soft tabs online noprescriptionbuyonlinerxx.com/buy-cialis-soft-tabs.html no prescription pharmacy

ck it out:

Finally, anothe

order zyban online in the best USA pharmacy visualhealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-zyban.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

r new song ‘Creature Comfort’ appeared on YouTube of a performance at last month’s Primavera festival.

 

prelone online in the best USA pharmacy www.auriculotherapy.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/jpg/prelone.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

 

 

 

 

 

Film Review

It Was Fifty Years Ago Today! The Beatl

buy strattera online www.biop.cz/slimbox/css/png/strattera.html no prescription pharmacy

es: Sgt. Pepper & Beyond (dir. Alan G. Parker)

It’s easy to sneer at The Beatles, for a lot of people at least. Pop music for people who don’t like pop music. A band who were more than the sum of their parts (reinforced by several decades of four very very variable solo careers). A band who were too successful for their own good, and everyone else’s, with the regards that their back catalogue is constantly repackaged and their story constantly retold, without (m)any new angles. 

There are, of course, some people who delight in sacrificing sacred cows, to the point that such an activity is as clichéd as those they believe they are attacking. But life is too short to deal with such idiocy.

The Beatles’ eighth studio album, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, will celebrate its 50th anniversary on June 1. That’s how old it is now, and it still has a hold on people. Why is it so lauded? Because it was groundbreaking in so many ways, in which this documentary explains.

In many ways – and I mean this with the greatest respect to all involved – it continues this important story where Ron Howard’s excellent documentary from last year Eight Days A Week: The Touring Years reached. It starts off with the Beatles  about to go off to the US on what would be their final tour. This was against a backdrop of protests in the Bible Belt of religious objections to John Lennon’s remarks that the Beatles were now bigger than Christ. This included record burnings in Memphis, and Lennon having to apologise and explain his remarks.

This was a time of transition. Though the most recent Beatles studio albums – 1965’s Rubber Soul and 1966’s Revolver had seen them up their game, they were still looking to take their music further. Yet much of these albums weren’t played on the tour as it was felt that they couldn’t be replicated live.They were talking about quitting live performance, something that worried manager Brian Epstein, who was in his element organis

buy cephalexin online www.biop.cz/slimbox/css/png/cephalexin.html no prescription pharmacy

ing tours. His death, a matter of months after the album’s release is handled sensitively.

The musical world was changing. There’s exploration of the move from being described as pop to rock, notion of long term rather than disposable. This wasn’t some controversy along the lines of Dylan going electric, but certainly musically and lyrically the band had left three chord tunes about love far behind them.

This documentary explores the making of the album, the response and what followed. It transpires that ‘When I’m 64’ had been played by McCartney at the cavern back in ’63. EMI were somewhat aghast at how much the album cost and how long it took to make. Three months and £25,000 on one album were unthinkable for the time.

The documentary is a mixture of archived footage with the Beatles and new interviews with associates. The latter include their authorised biographer Hunter Davies and Jenny Boyd (sister of Patti, George Harrison’s first wife). They explore how The Beatles were pushing back against the image of the ‘loveable moptops.’ Not for the first time, the theory is pushed again that it was McCartney not Lennon who was the avant-garde one.

Sure, much of the story may be familiar. But it’s beautifully told and explored, and far from a cash-in or rehash. Given that there were still a few more chapters to be written, I hope that Alan G. Parker will get the opportunity to explore this for us, too.

 

The return of The National

It’s funny, considering

keflex on

order clenbuterol online in the best USA pharmacy www.immunitytherapycenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-clenbuterol.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

line in the best USA pharmacy cosmeticdermcenter.com/wp-content/themes/bridge/img/png/keflex.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

that I was fairly immune to the charm

onlin

e pharmacy buy female viagra online with best prices today in the USA

s of The National for a long time, I was rather pleased when an email from 4AD dropped into my inbox early this morning. Much of that is no doubt to

order prednisolone online in the best USA pharmacy www.immunitytherapycenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-prednisolone.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

do with just how brilliant Trouble Will Find

online pharmacy buy zithromax no prescription with best prices today in the USA

Me was.

So yes, there is a new album from the

online pharmacy buy mebendazole online with best prices today in the USA

National, their se

buy ozempic online bloinfobuy.com/buy-ozempic.html no prescription pharmacy

venth, comi

buy hydroxychloroquine online bloinfobuy.com/buy-hydroxychloroquine.html no prescription pharmacy

ng out on September 8. It’s entitled Sleep Well Beast and the tracklisting is as follows:

  1. Nobody Else Will Be There
  2. Day I Die
  3. Walk It Back
  4. The System Only Dreams in Total Darkness
  5. Born to Beg
  6. Turtleneck
  7. Empire Line
  8. I’ll Still Destroy You
  9. Guilty Party
  10. Carin at the Liquor Store
  11. Dark Side of the Gym
  12. Sleep Well Beast
buy clomid online cosmeticdermcenter.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/jpg/clomid.html no prescription pharmacy

The first track to be released from the album is ‘The System Only Dreams In Total Darkness’ and yo

online pharmacy buy phenergan no prescription with best prices today in the USA

u can watch the video below:

 

Album Review – Mark Lanegan Band

It’s quite something to note that Gargoyle is Mark Lanegan’s te

buy colchicine online http://culia.net/onlinebooking/html/colchicine.html no prescription pharmacy

nth solo album. He first gained attention leading grunge godfathers Screaming Trees back in the 1980s – and a wealth of projects and collaborations have followed sin

online pharmacy super cialis for sale with best prices today in the USA

ce 1984. If Screaming Trees didn’t quite reach the Everest-like commercial peaks of Nirvana, Lanegan has managed to successfully immerse himself in vastly different musical activities- and compared to a number of his contemporaries avoid repeating himself for decades, turning into a totalitarian bandleader or simply winding up dead.

It does, of course, help that he’s got that voice. Comparable- in a good way – to the deep bass voices of Leonard Cohen (RIP) or Tom Waits, it’s leathery and gruff, yet still inherently musical. Frankly, Lanegan could recite the phonebook or a shopping list, and his expression would still be enticing listening. When the first track to be released from the album ‘Nocturne’ arrived a few months ago, this was still there, greeting the listener like a wry smile over the airwaves.

Where does Gargoyle fit into his catalogue? There’s definitely a sense of following on from 2012’s Blues Funeral and 2014’s Phantom Radio. These albums have a sense of an alternative rock history, drawing in not just grunge and dabbling with electronics in various forms, but also 80s goth music. While you don’t hear much of this on the Screaming Trees albums, these have come to the fore far more on recent albums.

Whilst entire dissertations could be written on the meanings behind ‘goth’ and ‘gothic’ you can’t fail to pick up on these themes from the album cover alone. It’s a gothic church fence, like the kind you would

online pharmacy clomid for sale with best prices today in the USA

find around a 19th century style church, where one assumes you might also find a, um, gargoy

buy cefixime online http://culia.net/onlinebooking/html/cefixime.html no prescription pharmacy

le. 

And this is perhaps where the album might struggle a bit. It has some great songs – in the pre-internet era, you might have said the aforementioned ‘Nocturne’ was worth the price of admission alone – and ‘Fir

order mounjaro online in the best USA pharmacy medilaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-mounjaro.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

st Day Of Winter’ and ‘Emperor’ are amongst other strong contenders as well. Yet somehow, whilst it’s a decent album, it can lack originality at times and the feeling can be that somehow it’s not quite the sum of its many parts.   It’s gothic, it’s noir, and it’s kind of fun, yet somehow it doesn’t quite connect at the end of the day.

***

https://youtu.be/yXdwuqB7p

order flagyl online in the best USA pharmacy medilaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/wiki/wiki-flagyl.html no prescription with fast delivery drugstore

DQ