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Yoko Ono: Approximately Infinite Universe (Apple)
Review by Ian MacDonald, NME, 20 January 1973
IN AS MUCH AS the Lennons have spent four years trying to turn self-dramatisation into an art-form, the criticism of indulgence so often aimed at ...
Kraftwerk: Exceller-8, Radio-Activity
Review by Miles, NME, 31 January 1976
EXCELLER 8 IS a 'best of album taken from the three Vertigo albums that Kraftwerk have released in this country and it's a good selection ...
The Everly Brothers: Songs Our Daddy Taught Us
Review by Mick Farren, NME, 6 March 1976
IN A QUIET sort of way, 1975 saw an Everly Brothers revival of sorts. Warner Brothers released their magnificent Walk Right Back With The Everlys, ...
Spirit: Future Games — A Magical Kahauna Dream (Mercury Import)
Review by Max Bell, NME, 19 March 1977
THE RETURN of Tab, Hunk and Dr. Sardonicus — more outrageously smooth than ever before. A new Spirit album is not only becoming a frequent ...
Graham Parker: Squeezing Out Sparks
Review by Tony Stewart, NME, 17 March 1979
WHEN YOU PLAY this album for perhaps the tenth time, when you return to 'You Can't Be Too Strong' and listen to that one song ...
Jim Carroll: The Jim Carroll Band: Catholic Boy (Atco)
Review by Cynthia Rose, NME, 31 January 1981
BLOND, FLESHLY-FACED and 30 years old, Jim Carroll was slated for status as a rock poet back in '71. Meant to be the other half ...
Review by Chris Bohn, NME, 24 April 1982
AS A PERFORMER, Laurie Anderson is little short of phenomenal: a slight Chaplinesque figure, she's as much vaudeville as she is artist, in that she's ...
Review by Barney Hoskyns, NME, 16 April 1983
I MUST applaud the mysterious Tony D for his live review of The Barracudas (12/2/83) the gig excited me in exactly the same way. ...
The Smiths: The Smiths (Rough Trade)
Review by Don Watson, NME, 25 February 1984
"And if you must go to work tomorrow Well, if I were you I wouldn't bother" ('Still Ill') ...
The Style Council: Cafe Bleu (Polydor)
Review by Hector Cook, NME, 17 March 1984
ME AND my ever-changing moods. One minute I hear 'Strength Of Your Nature' and think Paul Weller's cracked it, next I'm hearing some snippet of ...
The Triffids: Born Sandy Devotional
Review by Mat Snow, NME, 21 June 1986
THE MID-'80s motto is that irony has gone mainstream. Self-confidence and hope for the future have evaporated in glittering, actressy despair, to be replaced by ...
The Style Council: Style Council: The Cost Of Loving (Polydor)
Review by Len Brown, NME, 7 February 1987
LISTEN TO the wordly-wise Cappuccino Kid: "...this affair of the heart, once it began, dispelled all the bitternenss I felt at the world, and gave ...
The Style Council: The Singular Adventures Of The Style Council: Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (Polydor)
Review by David Quantick, NME, 11 March 1989
THE COVER OF The Style Council's most blatantly angry single, 'Walls Come Tumbling Down', bears not a picture of rioting or the Prime Minister on ...
Chemical Brothers, The: Apothecary Now: The Chemical Brothers : Exit Planet Dust (Junior Boys Own)
Review by Stephen Dalton, NME, 24 June 1995
THINK OF THE truly great, era-defining albums of the last 18 months. Definitely Maybe would be in there. Ill Communication and Dummy, too. ...
The Jam: Direction Reaction Creation
Review by Keith Cameron, NME, May 1997
IF WE ACCEPT pop as the religion of youth in the last quarter of the 20th century, then there can be no more striking example ...
Review by Stephen Dalton, NME, 20 February 1999
ROBERT WYATT has been a ghostly presence in progressive British pop for the last 30 years. ...
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