Johnny Campbell, Avalon. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 7.5/10

We all search for Avalon, the mythical lost island in which so much history, so much of our own island’s tale is based upon, the chivalric code, the fight against the darkness and evil; it may not seem it but there was a time when we could perhaps hold our heads up high and lead the charge against the legions of hate and wagers of desolation and destruction.

Aerial Salad, Roach. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Aggressive and punchy, it seems at times the young musicians and artists coming through today have forgotten just how important it is to pick a fight with authority and put their faces square up to flabby, sometimes spineless persona of those who would dictate their future to them. It doesn’t need to be physical, just edgy, exhilarating and showing just enough strength to show that you are not scared, everything is too safe across the board, we have all misplaced the anger because we are too comfortable to take on the Roach that is discrimination and injustice.

The Blue Hour, Always. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

There is more in this world than we can ever truly perceive, we think we feel the depth of our emotions but we never truly understand or grasp just how much damage or elation we cause ourselves in the pursuit of forever, of wanting to search for the Always as we forget the here and now. The horizon is majestic but so too is the foreground, so too is The Blue Hour in which strikes the ethereal and the charge of enlightenment.

When Rivers Meet, Liberty. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

It is a statement of intent, of courage, of absolute faith, to start an album with a cover of one of the most recognisable songs of the 20th Century. To put your own spin on a track that is part of the musical heritage of Johnny Cash, June Carter Cash and Merle Kilgore takes bravery, imagination and a flair that all three American music legends would have not only have recognised as pure but surely would have congratulated for its inventiveness and music Liberty. Not everyone can carry off the song Ring of Fire in such fashion, but then not everybody is When Rivers Meet.

Just An Empty Sheet Of Paper.

 

If I leave a blank page,

If I should just leave the scab

alone, like me, not pick at it,

not to get my finger nail

underneath it and slightly

leave it looking off coloured compared

to the rest of the skin that surrounds it,

would that please you, would it make you

jovial, a feeling of being eight

clouds above me, far out of sight, spit down

to my eye and showing me the arse

you wish me to kiss, bare bottom

and needing a wipe,

The Eskies, And Don’t Spare The Horses. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * * *

The melodrama of it all, the upsurge in tempo, the outstanding narrative and quirky, tongue in cheek sense of humour, all in a day’s work it seems for The Eskies and one that has come to enshrined as a platinum standard of music for the Dublin quintet as they release their second And Don’t Spare the Horses.

Ruby Boots, Don’t Talk About It. Album Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

For good or for ill, we are now encouraged to talk about everything that happens to us in our daily lives. If it is important then it is understandable to make sure our voices are heard, that our point of view is given air time and given respect, in a world of 7 billion people it is essential that we don’t curtail anybody’s story, that we don’t censer the stuff of great consequence.

Crooked House. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating * * * *

Cast: Christina Hendricks, Gillian Anderson, Glenn Close, Max Irons, Stefanie Martini, Terence Stamp, Julian Sands, Amanda Abbington, Christian McKay, Roger Ashton-Griffiths, John Heffernan, Preston Nyman, Madeleine Hyland, Petros L. Ioannou, David Cann, Gino Picciano, Andreas Karras, Jacob Fortune-Lloyd, David Kirkbride, Ricky Gabbrielini, David Seddon, Reuben Greeph, Ani Nelson, Lauren Poveda,  Honor Kneafsey.

The Woman In The City.

 

With my wife’s permission,

I spent the late winter Saturday evening

in the memory of embrace and arms

of my first love before

heading back home, cold feet

but undoubtedly a warmed heart.

I have neglected her, since she came

into money. For nine

and half long years I watched, hiding

my interest, trying hard

to forget just what this lady

in sheer blue had once meant to me.

I had loved her

when it seemed no one else would,

when she ragged, poor, shambolic,

Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Film Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Cast: Daisy Ridley, Mark Hamill, Adam Driver, John Boyega, Domhnall Gleeson, Gwendoline Christie, Carrie Fisher, Billie Lourd, Andy Serkis, Oscar Issac, Laura Dern, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Kelly Marie-Tran, Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Daniels, Warwick Davies, Frank Oz, Jimmy Vee, Joonas Suotamo, Adrian Edmondson, Mark Lewis Jones, Hermoine Corfield.

You can’t keep a good franchise down; lord knows they tried with the release of the much maligned episodes one and two of the Star Wars saga, but no matter what, eventually the licence to entertain and print money, sell merchandise and hopefully the true point of making a good story realised on screen will see the series continue.