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David Bowie - Blackstar

Joe Byrd & The Field Hippies - The American Metaphysical Circus

Shirley Collins - The Power Of True Love Knot / Harvest Years (Anthems in Eden / Love, Death & The Lady / Amaranth)

Alice Coltrane - Journey In Satchidananda / Universal Consciousness

John Coltrane - A Love Supreme

Coral - Butterfly House / Distance Inbetween

Country Joe & The Fish - I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die / Carousel Ballroom 1968

Miles Davis - Get Up With It / Agharta

Dead Can Dance - Wake

The Flaming Lips - The Terror

The Future Sounds Of London - Teachings From The Electronic Brain

Grateful Dead - Live/Dead

P J Harvey - The Hope Six Demolition Project

The Incredible String Band - The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter / Wee Tam & The Big Huge / Live At The Fillmore 1968

Kronos Quartet - Pieces Of Africa

Curtis Mayfield - Curtis (expanded) / Roots

Psychic TV - Force The Hand Of Chance (2cd) / Live In Glasgow Plus / Live In Astoria / Live At The Mean Fiddler / Live In Thee East Village / Alienist

Sequentia - Saints (Hildegard Von Bingen)

Ravi Shankar - Chants Of India

Shivkumar Sharma, Brijbhushan Kabra & Hariprasad Chaurasia - Call Of The Valley

Archie Shepp - Kwanza

Sonic Youth - Evol

Spirit - Time Circle

White Hills - Heads On Fire

Jason Simon – Familiar Haunts. Bloke from Dead Meadow goes Appalachian folk psych – better than that description suggests: https://jasonsimon.bandcamp.com/album/familiar-haunts-2

Douglas Dare – Aforger. This album has well and truly taken up residence in my head. It is fiendishly melodic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0An_bRNkAf0

Ryler Walker – Primrose Green. Having really liked Golden Sings That Have Been Sung from earlier this year, finally got round to listening to the album that first brought him to tastemakers’ attention. It’s undeniably well-done, but chronically derivative in places, particularly of John Martyn. The packaging – from the pseudo-hipster sleevenotes to the rustic golden age psych imagery (featuring poor Ryley holding a chicken and hugging a sheep) – is also so intent on screaming “authentic artist here!” that it similarly tips over into pastiche. Given the grittier, more interesting material on this year’s album, it’s no wonder he’s already practically disowned this one.

Siouxsie & The Banshees – Juju. See below. Had never listened to a proper S&TB album before. ‘Spellbound’ is just perfect, but other great tracks here too. It sets the template for goth, but you can hardly then blame them for the likes of The Mission (whose first few EPs were actually pretty great)

Concretism – Rabies Warning / Another Way Of Looking At It / Don’t Forget The Empties EPs. Won’t keep banging on about this guy, but I totally love his stuff, the very definition of hauntological electronica: https://concretism.bandcamp.com/

Listen With Father:

Eno – Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy). What a joy this album is, there really is nothing else like it (other than the two Eno albums either side of it, of course). I think the kids were interested, if nothing else…

Siouxsie & The Banshees – Once Upon A Time. Moving onto the kids’ list of favourites. Coincidentally, both this album and the Eno one feature whistling – ‘Happy House’ and ‘Back In Judy’s Jungle’ respectively…