R.E.M. “Green” ****

Re-issue specialists Rhino Records have opted to mark the 25th anniversary of the release of R.E.M.’s Warner Bros debut offering “Green” with the release of a compelling two-record set featuring the re-mastered original album alongside a rousing concert recording culled from the penultimate date on the band’s 1989  world tour.

The set list of their energised show in Greensboro, North Carolina sprinkled much-loved old favourites such as “The One I Love” and “ Finest Work Song” amongst a batch of newly minted gems led by “Stand,” “Pop Song 89” and “Orange Crush” which captured this unique  band at their most enigmatic and eclectic.

Out now (Rhino Records: £11.80)

The Stranglers, “The Old Testament” ****

This expanded version of The Stranglers’ anthology brings together the first six albums that Guildford’s finest musical exports recorded for United Artists, along with a generous assortment of singles, B-sides and rarities.

The group  may have risen to prominence during the punk era but Dave Greenfield’s inventive keyboard work and Jean-Jacques Burnel’s melodic bass always set them apart from many of their less gifted contemporaries, and this definitive  five-CD set provides the ideal introduction to their forceful and uncompromising sound.

Released on May 27th (EMI Records: £11.99)

Hugh Laurie, “Didn’t It Rain” ***

 

The amiable thespian continues his mildly self-indulgent exploration of American blues with “Didn’t It Rain,” a mellow and warm-hearted collection which finds him stepping out of the spotlight on several tracks as the vocal duties are delegated to  Guatemalan singer-songwriter Gaby Moreno and soul singer Jean McClain.

The legendary Taj Mahal also makes an impressive guest appearance on Little Brother Montgomery’s “Vicksburg Blues,” and Laurie’s well drilled backing band are in particularly fine fettle on an extended version of W.C.Handy’s “St. Louis Blues.”

Out now (Warner Bros: £9.99)

Clifford T Ward, “The Best Is Yet To Come-The Collection” ***

This highly listenable new anthology serves up a representative selection of the gentle and elegaic balladry which helped to elevate Ward to pop stardom for a brief period during the early seventies.

Cliff’s reluctance to tour or appear in public to promote his work effectively shattered any dreams that he may have harboured of achieving lasting commercial success, but the former school teacher bequeathed a fine body of work to posterity nonetheless, and his unique songwriting style is captured at its most appealing here on tracks such as “Jigsaw Girl,” “Coathanger” and his 1973 hit, “Gaye.”

Out now (Cherry Red / Press Play PRESS 8 CD : £6.50)

Various Artists, “After Sun” ****

An absorbing three-CD set from Fantastic Voyage, exploring the work of the roster of seminal blues, rockabilly and R and B artists who cut their teeth as aspiring young musicians at Sam Phillips’  legendary Sun Studios during the mid fifties.

Rather unusually Dave Penny’s anthology concentrates on the music that these uninhibited performers  made after they had left the fold and moved on to pastures new, with compelling offerings from the likes of B.B.King, Howlin’ Wolf and Elvis Presley rubbing shoulders with some splendid obscurities culled from the archives of a string of long forgotten American record labels.

Out now (Fantastic Voyage FVTD 165: £12.00)