CATCHING up with The Godfathers via their forthcoming album A Big, Bad Beautiful Noise was a wonderful experience, a speedball hit of nostalgia and potential, personal reflection and a reminder that the best rock ‘n’ roll is built along some pretty straightforward musical lines.

You Don’t Love Me sums all this up perfectly, they sound as threatening and snarky as they always did but timeless rather than dated, a sound that sits comfortably anywhere from 60s garage band territory to the post-punk period of re-evaluation to turn of the century guitar revival and beyond, they will probably sound just as at home anywhere in the next 60 years as well.

When The Godfathers first crawled out of the smoking wreckage of The Sid Presley Experience in the mid-1980s, they formed part of a rock and roll resistance, a movement of underground rabble-rousers who offered a wonderfully honest, threadbare and raw alternative to the chart glitz and manufactured pop that was prevalent.

Showing no sign of ageing or compromise they still have the air of a bunch of rock ‘n’ roll gangsters who have turned up mob handed to have a quiet chat about the payments on that fruit machine they loaned you, but where is the fun in music that doesn’t send a few shivers down your spine? - Dave Franklin