RICK ASTLEY - BEAUTIFUL LIFE

MASSIVE respect to any artist who restarts their career after having one of the biggest pop hits ever and then retires young, especially with a brave foray into a different genre.

Rick Astley might be best known for 1987 earworm Never Gonna Give You Up, but his new album Beautiful Life and its predecessor 50, his 2016 comeback record, are light years away from that bastion of pop cheesiness.

Astley is hoping to score success again after 50, at the time his first record in 10 years, sold more than 300,000 copies and topped the charts. Beautiful Life is a fair effort, comprised of tracks penned by Astley himself and on which he plays all the instruments.

The title track is a hit, an uptempo pop piece that showcases Astley's soulful vocals. But from there, some of the songs - best described as an homage to mid-noughties Take That - get a bit lost within each other.

Some are forgettable, and some are still rather good, such as She Makes Me, a solid piece that's more than two-thirds country-inspired. I Need The Light is one of the catchiest tracks, although nowhere near as catchy as Astley's breakout classic.

But let's be honest, nothing ever will be. He's come a long way, and where he is now suits Astley just fine, and fans will love this. 6/10 LUCY MAPSTONE

DIRTY PROJECTORS - LAMP LIT PROSE

In a musical landscape more crowded than ever, and with the entire history of music available at your whim, it's challenging to create an original sound. But indie-eccentrics The Dirty Projectors, helmed by the ubiquitous David Longstreth, have produced another startlingly fresh collection of tracks that brim with invention only a year after their last release.

Longstreth's work arranging parts and songwriting for artists ranging from Joanna Newsom to Solange tells in Lamp Lit Prose, an album with a curious blend of straightforward pop songwriting and left-field instruments and arrangements. The risk in such a bold album, is whether it experiments past the point of comfortable listening.

This balance is immediately tested in the opening track Right Now, where rising R&B vocalist Syd does battle with some particularly brash brass interjections. The same struggle emerges in That's a Lifestyle (with stunning backing vocals from Haim), in which the sweet 60s singer/songwriter style goes head-to-head with choppy almost Bjork-style vocal edits.

But thanks to Longstreth's care and sensitivity, the two elements balance each other out neatly, with the potentially jarring instrumentation adding flair to quite traditionally written songs. ZANDER SHARP 8/10

LOTIC - POWER

FOLLOWING two critically acclaimed EPs the Houston-born, Berlin-based experimentalist Lotic releases a full album that, if not exactly an easy listen, is striking in its inventiveness.

At its most accessible the tinkling bells, brooding synths and haunted cries evoke a dreamlike (or sometimes nightmarish) atmosphere. Love And Light and Hunted in particular could easily have been lifted from the soundtrack of a 1980s horror film.

Here and there, however, it descends into pure racket: Warp And Weft sounds like a drum-kit being thrown down a stairwell, while Distribution provides the listener with the disconcerting sensation that it is being played backwards and forwards simultaneously.

Of the couple of tracks to feature vocals, Nerve sounds like hip-hop as imagined by a robot, while Heart has incantation-like phrases moaned over a mesmeric industrial noise.

It certainly won't be for everyone, but for adventurous fans of electronica Power has a lot to recommend it. JAMES ROBINSON 7/10

COWBOY JUNKIES - ALL THAT RECKONING

CANADIAN alternative rock band Cowboy Junkies ride into their first album for six years on the back of an opening title track with no drums and a soothing chord structure that sets the relaxed tone of the record throughout.

Vocalist Margo Timmins' delicate vocals float over the sparse sonic frontier, firmly lassoing the listener's attention upon her every word.

Wooden Stairs perhaps best captures the slow burning reflective mood this album perpetuates with its wisps of rushing symbols, haunting, reflective lyrics, forlorn strings and lead guitar lines piped in backwards.

While some may find the songs of this album blur into one due to their similar, gradual pace, the angular bass and squealing lead guitar solos of Sing Me A Song and Shining Teeth's near threatening chorus of 'I don't want to see your shining teeth no more' prove Cowboy Junkies do have a bit of bite to them. 8/10 ANDREW ARTHUR