
This global mash of eclectic styles is up my alley lately, and Cornershop’s third should have been my favorite album of the year. It made a good effort, but fell short on some slight songwriting. Cornershop hinted at its potential to make a timeless album with the spotty but occasionally brilliant Woman’s Gotta Have It (1995). The idea of melding of traditional Indian music with rock isn’t new, but Cornershop have come closer to anyone in perfecting it. On their first punky indie singles and 1993’s Hold On It Hurts, one can barely recognize the multicultural juggernaut Cornershop would become. Now they mix raggas with pop, soul, electro dance, trippy instrumentals and hip-hop. What holds the album together is a consistent groove. Cornershop finally got funky. Now if Clinton’s P-Funk Mothership would just pay them a visit, beam them up and molest ’em with some extra genius funk, they’ll finally make that perfect album.
September 17, 2025
Chameleons – Arctic Moon (Metropolis)
September 1, 2025
Lathe of Heaven – Aurora (Sacred Bones)

