On paper it looks dauntingly over-ambitious, and in the hands of any other band it probably would be. But Singh has a talent for finding universal accessibility at the heart of any genre, and a pathological fear of the clichéd and portentous. So Handcream begins with deep soul singer Otis Clay making the introductions on "Heavy Soup", cranks up a hoary old Stones riff for an extended rant about the music biz on "Lessons Learned From Rocky I To Rocky III" and even finds a use for Noel Gallagher on the 15-minute soaring raga of "Spectral Mornings". Best of all, the whole album's imbued with a spirit that's both celebratory and contrary, one that challenges and stimulates even while it's making you dance on the table. --John Mulvey