Album: Jono McCleery - Moonlit Parade

★★★★ JONO MCCLEERY - MOONLIT PARADE Warm, intimate songs that pull you close from the young English singer-songwriter

Warm, intimate songs that pull you close from the young English singer-songwriter

Jono McCleery has one of those voices that once heard, demands your attention, an instrument of richness and depth, and one that has earned him many fans. The likes of Vashti Bunyan and Tom Robinson helped to crowdfund his recording debut back in 2008, Darkest Light; he steered himself through London’s eclectic electro-acoustic underground music scene alongside the likes of Jamie Woon and the Portico Quartet, and released four more folktronic-textured releases with Ninja Tune.

Album: Kurt Vile - (Watch My Moves)

A sunny soother from the US indie perennial

Although the term “hipster” has become degraded to well beyond cliché, Kurt Vile is one of those artists whose fans may indeed have that in-the-know smugness. With Vile, though, this is not a bad thing. Given the increasingly confidence-shedding nature of recent world events, Vile’s mix of indie rock with psychedelia and Americana makes for a welcome escape.

Album: Hannah Sanders & Ben Savage - Ink of the Rosy Morning

Folk treasures from a lockdown den

What an exquisite album! Beautiful voices that harmonise to perfection, superlative instrumental work, and songs both new and old yet all somehow familiar and timeless. Ink of the Rosy Morning: A Sampling of Folk Songs from Britain and North America is a lockdown album that captures the spontaneity that few of us felt during that dark time.

The Weather Station, Scala review - communion achieved against the odds

★★★★ THE WEATHER STATION, SCALA Communion achieved against the odds

An evening of potency and vivacity from Tamara Lindeman and Co

Acknowledging the contrast between personal and public situations, The Weather Station’s Tamara Lindeman says “I have a lot of songs about not being heard, yet I’m holding this microphone.” An individual’s voice can be ignored, but if it’s given a context which enables reaching out – it may be heard.

Album: Cécile McLorin Salvant - Ghost Song

★★★★★ CECILE MCLORIN SALVANT - GHOST SONG Moving, imaginative, laugh-out-loud

A moving, imaginative, at times laugh-out-loud collection of songs

When 2020 MacArthur Fellow and three-time Grammy Award winner Cécile McLorin Salvant previewed some of the material from her forthcoming album to an enraptured audience at Cadogan Hall as part of last year’s EFG London Jazz Festival, you sensed that something special was in the offing. But the treasure trove of marvels that is Ghost Song exceeds all expectations.

Wuthering Heights, National Theatre review - too much heat, not enough light

★★★ WUTHERING HEIGHTS, NATIONAL THEATRE Too much heat, not enough light

Emma Rice's punk-rock reworking of the classic is brilliant - when it's good

“If you want romance,” the cast of Emma Rice’s new version of Wuthering Heights say in unison just after the interval, “go to Cornwall.” They’re using the modern definition of romance, of course – Emily Brontë’s novel is full of the original meaning of "romantic", much wilder and more dangerous than anything Ross Poldark gets up to.

Album: Spell Songs II – Let the Light In

★★★★ SPELL SONGS II - LET THE LIGHT IN More nature-centric magic from the folk supergroup

A second volume of nature-centric magic from the folk supergroup

The first set of Spell Songs, The Lost Words, was inspired by nature writer Robert Macfarlane and artist Jackie Morris’s spell-spinning mission to bring back those ‘lost words’ from the natural world that had been excised from children’s dictionaries, set to the rich and varied music of kora player Seckou Keita, singer-songwriters Karine Polwart, Julie Fowlis and Kris Drever, harpist Rachel Newton, cellist Beth Porter, composer Kerry Andrew and multi-instrumentalist Jim Molyneux.

Folk, Hampstead Downstairs review - thoughtful play about folklorist Cecil Sharp

★★★ FOLK, HAMPSTEAD DOWNSTAIRS Nell Leyshon's play-with-music asks questions of a legacy

Nell Leyshon's play-with-music asks questions of a legacy

Cecil Sharp, heritage hero or imperialist appropriator? If you attended school in the first half of the 20th century, you would have sung from his collections of English folk songs, and probably gritted your teeth and performed the country dances he recorded, too.