Basia Bulat, Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen

BASIA BULAT, HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN Consummate display of musical urgency from Canada’s revitalised singer-songwriter

Consummate display of musical urgency from Canada’s revitalised singer-songwriter

The cape is not an everyday item of clothing. Worn by magicians, it brings an air of the extraordinary. It billows in the path of superheroes. The cloak of invisibility confirms the cape’s singularity. Basia Bulat was first seen in a sparkly gold cape on the sleeve of her recent Good Advice album and last night it was integral to the renewed vigour of her music and stage persona. Moved to say how hard it was play guitar with its folds fluttering, she nonetheless did not take the easy path and discard it.

theartsdesk in Estonia: Tallinn Music Week 2016

THEARTSDESK IN ESTONIA: TALLINN MUSIC WEEK 2016 A Presidential exhortation to save our Europe and our freedom

A Presidential exhortation to save our Europe and our freedom

“If we want to keep this free and democratic Europe of ours free and democratic, we must enlist ourselves, our skills and our commitment to liberty and justice. The problems we face are too great to simply say let the politicians do it.

CD: Laura Gibson - Empire Builder

CD: LAURA GIBSON - EMPIRE BUILDER West Coast songwriter gracefully soundtracks the great American rail trip

West Coast songwriter gracefully soundtracks the great American rail trip

I’ve never understood why the great American train journey isn’t as romanticised as the great American road trip. There’s nowhere else you get quite that same uninterrupted time with your own thoughts: to create, to ponder, to come to terms with everything. Certainly not in the UK, where the six-hour stretch from Glasgow to London is punctuated by so many stops that letting your mind wander as a pushchair or a scalding cup of tea makes its way up the aisle is something you do at your peril.

The Gloaming, Union Chapel

THE GLOAMING, UNION CHAPEL Exquisite folk minimalists launch second album

Exquisite folk minimalists launch second album

The Gloaming’s return to the Union Chapel in north London is a packed-out affair – and with good reason. Their British debut here, before the first album was released back in 2013, was a revelation. Few knew what to expect as Clare fiddler Martin Hayes, New York pianist Thomas Bartlett, Dublin-born viola and hardanger fiddle player Caoimhin O Raghallaigh, Sean Nos singer Iarla O Lionaird and Chicago guitarist Dennis Cahill launched into the epic "Opening Set" from that debut album.

CD: Steve Mason - Meet the Humans

CD: STEVE MASON - MEET THE HUMANS After years of experimentation, the former Beta Band man has found the perfect formula

After years of experimentation, the former Beta Band man has found the perfect formula

The thing about having a very distinctive voice is that it gives the audience something to latch onto. That’s all well and good, but it can also mean people find it easier to hear without listening. As the familiar tones and comfortable cadences of King Biscuit Time and former Beta Band member Steve Mason drift in, it’s easy to see how people could simply think, “Ah, another Steve Mason album.” Which it is, to be fair – but it’s also the rather wonderful result of all his former experiments.

Voces, Ballet Flamenco Sara Baras, Sadler's Wells

VOCES, BALLET FLAMENCO SARA BARAS, SADLER'S WELLS Iconic dancer dominates but doesn't enlighten

Iconic dancer dominates but doesn't enlighten

Claims to embody the spirit of flamenco, or to be born with flamenco in one's blood, abound in the programme of the annual Sadler's Wells flamenco festival. Sara Baras, whose show Voces opened the two week festival on Tuesday, doesn't make such a claim in writing: she doesn't need to. Her every move on stage radiates the self-possession of a flamenco aristocrat, a confidence so vital it simply bulldozes proscenium and fourth wall to set up a visceral – and vocal – relationship between audience and performer.

theartsdesk in Groningen: Uniting Europe with Music

THEARTSDESK IN GRONINGEN: UNITING EUROPE WITH MUSIC Frontiers are breached at Eurosonic festival and the European Border Breakers Awards

Frontiers are breached at Eurosonic festival and the European Border Breakers Awards

The nature of Europe, its administration, institutions and its porousness are hot topics. Sectors of Britain’s media and political class hyperventilate over trumped-up concerns while real issues which are just about impossible to address remain unresolved. In this climate, the European Border Breakers Awards are ripe for misinterpretation. Instead of being for those devising the shrewdest ways to slip in and out of countries, they are an annual European Union-sponsored award presented to pop musicians achieving success beyond their own borders.

Just in From Scandinavia: Nordic Music Round-Up 15

JUST IN FROM SCANDINAVIA: NORDIC MUSIC ROUND-UP 15 Distinctive voices in Faroese, Icelandic and Sámi show that singing in English is not necessary to make a connection

Distinctive voices in Faroese, Icelandic and Sámi show that singing in English is not necessary to make a connection

Is language a barrier to international recognition? Is English necessary to make waves worldwide? Musicians from the African continent and South America regularly perform in their native tongue beyond the borders of their home countries. But often they are – rightly or wrongly – marketed or pigeon-holed as world music, a branding which allows for eschewing the Anglophone. The always problematic label of world music can be and is debated endlessly, but one thing is certain: for Scandinavia, most internationally successful music is delivered in English.