Album: Willie Nelson - A Beautiful Time

★★★★ WILLIE NELSON - A BEAUTIFUL TIME A birthday offering from the old outlaw

A birthday offering from the old outlaw

All power to Willie Nelson – marking his 89th birthday this week with a new album, A Beautiful Time. He and Trigger have been making music together for more than half a century, Nelson releasing his first album in 1962. From his pen have come some of the most powerful, poignant and enduring country songs ever written and he’s not done yet. How many of today’s artists, from whatever genre, will survive even half as long?

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: Cowboy Junkies - Songs of The Recollection

★★★★★ COWBOY JUNKIES - SONGS OF THE RECOLLECTION Covers to covet

Covers to covet

The 19th album from Canadian alt-country rockers, and very beguiling it is too. As its title suggests, Songs of the Recollection is a covers album, but such a description is reductive. Good songs live on, discovered anew by successive generations – think how many singers have stamped their identity on numbers from the Great American Songbook.

Cabell, LSO, Rattle, Barbican review - transatlantic traffic

★★★★ NICOLE CABELL, LSO, RATTLE Bold voices from the New World - and the Old

Bold voices from the New World – and the Old

Had he never written a note of his own, George Walker would still have left a record of trailblazing achievements. Born in Washington DC in 1922, he studied piano at Oberlin College and the Curtis Institute (the conservatoire that notoriously rejected Nina Simone). He was taught by Rudolf Serkin and, in 1945, debuted as a soloist first at the New York Town Hall and then, playing Rachmaninov’s third concerto, with the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy.

Album: The Shires - 10 Year Plan

★ THE SHIRES - 10 YEAR PLAN Successful UK country duo's slick sound fails to set fire

Successful UK country duo's slick sound fails to set our reviewer on fire

Seems odd now, but there was a time when many Brits found country music laughable. It was a common thing. For instance, when Keith Richards embraced country, Jagger initially thought it a joke. By the time I was coming up in the Eighties, post-punk still a long shadow, my peers and I mostly felt the same; country was corny schmaltz dominated by middle-aged rhinestone blandness. I soon realised the error of my ways, but The Shires’ fifth album reminds me that, back then, we did also have a point.

Album: Basia Bulat - The Garden

★★★ BASIA BULAT - THE GARDEN The Canadian singer-songwriter pushes forward by reframing her past

The Canadian singer-songwriter pushes forward by reframing her past

On her sixth album, Basia Bulat re-records 16 of her own songs with specially created string arrangements. The Garden isn’t a best-of, more a recalibration of how the Canadian singer-songwriter sees herself through her music and how the meanings of the songs have changed.

Album: Kiefer Sutherland - Bloor Street

★★ KIEFER SUTHERLAND - BLOOR STREET Strictly for fans of American FM radio slickness

The Hollywood star's latest is for fans of American FM radio mainstream slickness

Disclaimer: it’s a little unfair I’m reviewing Kiefer Sutherland’s third album. He seems alright, left-ish for an American, done his time in the bad boy lane, sense of humour, tried his hand at this and that, even as a rodeo-rider, and has entertained plenty onscreen. Although I’d never heard his music until this month, I knew he’d played everywhere from the Grand Ole Opry to far-flung Glastonbury marquees.

Albums of the Year 2021: Chrissie Hynde - Standing in the Doorway: Chrissie Hynde Sings Bob Dylan

AOTY 2021: CHRISSIE HYNDE - STANDING IN THE DOORWAY Hynde Sings Dylan

Pretender rifles through Dylan's back pages

So, it’s been another world-beating year. Known unknowns and unknown unknowns – at least two people have set Donald Rumsfeld’s 2002 Pentagon musings to music, and I’m sure I’m not alone in finding his words rather useful. Indeed, it’s not hard to imagine Bob Dylan writing something similar, back in the day.