Album: Sarah Jarosz - Polaroid Lovers

The songs are there if the listener can handle the 'adult contemporary' vibe

Critically acclaimed in the US, singer-songwriter Sarah Jarosz has won four Grammies during the course of her career. Born in Texas, spending most of her adult life in New York, her seventh album was created in her new hometown of Nashville, with an all-star cast of country-flavoured session musicians and producer Daniel Tashian.

Album: Nailah Hunter - Lovegaze

★★★ NAILAH HUNTER - LOVEGAZE A disconcerting dive into mystical folk

A disconcerting dive into mystical folk

Nailah Hunter’s debut album occupies a domain where trip-hop, Lana Del Rey were she recording in a deep, echo-filled cave and ambient-slanted pop overlap. There’s a kinship with FKA Twigs and Julia Holter, but Hunter’s propensity to channel what feels like a mystical experience means that Lovegaze is more inscrutable than what’s generated by first impressions.

Albums of the Year 2023: Scott Dunn with Claire Martin and the RPO - I Watch You Sleep

This tribute to the late, great Richard Rodney Bennett is a thing of exquisite beauty

A flawless song list comprising Richard Rodney Bennett originals plus some of his favourite standards, stunning arrangements by conductor Scott Dunn, plus the mellifluous vocals of Claire Martin magically aligned in my Album of the Year, I Watch You Sleep, an extraordinarily beautiful tribute to Bennett marking the tenth anniversary of his death.

Albums of the Year 2023: PJ Harvey - I Inside the Old Year Dying

AOTY 2023: PJ HARVEY - I INSIDE THE OLD YEAR DYING Diggin' up the Dorset soil with the musical sorceress

Diggin' up the Dorset soil with the musical sorceress

PJ Harvey never fails to deliver – much as I hate that over-used word, the go-to assurance from politicians who promise the earth and dump nothing but shit. With Polly Harvey, she reaches into the unknown, true to her creative impulses, and oblivious to fashion.

Lankum, Roundhouse review - a warm evening of folk mastery

★★★★ LANKUM, ROUNDHOUSE A warm evening of folk mastery

Dublin comes to London in a rousing, carousing performance

The folk band Lankum are (for want of a less cliched phrase) at the height of their power. Their gig at the Roundhouse, as they said themselves, was the biggest audience they had ever played for – and everyone was loving it.
 
The Roundhouse, surely one of the most beautiful venues for gigs, felt completely packed by the end of the support act, Rachael Lavelle. Lavelle’s sound was entrancing in its own right, somewhere between Weyes Blood and Angel Olsen, ethereal but not without nods to the slightly absurd.

Hozier, OVO Hydro, Glasgow review - sublime voice and a super-sized sound

★★★ HOZIER, OVO HYDRO, GLASGOW Sublime voice and a super-sized sound

The Irish singer was enjoyable, but occasionally submerged under his own songs.

There was something misleading about the opening of this concert. As Andrew John Hozier-Byrne and his band stepped onstage, the stage was lit up by a single spotlight, focused around the microphone that the singer stepped up to. Yet the following two hours were anything but a one-man band, with the collective of musicians assembled behind him given ample room to shine, to mostly positive but occasionally negative effect.

Gogol Bordello, O2 Institute, Birmingham review - an incendiary performance by Eugene Hütz’ gang

★★★★★ GOGOL BORDELLO, BIRMINGHAM Incendiary performance by Eugene Hütz’ gang

Multi-cultural gypsy punks let rip in Birmingham

Gogol Bordello’s gig in Birmingham this week took place on the evening of Shane MacGowan’s funeral and inevitably turned into something of a celebration of that great poet and songwriter’s life. But then, with the raucous folk music on offer, it was hardly going to be any different.

Album: Kate Rusby - Light Years

★★ KATE RUSBY - LIGHT YEARS Another rosy-cheeked Xmas disc from Yorkshire’s Queen Folkie

Another rosy-cheeked Christmas disc from Yorkshire’s Queen Folkie

The regular appearance of Kate Rusby’s folkie Christmas albums have almost become a Yuletide tradition in themselves at this time of the year. 2023’s Light Years being, somewhat incredibly, the seventh in the series.

Music Reissues Weekly: Myriam Gendron - Not So Deep As A Well

The surprise reappearance of the Canadian stylist’s interpretations of Dorothy Parker’s poems

Myriam Gendron's debut album Not So Deep As A Well was originally released in 2014 by Feeding Tube, a US label run by the prominent music writer Byron Coley. When it came out, he wrote that she was a “wonderful if spectral guitarist and singer, whose signature sound was as light as it was intoxicating. This album glows with holism and is one of the most beautiful evocations of times past and present and future you will hear this year.”