Album: Barry Adamson - Cut to Black

★★★★ BARRY ADAMASON - CUT TO BLACK The coolest Mancunian returns with a lesson in style

The coolest Mancunian returns with a lesson in style

Always looking dapper and always sounding cool, Barry Adamson is a man who nevertheless seems to be perpetually of another time. Giving off the vibes of a one-man Rat Pack with a dash of the legendary Lee Hazelwood, his music certainly doesn’t have much in common with mainstream tastes.

Album: Abigail Lapell - Anniversary

An engaging - if doleful - set from the Canadian folk-Americana singer

Anniversary is Canadian singer-songwriter Abigail Lapell’s sixth album (if we include last year’s lengthy EP of lullabies). Her success has not reached much beyond her native land, as is often the way with Canadian acts, but she’s a proven talent, one who deserves a higher international profile. Anniversary consists of 11 poetic folk-country meditations on love.

Slash featuring Myles Kennedy and the Conspirators, OVO Hydro, Glasgow review - guitar heroics against a low-key backdrop

The rock icon's playing was sublime, but not all of his set suited the venue

The theme tune to John Carpenter’s horror classic The Thing rang out as Slash and his crew of collaborators took to the stage. Unlike that film’s famous climax though, there was no ambiguity here, for these were experienced stalwarts of rock music putting on a traditional, no frills show with a minimum of fuss.

Album: Gregory Porter - Christmas Wish

★★★★ GREGORY PORTER - CHRISTMAS WISH Christmas gets the Gregory treatment

Hallelulah: Christmas gets the Gregory treatment

The cat in the hat with the mellifluous voice delivers his Christmas Wish for the festive season, his first Christmas album, and it sounds more or less as you would imagine it – tasteful, discreet, soulful, reined in, but richly expressive, and celebrating the spirit of a sharing, caring Christmas.

Music Reissues Weekly: Shake That Thing - The Blues in Britain 1963-1973

SHAKE THAT THING - THE BLUES IN BRITAIN 1963-1973 Compendium of US-inspired Brits

Box-set compendium of US-inspired Brits lacks inquisitiveness

In September 1955, the grandly named London Skiffle Centre set up for business each Thursday in a room above the Round House pub in Soho’s Wardour Street. A prime mover in the venture was blues acolyte Cyril Davies. Two months after the opening, Lonnie Donegan’s “Rock Island Line” was issued as a single. It was previously out as a track on a 1953 Chris Barber album. Despite the wonky timeline, the skiffle boom was on.

Music Reissues Weekly: Playing for the Man at the Door - Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick

PLAYING FOR THE MAN AT THE DOOR Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick

Important box set tapping US folklorist’s previously unexplored archive

Between the late 1950s and around 1971, Robert “Mack” McCormick (1930–2015) travelled through his base-state Texas, Alabama, Mississippi, west Louisiana and parts of Arkansas and Oklahoma looking for musicians to record. It wasn’t a random process: he covered 700 counties using a grid system, so nothing would be missed. As well as tapes, he made lists, filled notebooks and took photos. He kept everything.

Album: Bob Dylan - Shadow Kingdom

The Song and Dance Man's lockdown-era live stream resurfaces

Dylan’s Shadow Kingdom first crossed our paths in July 2021, his first streaming event, and coming little more than a year after the garden of unearthly delights that was Rough and Rowdy Ways. To enter this kingdom, you were given a key code for $25, and allowed fifty minutes, 13 songs, and the chance to revisit over the following 48 hours.

Album: Rickie Lee Jones - Pieces of Treasure

★★★★ RICKIE LEE JONES - PIECES OF TREASURE The standards in sultry new ways of being

Singing the standards into sultry new ways of being

Reuniting with Russ Titelman, the producer of her eponymous 1979 debut and its follow-up 1981’s Pirates, Rickie Lee Jones approaches the great American songbook as if she was reuniting with an old flame, the thrill of it smouldering and concentrating itself in 10 elegant, soulful jazz-blues performances.