Georgia Mancio, Alan Broadbent, Pizza Express Dean Street review - songs beautifully crafted

★★★★★ GEORGIA MANCIO, ALAN BROADBENT, PIZZA EXPRESS Songs beautifully crafted

Gloriously personal expression

Does it spark joy? Yes, definitely...and maybe we music critics should ask the Marie Kondo question more often. London-based vocalist/lyricist Georgia Mancio and New Zealand-born, US-based pianist, arranger and composer Alan Broadbent have been prospering as a songwriting and performing partnership for more than a decade and have so far produced three strong albums. Wednesday night’s concert at Pizza Express Jazz Club in Soho was part of the launch tour for the third album, A Story Left Untold.

Album: PUP - Who Will Look After The Dogs?

A compelling balance between absurdity and sincerity

PUP’s Who Will Look After The Dogs? is a raw and emotionally charged album that captures the band’s chaotic spirit while showing clear growth in both sound and subject matter. Across 12 tracks, the Toronto group delivers a mixture of driving punk energy, wry humour and moments of vulnerability. It is a loud and heartfelt record that might not hit the heights of their best work, but still leaves a strong and lasting impression.

First Person: rising folk star Amelia Coburn on her French inspiration

AMELIA COBURN The rising folk star on her French inspiration

The Middlesbrough singer-songwriter on the background story to her latest single

“Sandra” is one of my favourite tracks from my album Between The Moon and the Milkman which was released last year.  While living in Paris a few years ago I shared a flat with an older French lady. We loved to chat every night when I came home from work, but one time she told me a story that stayed with me about her late husband, who was an abusive alcoholic. When he died, his only final wishes were to be buried. So of course, she had him cremated.

Album: Suzanne Vega - Flying With Angels

A diverse album that's still uniquely Vega

Wow, can it really be 40 years since Solitude Standing, the second studio album by Suzanne Vega who put the 1980s folk revival on the map. “Fast folk” the New York scene was called, and its voices emerged from much the same Greenwich Village cafes which were the proving ground for the 1960s revival that introduced Bob Dylan to the world. Plus some newer ones, notably the Cornelia Street Café, founded in 1977 and run by a Brit named Robin Hirsch until absurd rents forced its closure just a few years ago.

Album: Lael Neale - Altogether Stranger

★★★ LAEL NEALE - ALTOGETHER STRANGER Arresting art pop with a touch of creepiness

Arresting art pop with a touch of creepiness

Over its crisp 32 minutes and nine songs, Altogether Stranger embraces electropop, lo-fi terrain and gothic solo contemplation. By deconstructing modern R&B, the upbeat “Come on” is as close as it gets to pop’s mainstream. The unifying factors are Lael Neale’s way with a tune – she writes a memorable song – and her penetrating yet translucent voice.

Album: Car Seat Headrest - The Scholars

A rock opera too scholarly?

Following a tradition that reaches back to the The Who’s Tommy, bands and musicians with serious artistic ambition have created rock operas, reaching beyond the thematic explorations pioneered in concept albums a form that transcends the limits of the three minute popular song.   Singer and guitarist Will Toledo, the leader of Car Seat Headrest, is the latest to throw himself into the drama and story-telling that an opera requires.

Music Reissues Weekly: The Hamburg Repertoire

THE HAMBURG REPERTOIRE Perplexing compendium of songs The Beatles covered there

Perplexing compendium of songs The Beatles covered while playing the German port city

The blurb on the front of the double-CD set The Hamburg Repertoire says it collects “The original recordings of songs performed by The Beatles on stage in Hamburg.” Disc One opens with Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally.” Disc Two ends with Chet Atkins’ version of the “Theme From ‘The Third Man’.”

Album: Dr Robert & Matt Deighton - The Instant Garden

A couple of old mods waft into delightfully Seventies hippy territory

There’s this mod milieu, harking back to the Eighties. Weller at the forefront; Dr Robert and his Blow Monkeys; all righteously hate Thatcher; then the electronically groovy 1990s arrive; Acid Jazz Records; boss mod Eddie Piller; his collection of snappily dressed muso's who magazines wrote about and who nearly had hits. These sorts are still about, endlessly churning out music. It’s impressive. Sometimes the music is too. As with this album.

Album: Self Esteem - A Complicated Woman

Dissecting the utter tripe 21st-century western women navigate every day. In song!

Given that Prioritise Pleasure was Rebecca Lucy Taylor’s (RLT) Back to Black, and that there’s been a lengthy wait for this new release, it’s no wonder that there’s so much anticipation around A Complicated Woman. Add to the mix her frankly jaw-dropping performance alongside Jake Shears in Cabaret in the West End, and you might be forgiven for expecting big changes. But Self Esteem knows a winning formula when she’s on to one.