Album: Gillian Welch & David Rawlings - Woodland

Welch & Rawlings: the past is close behind

Named after the duo’s Woodland Sound Studios in Nashville, badly damaged in a 2020 tornado and restored by them, Woodland Studios is Gillian Welch and David Rawlings’ first album in four years, when All the Good Times won the Grammy for Best Folk Album. It’s their first album of all-original material since Poor David’s Almanack in 2017, and the second to be credited to them as a duo.

Album: AJ Lee & Blue Summit - City of Glass

★★★ AJ LEE & BLUE SUMMIT - CITY OF GLASS Bluegrass-Americana from California

Tight, light, airy and persuasive bluegrass-Americana from California

In the world of popular music, tangential connections to success are profile-raising. They offer an immediate connection to an artist. It is beholden on me, then, despite not knowing it when I first enjoyed this album, to mention that rising Grammy Award-winning Americana star Molly Tuttle appears. She is guitarist-vocalist Sullivan Tuttle’s sister.

Le nozze di Figaro, Garsington Opera review - fine-tuned telling it as it is

★★★★ LE NOZZE DI FIGARO, GARSINGTON OPERA Fine-tuned telling it as it is 

Youthful leads add to the pleasures of Mozart's greatest comedy in perfect surroundings

“Tradition is sloppiness,” Mahler the opera conductor is credited with saying. But in the case of old master John Cox’s long-serving Garsington production of the greatest of operatic comedes, not if it’s refreshed with the subtlest insights in to human tensions and frailties.

Album: Willie Nelson - The Border

★★★★ WILLIE NELSON - THE BORDER Country’s ageless outlaw strikes gold again on album No. 152

Country’s ageless outlaw strikes gold again on album No. 152

At 91, Willie Nelson is about to tour the US with The Outlaws, AKA Minnesota youngster Bob Dylan, 83, the even younger Robert Plant, 75, with Alison Krauss, a mere 52, and 72-year old John Mellencamp (plus a trio of 21st century artists in Celisse, Southern Avenue and Britney Spencer). 

The Great Escape Festival 2024, Brighton review - a dip into day one and the elephant-in-the-room

★★★ THE GREAT ESCAPE FESTIVAL 2024, BRIGHTON Day one & the elephant-in-the-room

An opening snapshot of Brighton's multi-venue showcase

Before reviewing The Great Escape, we must first deal with the elephant in the room. Or, in this case, the room that’s crushing the elephant, like the trash compactor in the first Star Wars film.

THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM BIT

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.

Album: Kings Of Leon - Can We Please Have Fun

The good ole boys of stadium indie go back to basics: will it work?

The buildup to this album offered quite a bit of hope. The promo blurb with it talks about “cutting loose, trying new things… hark[ing] back to their gritty origins… freed from any expectations.” Most glaringly, it says it’s “the album the band says they’ve always wanted to make” – perhaps, along with the plaintive album title, a tacit admission that their heart hasn’t really been in the modern day AOR they’ve been pumping out every since the strained “woah-woahs” (“millennial whoops”) of “Use Somebody” and “Sex on Fire” blasted them into the mainstream in 2008.

Mitski, Usher Hall, Edinburgh review - cool and quirky, yet deeply personal

★★★★★ MITSKI, USHER HALL, EDINBURGH Cool and quirky, yet deeply personal

A stunningly produced show from one of pop’s truly unique artists

It was her 2018 album Be the Cowboy which saw Mitski propelled to stardom status. Laurel Hell, which followed in 2022, saw her continue on the popstar trajectory with synth-heavy songs, so the more laid back folkiness of last year’s release, The Land is Inhospitable and So are We came as a bit of a surprise.

Album: Khruangbin - A LA SALA

Same old same old, and all the better for it

This is a reviewer’s nightmare: it’s literally just Khruangbin doing what Khruangbin do. As ever, the Texan trio are rolling out laid-back psychedelic spaghetti western Tex-Mex country-soul-funk groove after laid-back psychedelic spaghetti western Tex-Mex country-soul-funk groove, all drenched in the usual hazy reverb that practically demand you start drawing for adjectives like “sun-bleached” and talk about big skies and desert landscapes. The instrumentation is, as ever, all super-trad too.