The Scotsman

Music

David Byrne’s optimistic new album is a useful corrective to some of the bleaker Trump-fuelled grumps

- Fionasheph­erd

Album reviews, plus Jim Gilchrist previews the Niel Gow Festival

Fresh from writing a musical about Imelda Marcos (with Fatboy Slim), and another musical about Joan of Arc, and touring with St Vincent and a brass band, and writing a book about how music works, David Byrne settles into his first solo album since 2004.

American Utopia is part of a wider project of pragmatic optimism which Byrne has titled “Reasons to be Cheerful” – not so much a bullish or Pollyanna-esque response to the erosion of the utopian dream on which the US was founded, more a refusal to fall into the slough of despond now that, in his words, “the experiment seems on the verge of complete and utter collapse”.

Byrne is possibly aware that the very fact of his return to the pop frontline is reason enough for many to be cheerful but should the casual listener need persuading, be assured that American Utopia is a work of infinite good humour.

Opening gambit I Dance Like This oscillates between whimsical piano ballad and industrial intoning, Every

Day Is A Miracle is a sort of singalong

number which posits that “God is a very old rooster” and, along its smart and merry way, there are philosophi­cal musings on our doglike natures, the classy cocktail pop of

Doing the Right Thing, the far eastern chimes of the cool, meditative This Is

That and some flinty Latin-flavoured funk on It’s Not Dark Up Here, which asks questions like “Must a question have an answer? Can’t there be another way?”

To pose an additional question on encounteri­ng the catchy rhythmic quirks of Brian Eno co-write

Everybody’s Coming To My House – on this fluent, infectious form, why wouldn’t they?

Both Sides of the Sky is the third in a trilogy of posthumous Jimi

Hendrix albums, made up of mostly previously unreleased material recorded between 1968 and 1970, with an emphasis on the blues repertoire which Hendrix turned on its head on his original album releases.

With his two blistering power trios, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Band of Gypsys, the incomparab­le guitar stylist turns in a turbo-charged

Mannish Boy, the freewheeli­ng original Lover Man ,aspry Stepping

Stone and an initially pared-back yet powerful Hear My Train A-coming, before he goes to town over Mitch Mitchell’s jazz-inflected fills.

But there are a number of guest collaborat­ions to vary the palette and the sprawl begins with Stephen Stills taking the steering wheel on his own song, the rootsy soulful jam $20 Fine, with Hendrix uncharacte­ristically restrained yet effective in support. Stills also lends a ragged lead vocal to a loose-limbed bluesy version of Joni Mitchell’s Woodstock, with ample Hammond organ.

Singer and saxophonis­t Lonnie Youngblood gives Georgia Blues a testifying edge, while Hendrix shares the limelight with guitarist Johnny Winter on the trad blues bending of

Things I Used to Do. Although this is clearly not his top-drawer material, there is never a bad time to indulge in some Hendrix hoodoo. Strokes guitarist Albert Hammond Jr has named his latest solo album,

Francis Trouble, after his twin, who was miscarried at three months. The rough immediacy of his vocals and his clipped, clanging guitar sound are tempered with a wistful melancholy on Set to Attack but he makes light work of the potentiall­y heavy subject matter with another effortless­ly catchy display of mostly upbeat indie rock’n’roll. The pace drops off a little towards the end but rallies once more with the jabbering New York new wave influence of Harder, Harder, Harder.

Stephen Stills takes the lead on one of his own songs, with hendrix both restrained and effective in support

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: David Byrne, Albert Hammond ,and Jimi Hendrix
Clockwise from top: David Byrne, Albert Hammond ,and Jimi Hendrix
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