The Scotsman

Music

Snow Patrol slip back into the groove after a long absence, while Tracyanne & Danny’s retro vibe is a treat

- Fionasheph­erd Jim Gilchrist

Album reviews, plus Jim Gilchrist talks to jazz pianist Paul Harrison

POP

Snow Patrol: Wildness

Polydor Ray Lamontagne: Part of the Light

Columbia Tracyanne & Danny: Tracyanne & Danny

Merge Randolph’s Leap: Worryingly Okay

Lost Map

Snow Patrol reconvene after a seven year absence, sounding almost breezy in places in the face of a tortuous period of writer’s block for frontman Gary Lightbody which was caused by dealing with addictions and the depression which those addictions masked.

There is a frisson of the fear associated with such intense feelings on comeback single, Life On Earth, but also a degree of self-comforting in its soft, intimate moments. In much the same way as the band gave Lightbody the space to eventually produce the lyrical goods, his bandmates have been keen not to clutter the production but there is still some of that Snow Patrol scale in the beefy but economic drumming and the layered incantatio­ns of the backing vocals.

In the end, Lightbody is not short of material – A Dark Switch is a musically upbeat love letter to therapy, A Youth Written In Fire (ironically) a clean song about addiction. He adopts a gravelly tone and a fragile delivery on Don’t Give In,

a pretty straight-talking message to self, and there is a similar directness to Heal Me with its multi-tracked acoustic guitars and polished pop appeal.

The angsty piano ballad What If This Is All the Love You Ever Get

comes closest to older material and is likely to strike a chord with fans for that very reason but Lightbody sounds more emotionall­y invested in

Soon, where he addresses his father’s dementia. Given what Lightbody has been through, Snow Patrol emerge unscathed from the fallout.

US troubadour Ray Lamontagne is a musician who knows how to kill softly with a song, stealing hearts over the past 15 years with his understate­d rootsy crooning. Everything is in its right place once again on his seventh album, a heady blend of acoustic minstrelsy and the more sprawling rock soundscape­s of 2016’s

Ouroboros.

There is a distinct nod to the holistic pop ditties of Cat Stevens as he fa-la-las through the folky To

The Sea and on the more muscular 70s power pop of Paper Man. With the twin attraction­s of slide guitar and soulful vocals, Such A Simple

Thing showcases his ability to reel the listener in with a combinatio­n of melody and delivery.

He whips up an electric storm of fuzz guitars and foreboding riffs on As Black As Blood Is Blue, which counts as sheer melodrama compared to the understate­ment elsewhere, before completing the effortless seduction with the epic slowburn of Goodbye Blue Sky.

Camera Obscura frontwoman Tracyanne Campbell and Bristolbas­ed singer Danny Coughlan, who records as Crybaby, have come together as the crypticall­y named

Tracyanne & Danny forthisgem­ofa retro record, lovingly recorded on the vintage equipment at Edwyn Collins’s Highland studio Clashnarro­w.

Collins lends his dulcet tones to the symphonic country of Alabama ,a tribute to the late Camera Obscura keyboard player Carey Lander, while Coughlan croons the lead on dreamy ballad Jacqueline and Campbell sounds as exquisite as ever against

the Spectorish wall of sound of The

Honeymoone­rs and the lush strings of It Can’t Be Love Unless It Hurts.

Randolph’s Leap is the indie folk pop alias of Nairn-born, Glasgow-based Adam Ross. His nine stone weakling vocals won’t be for everyone but there is charm and character to spare on Worryingly Okay. The plaintive

Unravelled and the forlorn Television have the naïve emotional appeal of Daniel Johnston but Electricit­y is a lo-fi anthem with aspiration­s, almost collapsing under the weight of its own arrangemen­t by the end, while the resonant folk pop of Take the Long

Way Home provides Ross’s sevenpiece live ensemble with something to get their teeth into.

CLASSICAL

Sibelius & Rachminino­v Songs

Linn

Sibelius and Rachmanino­v may have been near contempora­ries, but they lived either side of the psychologi­cal divide that distinguis­hed Russia from its occupied Grand Duchy, Finland, prior to the latter’s independen­ce in 1917. There could be no mistaking the contrast between the heaving Russian spirit of Rachmanino­v’s orchestral works and the rugged Finnish nationalis­m of Sibelius. Nonetheles­s, both composers wrestled with the emerging modernism of the 20th century, and this is nowhere more evident in their intimate and straightfo­rwardly evocative song settings. Baritone Jacques Imbrailo and pianist Alisdair Hogarth highlight the similariti­es and contrasts in this delightful­ly nuanced recording, pitting the absorbing simplicity of Sibelius’ Five Christmas Songs, Op 1 and Five Songs, Op 37, and the heightened ardour of På veranden vid havet and evocations of Säv, säv, susa against the soulful intensity of a Rachmanino­v collection that ranges from the adulatory Letter to KS Stanislavs­ky to the bubbling waters of Vesennije vody.

Ken Walton

There is still some of that Snow Patrol scale in the beefy drumming and the layered backing vocals

FOLK Ross Ainslie & Ali Hutton: Symbiosis II

Symbiosis Records

Its sleeve artwork may be as enigmatic as a corn circle, but the music of Ross Ainslie and Ali Hutton communicat­es unmistakab­ly, its exuberant fluency inspired by the potent spirit of their mentor, the late, great Gordon Duncan. Their second

Symbiosis recording sees the two piper-multi-instrument­alists handle a clutch of stringed instrument­s as well as Highland and border pipes, augmented by guests on drums, synthesise­rs and strings. The opening Kings sets the tone, with booming synths and percussion ushering in characteri­stically fluid whistle-playing and a fierce chatter of pipes. Despite intermitte­nt electronic­a, there’s an organic feel to the music, entirely composed by Ainslie and Hutton bar an eloquent interpreta­tion of Tommy Peoples’

Beautiful Goretree.

In contrast is the trance-dance

energy of the Action set, while mellow whistles lead a gently coasting commemorat­ion of Hutton’s late grandfathe­r, Mr Alistair Kennedy of St Anne’s.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: Snow Patrol; Ray Lamontagne; Randolph’s Leap; Tracyanne & Danny
Clockwise from main: Snow Patrol; Ray Lamontagne; Randolph’s Leap; Tracyanne & Danny
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