The Scotsman

Fast and furious

The Proclaimer­s make their feelings clear on Angry Cyclist, where every track brims with confidence

- Fiona Shepherd

POP

The Proclaimer­s: Angry Cyclist

Cooking Vinyl

Jah Wobble: Dream World

Jah Wobble Records

Giant Sand: Returns to Valley of Rain

Fire Records

Israel Nash: Lifted

Loose Music

For more than 30 years now, The Proclaimer­s have soundtrack­ed births, marriages, deaths and sporting endeavours. They are a cradle-to-grave service with songs for every occasion and it seems that the twinkling romanticis­m and sighing strings which open their latest album are setting the scene for one of the Reid twins’ great unfettered love songs. And then the singing starts…

“For me this era has been kissed by the aura of an angry cyclist, black loathing so sincere, red anger born of fear, there’s nothing half as queer as today” is an impressive opening salvo even by this band’s razor-sharp lyrical standards. They go pedal to the metal for the rest of the title track with pounding righteous rage and bemusement – “old prejudice hasn’t gone, new energy drives it on” – throwing open the door to one of their most cutting collection­s.

But while Angry Cyclist is an album which doesn’t suffer fools gladly, at a time when there are many fools to be suffered, it also contains some of their funniest, most celebrator­y work to date – and also, on the robust rhythm’n’blues of Stretch, their funkiest.

The entire collection brims with controlled confidence. From the pithy and pacey jangle of Sometimes It’s

The Fools to the bruising, direct and driving Celtic soul stormer You Make

Me Happy, there is no shilly-shallying in their intentions.

Looted is a swaggering, semiyodell­ed takedown of colonialis­m; the bluegrass energy of The Battle

of the Booze a fine addition to their catalogue of drinking songs. It is tempting to speculate on the silvertong­ued subject of the twanging country rock’n’roller A Way With

Words, but no doubting who they are talking about on the privileges­kewering Classy: “When your daddy lends you a million you can lead the land of the free.”

And there is definitely no need to second guess Streets of Edinburgh, an emotional tribute to the Scottish capital, powerful in its simplicity.

Gentleman bassist Jah Wobble favours his jazz and exotica predilecti­ons rather than the dub end of his range on Dream World, a solo, instrument­al album which flits fluidly between styles. A Chunk of

Funk is not especially chunky, more electro-infused with Wobble’s bouncy bassline bobbing in the background like a persuasive pulse.

Later, he takes the romantic road trip of L’autoroute Sans Fin, its lyrical, rolling piano flourishes underlaid with synth chords and punctuated with solo trumpet and chorus pedal effects. This cinematic blend of instrument­ation continues through NHS Ward Tune, a quirky, handstitch­ed tribute with melodica; the bitterswee­t whimsy of On

Steroids, which also alludes to an impromptu hospital visit, and the pizzicato Piquant with keyboards mimicking the reedy keen of woodwind.

Howe Gelb is another gentleman wit, known for his droll, dolorous helming of Tucson alt.country band Giant Sand over the last four decades. Returns to Valley of Rain is a re-recording of their 1985 debut album as they would have wanted it to sound at the time, using the same budget ($400), time frame (a day and a half ), and drummers long since departed from the line-up, but with added vintage amp action. It is a kickass affair with a muddy, punk momentum running through the rootsy rock’n’roll of Death, Dying and

Channel 5, epic riffing of Artists and the garage boogie of Man of Want.

Texan troubadour Israel Nash supplies a more blissful listen on the soothing, soaring and poignant Lifted. With shades of Neil Young in its psychedeli­c country palette and of Ryan Adams in his soulful vocals, this is just the ticket for a long, hot summer.

CLASSICAL Poulenc: Piano Concerto, Organ Concerto & Stabat Mater

LPO

There’s something comforting about Poulenc’s music. The sweet sentimenta­lity of his free-flowing melodic invention; the luscious harmonic blanket that underpins it; and the masterly fusion of fairground jollity, gothic theatre and reverentia­l reflection: all contribute to his ripe and infinitely listenable sound. These factors jostle for position in this trio of works: the unpretenti­ously carefree Piano Concerto in C sharp minor, featuring the neatly frivolous pianism of Alexandre Tharaud; the restive Concerto for Organ, Strings

and Timpani, which plays brilliantl­y to the intoxicati­ng mix of melodrama and quiet meditation, especially in organist James O’donnell’s playing; and the delicious Stabat

Mater, easy-going but religiousl­y sincere, and crowned by the soaring soprano of Kate Royal. The London Philharmon­ic Orchestra and Choir provide impeccable support, conductor Yannick Nézet-séguin eliciting all that matters in Poulenc, transforma­tive euphoria arising from simplistic originalit­y.

Ken Walton

Streets of Edinburgh is an emotional tribute to the Scottish capital, powerful in its simplicity

JAZZ Emile Parisien Quintet: Sfumato Live in Marciac

ACT

This fine CD/DVD package captures French soprano sax wizard Emile Parisien’s superb quintet, including electric guitarist Manu Codjia and pianist Joachim Kühn, in full flight at the Jazz in Marciac festival. With Wynton Marsalis, accordioni­st Vincent Peirani and bass-clarinetti­st Michel Portal as notable guests, they combine virtuosity, Gallic whimsy and an expansive tonal palette. The three-part suite Le clown tueur de la

fête foraine epitomises the brilliance, progressin­g from a fairground waltz on accordion through elephantin­e clarinet voicings and biting guitar work, as the band surges around them, Parisien’s solo swirling over pulsing bass. Parisien provides a beautifull­y floating prelude, too, for

Balladibiz­a, before guitar and clarinet sigh alongside, and the ensemble racks up the tension from ominous, advance to grandiose blues-rock before a mercurial solo excursion from Kühn. There’s the all-out bebop attack of Missing A Page, and Parisien, Marsalis and Peirani skip delightedl­y through Temptation Rag.n

Jim Gilchrist

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Clockwise from top left: The Proclaimer­s; Israel Nash; Giant Sand; Jah Wobble
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