The Scotsman

John Grant

- FIONA SHEPHERD

Playhouse

There is such a casual brilliance to Canadian crooner John Grant’s music that even his most relaxed, straightfo­rward concert reveals scintillat­ing layers to his sound, and so it was with one of the most keenly anticipate­d shows of the Internatio­nal Festival’s contempora­ry music programme, with Grant and his Icelandic band – plus the notable piston engine of Siouxsie and the Banshees drummer, Budgie – embellishe­d only by a stage set of illuminate­d pillars that looked imported from a 1980s music video.

Grant’s music oscillated between the pulsing synth, plangent guitar and martial beat of You Don’t Have To and the sumptuous easy listening country of It’s Easier, while his lyrics often illustrate­d the thin line between love and hate, blurred in his luxurious baritone caress.

His cheeky, at times caustic sense of humour popped up not just in his lyrical putdowns but in the impish analogue synth lines that punctuated some of his most sincere, spine-tingling paeans to love and friendship.

But he was at his best at extremes, marshallin­g the majestic ballad Glaciers to its positively volcanic climax, with heroic piano, distorted guitar and pillars flaming orange, and on the epic, escalating but also very funny melodrama of Queen of Denmark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom