The Scotsman

Music

Mogwai’s new soundtrack is haunting, while Gilbert O’sullivan revisits the spirit of the 1970s

- Fionasheph­erd

Album reviews, plus Jim Gilchrist on SNJO’S work with arranger Florian Ross

POP

Mogwai: Kin: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

Rock Action Gilbert O’sullivan: Gilbert O’sullivan

BMG

Lemon Twigs: Go To School

4AD

Mogwai are no strangers to soundtrack work – even their own albums are sculpted as if to form a cinematic backdrop. To date, their music has supplied the ambient atmosphere for documentar­ies including Douglas Gordon’s Zidane and Mark Cousins’

Atomic and, most effectivel­y, the eerie French TV series Les Revenants.

Kin is their first feature film soundtrack, made for Jonathan and Josh Baker’s forthcomin­g sci-fi/ crime thriller, starring James Franco, Dennis Quaid and Jack Reynor. Inevitably, it is hard to judge its impact without the accompanyi­ng visuals, though the sombre, even funereal piano piece Eli’s Theme refers to the film’s lead character and emotional compass.

Piano remains at the forefront throughout but the band slowly layer on the sonic effects to create the rotor flutter of Flee. Their signature soaring guitars feature more prominentl­y on Funeral Pyre and they build an elegant wall of sound with a seamless union of synths and guitar on Donuts.

The influence of John Carpenter’s retro-futurist synthscape­s is hinted at throughout before they unleash another in their recent line of shoegaze indie pop tunes, We’re Not

Done, as their end titles gallop.

Meanwhile, in an alternativ­e universe, 70s pop balladeer Gilbert

O’sullivan returns, with a new album produced by Ethan Johns, who is more readily associated with the likes of Kings of Leon, Ryan Adams and Laura Marling. Could he be the Rick Rubin to O’sullivan’s Johnny Cash?

O’sullivan’s reappraisa­l is more likely to be of the Chas & Dave variety, not least because Hodges makes his unmistakea­ble presence felt on the perky pub rhythm’n’blues of This

Riff. The rest of the self-titled album is similar timewarp stuff, as Johns simply facilitate­s what O’sullivan does best – writing good oldfashion­ed tunes.

Squint a bit at the smooth production, jaunty melody and warm tones of guitar and organ on The Same The Whole World Over and you could be listening to Gerry Rafferty.

Love How You Leave Me is pure Mccartneye­sque whimsy, with a little burst of western swing guitar. There’s more Beatley goodness on the wistful

I’ll Never Love Again and Where Did You Go? is like easy listening Bob

Dylan.

O’sullivan plays the nostalgia card explicitly on Dansette Dreams and

45s, accompanie­d by saccharine strings, with the lyrical caveat that “I’m not suggesting for one minute living in the past is everything that it’s cracked up to be”. But he could be forgiven his bunker mentality as he lists a succession of social and political ills on The Mind Boggles to which the only answer can be the song title. In the young minds of The Lemon

Twigs, Gilbert O’sullivan has probably always been king. The precocious brothers Brian and Michael D’addario have already impressed with their freewheeli­ng appropriat­ion of 70s prog pop and now it’s time to move to the next level with their own rock musical.

Go to School could have been stowed in a vault around the same time as The Who’s Tommy, so sure is it of its references. The brothers have clearly succeeded in seducing their influences, as guest musicians include Big Star drummer Jody Stephens and Todd Rundgren singing the role of Bill, hapless husband to the frustrated Carol (sung by the brothers’ mum Susan Hall).

The book follows their adopted chimpanzee son Shane’s awkward experience of mainstream schooling – a painful trajectory of bullying, first crushes, heartbreak, conflict with parents, arson, murder, all your typical musical theatre fare – and the entire eccentric but wholly entertaini­ng venture is what happens when single-minded creatives are given free rein. Cherish The Lemon Twigs because they are a rare propositio­n in today’s conformist pop culture.

CLASSICAL Debussy… et le jazz: Preludes for a quartet

Harmonia Mundi

Central to this release by the Lyonbased Quatuor Debussy (Debussy Quartet) and friends is the pretext that “Debussy may not have made his way to jazz, but jazz certainly made its way to Debussy.” So what they give us is a series of performanc­es that reset some of composer’s Preludes within breathy arrangemen­ts that range from simple easy listening to quirks of instrument­al colour that throw original light on the music.

Take the shimmering, glissandoi­ng strings, extended piano ostinati and jazzed up deviations that form a thrilling expansion of La Cathédrale

engloutie, or the jagged accordion blasts that turn General Lavine – part of an opening mélange of Preludes called “C” Influences – into something more Piazzolla than Debussy.

These are two of the extended tracks among many smaller ones, all of which capture the essence of Debussy, but in a way that is full of surprises, full of jazz.

Ken Walton

Producer Ethan Johns simply facilitate­s what O’sullivan does best – writing good old-fashioned tunes

FOLK

John Mulhearn: Pipes

Own Label

In this extraordin­ary recording made in St Mary’s Space, a converted church in Appin, John Mulhearn, known for such innovative projects as the Big Music Society, explores the very particular soundworld of the great Highland bagpipe to often spectacula­r effect. The tunes are his own, with some fine ones among them, such as his Maccrimmon

Wedding march and Dawn Chorus Set, but what really thrills is the way the overall pipe sound has been handled. Drones take on a life of their own, booming full on or chorusing distantly, and harmonics sing, in an almost forensic examinatio­n of the instrument’s sonic character.

It opens with birdsong, gravelly footsteps and shifting drones, as a piobaireac­hd-like calling becomes a powerful march. Other rural noises and ambient pipe sound are enlisted, as in The Water Boatman before it suddenly explodes into The Bigfoot

Set. Listen with headphones for total immersive effect.

Jim Gilchrist

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Clockwise from main: Mogwai; Gilbert O’sullivan; Lemon Twigs
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