The Scotsman

Hawksley Workman

King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut, Glasgow

- PAUL WHITELAW

If the cult American filmmaker and comedian Bobcat Goldthwait – best known as the strangulat­ed Zed from the Police Academy series – decided to launch a supplement­ary career as a singer-songwriter, he would look and sound like the Canadian musician Hawksley Workman. That isn’t intended as an insult.

Workman – real name Ryan Corrigan – is a stocky gent with a voice that could strip paint from a warship. Again, not an insult. During this solo acoustic show, he yelped, howled, grunted and growled to intense – almost alarming – effect.

Clad in regulation denims and peak cap, and with his eyes scrunched tight, his body jerked spasmodica­lly as he sang songs pitched somewhere between the offbeat literacy of The Mountain Goats and the eccentric openhearte­dness of Jonathan Richman. His irreverent tribute to hockey star Wayne Gretzky was a particular highlight.

He’s funny too. Between each song he improvised droll anecdotes about growing up in rural Canada, along with observatio­ns on what he’d experience­d during his latest visit to Glasgow. He’s so genial, he even managed to bounce back from an eggy moment when he absent-mindedly stated that it was nice to be in England. He has been a prolific live performer for nearly 20 years; the man is a pro.

He didn’t even seem fazed by the fact that this gig attracted only around 30 paying punters, including a couple of witless hecklers who had clearly wandered in by mistake.

He has played tougher gigs, I’m sure, but this idiosyncra­tic artist deserves a bigger audience.

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